If we disregard all of the evidence that contradicts a pacifistic interpretation then our self-fulfilling prophecy will indubitably be fulfilled. — Leontiskos
if you are familiar with the four canonical gospels then you must be aware of when Jesus instructed his disciples to sell their cloaks to buy swords — Leontiskos
I don't think anyone knows what the allegory of heaven means exactly — Tom Storm
They did that a lot of that sort of thing after they attained state power. — Paine
I see no problem between Christ's mission and self-defense. — NotAristotle
They did that a lot of that sort of thing after they attained state power. — Paine
Suffering is kind of the point of most forms of Christianity, isn't it? — Tom Storm
Certainly, biologically, we are here to reproduce — jgill
This very strongly presupposes a deity, who has requirements of some kind, preferences in human behaviour and standard according to which humans are judged. I can't help you with that: I don't believe in gods. — Vera Mont
we are free to set personal goals, meet obligations incurred in social existence, decide to what endeavour we dedicate what portion of our life. — Vera Mont
only you benefit from discussing your particular life; the rest of us are not invested in your ambitions. — Vera Mont
I suspect we would learn more from watching a master carpenter use a hammer than we could from talking about the hammer. — Vera Mont
From my perspective those questions seem a bit ambitious — Tom Storm
Now, once you don't have to worry about the lot of that your focus shifts to just making sure crazy, foolish, or large people don't bother or molest sane, intelligent, or smaller people so society can function as a free and friendly thing people want to and are proud to be part of and so will protect with their lives willingly and by choice, no conscription needed. This is what democracies excel at. — Outlander
Reason can help to keep our thinking straight in the sense that it is truth preserving. This means that the truth of the premises guarantees the truth of the conclusion of a reasoned argument. — unenlightened
When we get in a total mess, we might go back and see if another principle will help us better. — unenlightened
I was thinking about this, and what rights a population might have to overthrow the government if it were considered illegitimate. — Hanover
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights — Hanover
Well both are bad. But famine is worse. In reality, no one is forcing your to over-eat, especially if you voted for a self-actualising democracy that makes it your own informed choice. — apokrisis
So any form of human social organisation starts with delivering food and shelter. It then can start to deliver belonging and esteem. — apokrisis
Now do you really just want opinions or a rational critique of how to take this further? — apokrisis
It’s your argument. And you have provided no facts to ground your position. — apokrisis
I am asking what does it even mean to be a king except that you have a kingdom. — apokrisis
History has already shown that. — apokrisis
Sure. It would have to be resilient in the face of perturbations of all kinds. That is part of the design criteria. — apokrisis
I’m just pointing out where I would start. Which is defining what counts as his “kingdom”. — apokrisis
We would expect likewise that the monarchies would start to fail when having to deal with new and more effective varieties of social organisation. So there would be a time when they stop working as something better has come along. — apokrisis
What is a king if he has no court, no lords and ladies, no knights or servants? There has to be some kind of hierarchy in place otherwise a king lacks all the usual distinctions that would make him any different. — apokrisis