*credit to madmikesamerica for the info. — The scientific philosopher
How lovely on the mountains Are the feet of him who brings good news, Who announces peace And brings good news of happiness, Who announces salvation, And says to Zion, "Your God reigns!"
There are many other atrocities in the bible and I urge you to research them. — The scientific philosopher
Things like compassion for the less fortunate, the equality of all souls before God, and the inherent value and dignity of all human life seem to have their origin in the NT, right? — Erik
I would assume (perhaps erroneously) that the mere notion of individual autonomy could only arise within a fairly sophisticated moral and intellectual framework. — Erik
How does putting intense pressure on each member to conform to the egalitarian values of the tribe square with their ostensible valuing of the autonomy of each individual? — Erik
Maintaining the equality of all members within a tribe of 20-50 people seems quite a bit different than acknowledging the equality of all people within all tribes.
I'm also a little suspicious of the idea that hunter-gatherer tribes maintained a deep respect for the individual autonomy of those tribal members. — Erik
I'm curious as to why you would assume this, perhaps you could expand? — Pseudonym
Pretty much in the same way as any respect for egalitarian values must. We cannot just let murderers murder out of respect for their autonomy, because it interferes with the autonomy of another. Tribes living from hand-to-mouth recognised that if one tribe member got ideas of grandeur that could literally be deadly to the tribe's survival, relying so heavily as it does on co-operation. At least, that's the theory. — Pseudonym
I think your problem is based on a lack of basic knowledge. People who study h/g Society would not accept your caricature. — charleton
an emphasis on the primacy of subjectivity and self-consciousness, a "rich inner life" and social contract theory grounded in atomic individuality, — Erik
... the much more benign examples offered up by the writer, like "boasting" and "putting on airs." — Erik
I thought I had just explained how, in hunter-gatherer society, these are far from benign, is there something you don't understand, or disagree with. — Pseudonym
Sorry, I haven't the faintest idea what you're talking about. Perhaps you could provide me with some examples of behaviour which might demonstrate some of the above traits that is common in modern society but absent in hunter-gather society. That might help to clarify things. — Pseudonym
Maybe you could offer examples of what forms of "autonomous individuality" were commonly embraced and practiced in those early hunter-gatherer societies. — Erik
Individual rights as enshrined in our political constitutions. Specifically things like freedom of speech and the freedom of conscience as developed in liberal democracies, the Reformation idea that each individual stands in a relationship to God alone and does not need a mediating clergy, a language in which concepts like individuality and "self-consciousness" seem to posit an inner/outer split that is probably not as "natural" or obvious as it now seems to us, etc. — Erik
But even Tacitus recognised that Rome prevailed. I'd put Tacitus in the camp of bigging-up your opponents to make yourself look good for conquering them.
He also seemed to be genuinely interesting in the way the Germans ran their political system, and historians and anthropologists use him as a source, especially in the interests of proto-democracy. — charleton
Are you serious? The guiding book of one of the world's most popular religions is filled with misogyny, homophobia, genocide, and racism and your response is basically, so what? — Pseudonym
Is there a point to this? The Bible says to do what we all can agree are bad things, therefore [fill in the blank]. — T Clark
Are we supposed to believe that all the stories you read in these books are true? — Bitter Crank
Have you not heard of Religion? — Pseudonym
Either we take the bible to be a load of irrelevant nonsense (my preferred choice), or we examine it as a philosophical text. — Pseudonym
We either take the bible as a whole or we pick each idea we like from it and ignore the ones we don't. If we do the latter then the bible need not be mentioned aside from a brief credit as to the origin of the idea, if we do the former then the atrocities it condones need to be accounted for by normal moral standards. — Pseudonym
This is a philosophical forum; the implication of your dismissal is that there is no philosophical discussion that results from the immorality of the bible (either that or you were just being belligerent and trying to ruin someone else's legitimate discussion just because you're not interested in it). — Pseudonym
So why no similar interjection on the many threads discussing other aspects of the bible? Either we take the bible to be a load of irrelevant nonsense (my preferred choice), or we examine it as a philosophical text. — Pseudonym
In either case I can't see any situation in which they are irrelevant to philosophical discussion. — Pseudonym
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