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04-10-2001, 02:47 PM | #31 | |||||||||||
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There are more of course. Now please stop implying or stating that I make assertions that I cannot support. Quote:
Nomad [This message has been edited by Nomad (edited April 10, 2001).] |
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04-10-2001, 03:06 PM | #32 | ||
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I will get to the rest later, if you want. I really don't care, and would be happy to sit back and watch the conversation progress without me. Your call. |
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04-10-2001, 04:45 PM | #33 |
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OK, infies and fundies, I'll tell you about the context of rape in Orthodox Judaism today. The Haredim (Ultra-Orthodox) follow the rules of the Talmud punctiliously, so it'll serve:
If a woman gets rape, the Orthobozos regard here as "tme'a", that is, an impure woman. She is afterwards illegible for marriage and is doomed to lonely servitude in her father's home. Such was also in Biblical times. If a woman was raped she was doomed. To fix that, the Bible, a human product of its time, decrees that the rapist should marry her, the impure woman, so that she would not be doomed to solitude. In the context of a patriarchal(sp?), ritualistic society the law of the Bible makes perfect sense. Not for an immutable Word of God, though... If you have any questions about the meaning of the Hebrew text, ask away and I'll give the accurate translation. Shlomi Tal aka devnet. http://www.geocities.com/stmetanat/home.html |
04-10-2001, 07:54 PM | #34 | |
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Originally posted by Nomad:
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04-10-2001, 08:00 PM | #35 | |
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04-11-2001, 01:51 AM | #36 | ||||
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And I'd like to pick upon this: Quote:
You are still trying to interpret these passages in the most favorable way you can, but surely you can see that the Bible certainly appears misogynist when taken at face value? So, given that any reader is expected to derive a clear moral code from it, why is this? And how do you explain Leviticus 12, where the birth of a boy makes the mother "unclean" for one week, but the birth of a girl makes her unclean for two weeks? |
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04-11-2001, 07:00 AM | #37 |
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The idea that Judeo-Xtian law is the source of US law is basically unsupportable (find me some examples of a democratic Constitution with separation of powers in the Bible).
The Founding Fathers drew on an immense array of sources, but the most important were classical (pagan), with their emphasis on Constitutions, a mix of powers, etc. The Greco-Roman world was far more important than the Christian. For example, here's an article on Polybius, Montesquieu, and the FFs: http://www.sms.org/mdl-indx/polybius/polybius.htm with a quote from a quote from it: "It is no accident, then, that so many who gathered at Philadelphia to declare independence and a decade later to draft a constitution were men who had apprenticed themselves to Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, Polybius, and Cicero, and who could debate at length on the various constitutional forms of the classical world before they chose one for the new American nation. We owe our very existence as a people in great part to classical learning." From the Encyclopedia Americana from Grolier: http://gi.grolier.com/presidents/ea/side/congus.html The decisions of the Constitutional Convention to establish a bicameral Congress and to separate it from the executive illustrate a major theme of 18th century American political thought. The Founding Fathers emphasized checks and balances as means of assuring individual freedom and avoiding governmental tyranny. Similar principles had been stressed by classical political philosophers, including Solon, Plato, and Aristotle, in whom the Founding Fathers were well read, and also by contemporary theorists, among them Blackstone, Hume, and Voltaire, who were impressed by Newtonian analogies to the physical and natural order of the universe. Montesquieu thought he observed a nicely honed balance among English political institutions, especially in the separation of powers among legislative, executive, and judicial branches. Although Montesquieu's description was found inaccurate for the British system, his De l'esprit des lois (The Spirit of the Laws) nevertheless served the Founding Fathers as a model in writing the Constitution of their new nation. The Constitution was written largely by men who feared, despised and hated Christianity, and who were Deists, which was, as Vidal once eloquently put it, what atheists of the time called themselves. How much do you think Jefferson or Madison, who laughed at Christ-inanity, drew on Judeo-Xtian tradition as the source for their writing and thinking? American laws, like Canadian, and most Europeon legal systems, are built on Judeo-Christian principles (like the king is subject to the law). For one thing, Continental Europe has a very different historical basis than the Anglo-Sxon common law system. Here is the Britannica article on the evolution of European law: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=84945&tocid=0 Didn't see much about Judeo-Xtian there. Note the opening paragraph: Romano-germanic Law, the law of continental Europe, based on an admixture of Roman, Germanic, ecclesiastical, feudal, commercial, and customary law. European civil law has been adopted in much of Latin America as well as in parts of Asia and Africa and is to be distinguished from the common law of the Anglo-American countries. Now for common law: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=25376&tocid=0 Common law is the law that was developed in England after the Norman Conquest (1066), by judges who ruled in individual cases in the light of precedent or custom, with minimal recourse to statutes or enactments. This body of customary law continued to evolve through the end of the 18th century in England and its overseas colonies. Common law continues to undergo considerable modernization. In other words, Civil (continental) law is a fusion of Germanic, Roman and other sources. Common law is a continuation of non-Christian Anglo-Saxon laws (as the paragraph following the quote says). Where is the great influence of the Judeo-Xtian tradition? Nowhere! Luckily. I wouldn't want to have to kill my wife because she wasn't a virgin when I married her. In fact, can you find any great number of laws from the Bible still on the books, whose source IS the Bible and nothing else? I'd be interested to hear about those. Michael [This message has been edited by turtonm (edited April 11, 2001).] |
04-11-2001, 08:09 AM | #38 | |
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Remember that Henry II was excommunicated (twice I believe) for violating Canonical law, and he certainly was not the first secular European King to face this penalty. On the other hand, if you have an example of a culture or civilization that predates Judaism and made the King subject to the law, please show us. So far as I am aware, the Western concept of all are subject to the law came from the Judeo-Christian traditions. Nomad |
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04-11-2001, 08:32 AM | #39 | ||||||||
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Probably the best way to look at this issue is to not get so carried away in condemning past cultures and their values, and try to look at them in a more even handed manner. For example, you did know that according to God, there is neither male nor female right? That all are equal before the Lord? Quote:
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Nomad |
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04-11-2001, 08:32 AM | #40 |
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Unless the description of the law specifically excludes the king, I'd say he is subject to it by default. Therefore any culture with a framework of laws would have this unless otherwise specified. And universal laws were a feature of the Athenian and Roman republics.
Of course, whether the laws were actually enforced upon the king is a separate issue. And one in which Christianity doesn't score particularly highly, especially as the Bible itself gives examples of kings flouting Biblical laws (e.g. all those concubines: how is this not adultery?). |
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