But this just again misses the point. It's not that I'm evasive at all. You're just not following the argument or you're choosing not to. If I were to spill out massive amounts of theology (which I will for the sake of argument), am I really going to be interested in your cursory take of it, and do you not see that your take on it would be entirely irrelevant to the question at hand, which is whether I subjectively find value in what I cited? That is, the question is not whether it passes muster for you, but you've got the impossible task of convincing me that it's subjectively valueless to me despite my insistence otherwise — Hanover
Can you calm your sense of your own primary importance for a second or two, and realise YOU were never my main target in this exchange/this forum/ this thread or this life?By analogy, can you not see the folly in trying to convince me I'm not actually inspired by the sunrise? That you may just see the cycles of time and planetary movement isn't relevant to me. — Hanover
But, since you asked, let's look at Leviticus 19:16. This sets off the prohibition of not being a talebearer among your people, which, at first glance appears to simply be a simple proscription against gossip. Let's turn though to the Chofetz Chaim, the seminal volume on Leviticus 19:16 and see what it has to say. But, let's jump ahead to Chapter 10 for the hell of it, and see when such speech is permissible. Sometimes it's permissible you say? Yes, read on: https://torah.org/learning/halashon-chapter10/
Take a look at that and outline it for me. Your task isn't to show me where it's not valid or where the analysis comes short, but it's to explain to me why it's of no significance in my life, even if I insist that it is. — Hanover
... there exists a despicable complicity between the globalized logic
of capital and French identitarian fanaticism.
What is being constructed before our very eyes is the communita-
rization of the public sphere, the renunciation of the laws transcendent
neutrality. The State is supposed to assure itself primarily and perma¬
nently of the genealogically, religiously, and racially verifiable identity of
those for whom it is responsible. It is required to define two, perhaps
even three, distinct regions of the law, according to whether the latter are
truly French, integrated or integratable foreigners, or finally foreigners
who are declared to be unintegrated, or even unintegratable. The law
thereby falls under the control of a “national” model devoid of any real
principle, unless it be that of the persecutions it initiates. Abandoning all
universal principle, identitarian verification—which is never anything
but police monitoring—comes to take precedence over the definition or
application of the law. This means that, just as under Petain, when min¬
isters saw nothing wrong in surreptitiously defining the Jew as prototype
of the non-French, all legislation would be accompanied by the required
identitarian protocols, and subsets of the population would come to be
defined each time by their special status . This arrangement is taking its
course, as successive governments each bring to it their own special
touch. We are dealing with a rampant “Petainization” of the State.
How clearly Pauls statement rings out under these conditions! A
genuinely stupefying statement when one knows the rules of the ancient
world: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free,
there is neither male nor female” (Gal. 3.28)! And how appropriate, for
we who will unproblematically replace God by this or that truth, and
Good by the service this truth requires, the maxim “Glory, honor, and
peace for every one that does good, to the Jew first and also to the Greek.
For God shows no partiality” (Rom. 2.10).
Link repeated from Paine back on page 3, who seems to be about the only person to have noticed that the thread is primarily about atheists' understanding of religion, or the lack thereof. — unenlightened
I agree. But I think it is not just an odd doctrine. It seems to me to be actually immoral to destroy an innocent life in order to escape from guilt, (even if the victim volunteers). Once the sin has been committed, nothing can alter that fact. There are various things, practical and symbolic, we can do in order to go on living, but what really amounts to a resolution of the problem is a mystery to me. Time's a great healer, I suppose. — Ludwig V
You seem to be stuck in black and white thinking: you seem to think that either the author has no idea what they mean, or they are one hundred percent certain about it. — Janus
I've mentioned throughout that it's partly the fault of literalist theists who insist on the truth of the scriptures that this is a common line of attack. Many an atheist, and I include myself in this group, has been dissuaded byof theological convictions on the basis of literal interpretations of scripture being a central part of a particular community. — Moliere
So to insist on the truth of talking snakes or the existence of Jesus is to miss out on what makes these stories compelling. — Moliere
So for me, there is justification for secular humanist education and some forms of assertive atheism. — Tom Storm
How exactly does an allegory work to provide sustenance to a believer, any suggestions? — Tom Storm
And I'm not claiming that any interpretation is "privileged", although in cases where the wordsmith had very definite ideas in mind, then her intentions should certainly be acknowledged as authorial intentions, although in cases where the author is no longer with us to answer questions about her intentions, we cannot determine with certainty what they were. — Janus
Is that not the story of Jesus, whose necessity arose from the eating of that impregnated apple?
But that's not a story I focus on, but I get it. We don't need any actual apples, serpents, or crucifixions for that to have meaning.
Importantly, that story has the attention of a culture, and so it matters. That is where we look for meaning, so that's where we find it. — Hanover
The only thing I will not countenance is : "He didn't know what he meant." — Vera Mont
I have often encountered people who have commented upon what I wrote and come to me with interpretations of my work I did not consciously intend but, on reflection, where defiantly there. — Tom Storm
The only thing I will not countenance is : "He didn't know what he meant." — Vera Mont
But are you really telling me you didn't know what you intended to write, that you just had some kind of vagae association, when you were writing it? — Vera Mont
I see ↪Tom Storm has made pretty much the same point. Perhaps it's different for different writers. Anyway, I'm happy to leave it there and agree to disagree, because neither of us is going to be able to prove their point. — Janus
Pointing out that snakes cannot talk in response to a non-literal interpretation of the fall of man really seems to miss the point. — Moliere
I might have gone in wanting to say X (and partly achieved that) but what the story really demonstrated is Y. — Tom Storm
The only answer apologist can give is "God moves in mysterious ways": which is not even close to being morally satisfactory. — Janus
My experiences of writing philosophy include the slightly weird experience of finding an argument taking charge and leading me down a path I didn't intend to go down and don't want to go down. — Ludwig V
That's a situation that post-modernists particularly enjoy(ed). — Ludwig V
But sometimes people forget that many texts are read and are important to audiences far beyond their original context The question of interpreting them in those circumstances must go beyond their origins. Indeed the problem starts to arise as soon as the text is published. — Ludwig V
But are you really telling me you didn't know what you intended to write, that you just had some kind of vagae association, when you were writing it? — Vera Mont
Interesting. Talking snakes is one thing. But dismissing the existence of Jesus would undermine Christianity, surely? How many practicing Christians would there be who think Jesus never lived? If everything comes down to compelling stories rather than truth then Hamlet or David Copperfield may was well be worshiped (actually I think Harold Bloom did just that). — Tom Storm
Yes. I am a reluctant post-modernist. — Tom Storm
once a work is in the public domain, anyone can bring anything to it, put it to any use and make their contribution as important as or more important than the original and turn it into something quite else from what it was intended to be. — Vera Mont
This experiment demonstrates very clearly that it is possible for an author to not know what one intends to write, when it is written. — Metaphysician Undercover
But I think there is a distinction between valid and invalid, difficult though it is. — Ludwig V
that the bible or ANY written text or relayed story, that has ever existed, contains the memorialised communications of the creator of the universe.I've mentioned throughout that it's partly the fault of literalist theists who insist on the truth of the scriptures — Moliere
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