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Old 01-23-2013, 07:12 PM   #21
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The scientists of yesteryear did have a belief system too but back then this was not regarded as unusual or contradictory - whereas today it would. But that belief in and of itself does not invalidate any scientific discovery or breakthrough however. When Newton formulated a proof for gravity, for example, his belief was of zero relevance. He could just as easily have discovered it had he been an atheist. So having a belief is not in and of itself a restriction on scientific investigation. As long as the two are separated and absolutely so, then it is not a problem. Indeed I would argue that what one does or does not believe is immaterial, pertaining to scientific research as long as it remains isolated from it. No one denies the work of Galileo or Copernicus or Darwin because they were Christian now - though Darwin subsequently renounced his. If something is true and objectively so, then whoever proves or demonstrates it is correct too. What else they may or may not believe is of zero concern. No human being after all is completely logical and expecting scientists to be so, is both impractical and unnecessary. We expect them to be more logical of course, just not exclusively so, however. Indeed they are, if truth be told just as human as the rest of us now
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Old 01-24-2013, 01:35 AM   #22
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Everyone knew Jesus' message, far better than was wanted, anyway.
There were exceptions
But your 'church' wasn't among them. It invented Jesus in the 4th century. Or had you forgotten?
The Nag Hammadi codices (containing some of the books of the heretics) are dated to the mid 4th century.
By optimists.
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Old 01-24-2013, 02:56 AM   #23
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Default censorship, Thomas Brodie, and FRDB

<comment on moderation removed>

FRAUD:

sotto voce's bizarre, rambling submission on the Brodie affair, issued at 08:27, contained a minor spelling error, having nothing to do with either the OP, nor with the tenor of his post. Since the error, however, related to a famous scientist's name, James Clerk Maxwell, I thought it appropriate to clarify his minor mistake, and I did so, in submitting my own post, at 09:37.

At 09:40, sotto voce, having read my rejoinder, edited his post, correcting his spelling error.

At 09:42, sotto voce submitted a new post to the forum, now with his corrected spelling mistake, and attacked me, as having "misquoted" him.

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Originally Posted by sotto voce
Don't misquote, poster.
<edit>

:huh:
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Old 01-24-2013, 03:29 AM   #24
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The scientists of yesteryear did have a belief system
As they do now, though they usually lie about it, to keep their jobs. Indeed, many if not most scientists believed the Bible, and, being more intelligent than most, not just out of social habit; and this fact finally demolished medievalism.

There was worship of the bones of 'saints', there was garlic at the door to keep out demons, and much more besides, that boggles the minds of modern people who mostly have ungratefully accepted the benefits of Newton, Boyle, Faraday and Clerk Maxwell. But the principal casualty was transubstantiation. This dogma, that had been pronounced belatedly, after 900 years of imperial religion, had been the main offender of Europeans, because it was not only obvious fabrication theologically, it had very important, practical consequences that affected everyone. It gave enormous power to priests, who also enjoyed a measure of immunity from prosecution. This was a foolish and dangerous mix, that led to abuses of all sorts, to scandal that threatened anarchy, to war and political disestablishment of papacy.

But if there were anguished doubts about the intellectual validity of Catholicism, scientists applied the coup de grâce. They rejected the idea of commonplace, biddable men making God with their bare hands, while accepting the notion of a creator walking on water, because a creator could break his own rules if he wanted to.

For non-scientists, the undreamed-of daily benefits of applying science removed the intellectual integrity of papalism wherever these benefits were to be observed. Science and faith could co-exist in perfect harmony, even complementing each other. So medievalism died of self-inflicted wounds, due to its farcical theology, its greed and its fundamental irrationality. Nothing has changed since then; and neither can there be change, as the Vatican well knows.
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Old 01-24-2013, 04:00 AM   #25
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G'day from rural Australia sotto voce.

I enjoyed reading your "essay".

Specifically the puzzle you outline.


