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Old 10-20-2004, 03:25 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
Yes, it is found among the Cynics. Epictetus the Cynic philosopher: "If you want to be crucified, just wait. The cross will come. If it seems reasonable to comply, and the circumstances are right, then it's to be carried through, and your integrity maintained." There are others, but I am too lazy to copy them.
Epictetus probably had some knowledge of Christians (or Galileans) see Discourses book 4 chapter 7 section 6.

He is possibly not a witness to pre-Christian usage here.

Andrew Criddle

(FWIW I think it probably was a pre-Christian usage but it would be nice to have examples earlier than Epictetus.)
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Old 10-20-2004, 05:10 AM   #22
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Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
Epictetus probably had some knowledge of Christians (or Galileans) see Discourses book 4 chapter 7 section 6.

He is possibly not a witness to pre-Christian usage here.

Andrew Criddle

(FWIW I think it probably was a pre-Christian usage but it would be nice to have examples earlier than Epictetus.)
That's what I get for laziness, eh? In any case the Discourses are even later, as they were compiled after his death ~135 CE. And he was a Stoic, not a Cynic, as you were too polite to tell me.
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Old 10-20-2004, 06:14 AM   #23
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But if it can be authenticated that Christians were around in the 1st Century, it casts doubt on the notion of Jesus being a legend. Legends aren't created that fast.
Oh, they most certainly are. One legend I read was of a Rabbi back in the Middle Ages who considered himself the Messiah, and a legend spread in his lifetime that he would retake Israel while riding on a multi-headed dragon.
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Old 10-20-2004, 09:01 AM   #24
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(And yes, Epictetus, conspiracies do happen. History was full of them. Brutus wasn't a lone knifeman. The wounds indicate that there was more than one person involved. The Watergate break-in wasn't just a burglary. Why accept the Warren Commission when it didn't have all the data available to it?)spin
Actually, I was merely using this as an example to illustrate how people can come to radically different conclusions and entire industries can be generated over a controversy very quickly even in this day and age with video (8 mm) images of the event. I don't really have a strong opinion one way or the other about whether Kennedy was killed solely by Oswald. I think there are some oddities in the whole episode; i.e. conflicting witnesses, dead witnesses, timing of the shots, etc. but I am unconvinced that it was absolutely done by some group of disaffected Cubans or the CIA or Johnson. On the flip side, I think the government rarely tells us the whole story and hides things from the public all the time. I am just too suspicious of it. But I believe that we should apply Occam's Razor here. Brutus wasn't a lone knifeman. I like that!
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Old 10-20-2004, 09:13 AM   #25
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Epictetus probably had some knowledge of Christians (or Galileans) see Discourses book 4 chapter 7 section 6.
Yeah...I must admit I knew about them. They used to bug the #$%$ out of me coming to my door handing out xtian literature...Chick tracts, I think it was.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
That's what I get for laziness, eh? In any case the Discourses are even later, as they were compiled after his death ~135 CE. And he was a Stoic, not a Cynic, as you were too polite to tell me.
I let it slide. Actually the Cynics were not too different from us, though I have heard disparaging remarks made about them. The one I recall is that "A Stoic is merely a Cynic who takes a bath once in a while."
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Old 10-20-2004, 09:17 AM   #26
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I let it slide. Actually the Cynics were not too different from us, though I have heard disparaging remarks made about them. The one I recall is that "A Stoic is merely a Cynic who takes a bath once in a while."
Hey, I lived in a bathtub.

Now get out of my sun.
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Old 10-20-2004, 10:37 PM   #27
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Hey, I lived in a bathtub.
But it never had water in it.


spin
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Old 10-21-2004, 12:14 PM   #28
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Originally Posted by spin

Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
Hey, I lived in a bathtub.
But it never had water in it.

spin
Hey, wait a minute. Maybe we should figure out when then bathub, specifically with a statue of the Virgin Mary in it, became a Christian symbol. :devil3:
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Old 10-21-2004, 12:23 PM   #29
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But it never had water in it.


spin
If only my handle was Thales. Then I could say that the tub was water.
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