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01-17-2001, 03:00 PM | #11 | |
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You can doubt my sanity for this, but I assure you there are many better reasons to doubt my sanity. Nit-pickingly yours, nescio |
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01-17-2001, 07:37 PM | #12 |
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Actually, one could call that a conclusion!
A fact is what we see. I see the sun rising. That's the fact. I see the planets moving around in the sky, those are facts. That there is a better coordinate system (heliocentrism) to efficiently describe the motion of the planets is a conclusion. From the "obvious" factual geocentric coordinate system the earth is indeed motionless, the sun does rise and the planets do move in elaborate bizarre curves in the sky. It's a great coordinate system for explaining our facts. It's just a terrible one for predicting the motion of the planets. Even more nitpickingly yours... |
01-18-2001, 01:00 PM | #13 |
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SD-
I just wanted to point out that saying the sun rises is a geocentric anachronism which people still use even though they know about the Earth's turning, etc. I missed your points about observation the first time. That's why I don't post much. nescio p.s. Frankly, I don't know where you and some of the other people here get the time and stamina to keep multiple threads in multiple forums going all at once. I read much more than I post. |
01-19-2001, 08:26 AM | #14 |
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Pure ego, my know-nothing friend!
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01-19-2001, 12:16 PM | #15 | |
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01-19-2001, 12:41 PM | #16 |
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Ah, I think Mike was just overloading "believe" in a non-obvious way. I read the statement as, "I am speaking in terms of what I understand to be absolutely true, independently of my opinion."
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01-19-2001, 01:49 PM | #17 |
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Aaah, okay...got it.
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01-19-2001, 02:35 PM | #18 | |
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I'm not understanding how singledads attempt to clarify helps much, but I'm willing to learn... ? At any rate, I think you have a misunderstanding of "fact" and "faith." I'm with singledad on that. Very few Christians would deny it is most assuredly a matter of FAITH. Hence, "Christian FAITH." I think you are assuming that acknoledging it as a faith claim weakens it. I don't think that is necessarily so. I hold many beliefs, and further more, I believe they are RIGHT. But I cannot conclusively and irrefutably prove them all to be so, so there's some faith involved. Hopefully its a reaonable and well grounded faith, but ti is faith just the same. But you can't use "facts" as you are attempting to use it, without redefining the english language. Andrew [This message has been edited by Captain Bloodloss (edited January 19, 2001).] |
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01-20-2001, 05:48 AM | #19 |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Captain Bloodloss:
At any rate, I think you have a misunderstanding of "fact" and "faith." I'm with singledad on that. Very few Christians would deny it is most assuredly a matter of FAITH. Hence, "Christian FAITH." Not only do we have a semantic tangle of "fact" and "faith" in the popular mind, there is the problem of Christianity in general and the gospel accounts in particular. Christianity stakes its claim on as revealed message from history. The gospel accounts, as most mainline scholars now admit, are not biography in the modern secular sense but are instead a complex blend of fact and fiction. They are faith statements which emerged from various communities' experience of the words and deeds of one man (here I am taking the position that Jesus actually existed). Given the fact that most people were not allowed to read the Bible before Luther, and that most evangelicals today are technically literate but often read with inattention and to confirm their own prejudices, it is no wonder that we have a serious problem of biblical literacy today. But illiteracy is not confined to the Bible! Don't forget Jay Leno's taking to the streets like Diogenese with his lantern to show uncomprehending citizens pictures of Dick Cheney or some other governmental figure and trying to find some popular wisdom.... Was it John Stuart Mill who said that not all conservative people are stupid, but most stupid people tend to be conservative? Illiteracy of any kind is a comfortable place to be. The only way I can know this is that I've seen that comfort creeping in from time to time in my own life. It's safe and comfortable, but what saves me is that I still need to keep taking the garbage out. |
01-20-2001, 08:27 AM | #20 | |
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There are those that say philosophers are those who try to understand reality through mainly theoretical rather than demonstrable insites. Note(how I SPELL): DEMONstrate means to prove- so Christianity has the right to fear proof. This branch of philosophy includes religion and speculation on the nature of God and man. All philosophy, or thought, remains speculation until proven correct. I feel that the truest group of philosophers are the scientists, but that the 2 branches of philosophy will meet someday, when science explains that which faith has always claimed is unnecessary to explain. My simplest thought on the matter is: unless I can feel it through opposing it (if you move with the wind, at the speed of the wind, there is no wind to you- If you move against the wind, or are still while the wind blows by, you will feel the wind on your face!! !) it is not there, or I am already part of the wind. I might say I'm not- because I do not notice it. haha. . It makes me question Christianity, and why they say god is outside of them? Maybe it is they who are wrong. Peace is not opposition to war. L8r. |
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