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The other answer is that Jesus just did not exist.

The miraculous is possible, yes, but Jesus did not perform any miracles, because he did not exist. Which is fair enough.

Though it's a puzzle how all the king's horses and all the king's men, Jews with their Scriptures, Greeks with their wisdom, could not overcome the view that he had lived on earth.

It's no puzzle if the King sponsored the view.

Did the King publish the view that he had lived on earth?



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Originally Posted by Letter of the King, Constantine following Nicaea via Socrates Scholasticus’ Ecclesiastical History 1:9



Constantine the King to the Bishops and nations everywhere.

Inasmuch as Arius imitates the evil and the wicked,
it is right that, like them, he should be rebuked and rejected.

As therefore Porphyry,
who was an enemy of the fear of God,
and wrote wicked and unlawful writings
against the religion of Christians,
found the reward which befitted him,
that he might be a reproach to all generations after,
because he fully and insatiably used base fame;
so that on this account his writings
were righteously destroyed;

thus also now it seems good that Arius
and the holders of his opinion
should all be called Porphyrians,
that he may be named by the name
of those whose evil ways he imitates:

And not only this, but also
that all the writings of Arius,
wherever they be found,
shall be delivered to be burned with fire,
in order that not only
his wicked and evil doctrine may be destroyed,
but also that the memory of himself
and of his doctrine may be blotted out,
that there may not by any means
remain to him remembrance in the world.

Now this also I ordain,
that if any one shall be found secreting
any writing composed by Arius,
and shall not forthwith deliver up
and burn it with fire,
his punishment shall be death;
for as soon as he is caught in this
he shall suffer capital punishment
by beheading without delay.


(Preserved in Socrates Scholasticus’ Ecclesiastical History 1:9.
A translation of a Syriac translation of this, written in 501,
is in B. H. Cowper’s, Syriac Miscellanies,
Extracts From The Syriac Ms. No. 14528
In The British Museum, Lond. 1861, p. 6–7)

BTW I don't know why the Emperor Constantine called himself King rather than Lord God Caesar.

But that's what the source preserving the letter appears to state.

Perhaps the power went to his head at Antioch and Nicaea?

He had been campaigning for this moment for twenty years.

He had finally won the jackpot.
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Old 01-24-2013, 04:02 AM   #26
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Originally Posted by sotto voce View Post

Everyone knew Jesus' message, far better than was wanted, anyway.
There were exceptions
But your 'church' wasn't among them. It invented Jesus in the 4th century. Or had you forgotten?
The Nag Hammadi codices (containing some of the books of the heretics) are dated to the mid 4th century.
By optimists.
By analysis of the cartonage.

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Old 01-24-2013, 04:22 AM   #27
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Originally Posted by sotto voce View Post

Everyone knew Jesus' message, far better than was wanted, anyway.
There were exceptions
But your 'church' wasn't among them. It invented Jesus in the 4th century. Or had you forgotten?
The Nag Hammadi codices (containing some of the books of the heretics) are dated to the mid 4th century.
By optimists.
By analysis of the cartonage.

That settles it, then.
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Old 01-24-2013, 04:44 AM   #28
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G'day from rural Australia sotto voce.
G'day, mountainman. Hope you're enjoying the summer.

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I enjoyed reading your "essay".
Thank you. I think. :thinking:


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Though it's a puzzle how all the king's horses and all the king's men, Jews with their Scriptures, Greeks with their wisdom, could not overcome the view that he had lived on earth.

It's no puzzle if the King sponsored the view.
True, true. But why in the name of all that's Dionysian would the official patrician protector sponsor one whose fore-runner lived on locusts and honey?


Quote:
Did the King publish the view that he had lived on earth?
Three hundred years before him, yes. There was no dispute about that. Arius the Bait tried it on as the first Jehovah's Witness, but got the door shut on him too often. So King Con hauled him in, in favour of more credible conmen.
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