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09-01-2010, 11:35 AM | #51 |
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In modern political discourse, "fundamentalist" tends to be a general insult, about as meaningful as "socialist" or "fascist." This is a problem with modern political rhetoric.
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09-01-2010, 11:52 AM | #52 | ||
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Andrew Criddle |
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09-01-2010, 12:25 PM | #53 | ||
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As the movement progressed the people who took leadership gradually narrowed down who could be considered a fundamentalist. And the defining characteristic of the movement became its own narrowness. Quote:
Not by your definition, but in actual normal discourse the big tent people are not called fundamentalists except as an insult. Peter. |
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09-01-2010, 01:29 PM | #54 | ||||||
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While this is necessarily true because of the time necessary to print, the following is ridiculous: I understand and I understand that you will remain unrepentant and rigid on the matter. Quote:
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Flippant denial ("Not really true") saves dealing with it. Quote:
Calling them exclusionist, simply means they aren't in the spirit of ecumenicalism. But then, it would seem that most religionists have to work at being ecumenical. Quote:
Calling someone a "fundamentalist" may be an insult, but so is calling someone a "cheapskate", though the referent may indeed be a cheapskate. Your claimed new understanding of "fundamentalist" remains astandard and appeals to exclusivity are analogous to calling other religions' beliefs "myths". spin |
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09-01-2010, 06:12 PM | #55 | |
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This doesn't change the fact that if you insist on a definition of fundamentalism that would include most liberal evangelicals then your definition is entirely at variance with how the word has normally been used for the past 60 years. Peter. |
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09-01-2010, 07:27 PM | #56 | |
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Unfortunately, the POV of historical/critical scholars is at direct variance with that of evangelical Christianity.
The former wish to establish the relative value of historical reconstruction from surviving evidence when interpreted a naturalistic manner. The evidence determines the likelihood of any given explanation. The latter are completely confident of what should have happened (based on a literal interpretation of scripture), meaning the value of historical/critical inquiry is in its ability to either confirm these truths or illuminate them for purposes of edification. Explanations must conform to the truth, so evidence is relative. I have not honed this kind of contrast to a fine edge, but in a way their POVs are like oil and dihydrogen monoxide. DCH Quote:
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09-02-2010, 12:21 AM | #57 | ||
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The issue about fundamentalism is still a faith based on a literalist approach to the bible. That hasn't changed. It is still apt. And it is the overt matter which separates the fundamentalist believer from the liberal christian. To return to the start of our discourse, Wallace was deliberately misusing the term for purely polemical purposes, labeling people who in no way fit the definition of "fundamentalist" as a generic insult. spin |
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09-02-2010, 07:45 AM | #58 | |
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There are people who tell him that he can't be a proper Christian because he doesn't completely agree with them; and there are people who tell him that he can't be a proper scholar because he is an orthodox evangelical Christian. He is pointing out that his opponents have a lot in common. I think his meaning was pretty clear. You are a linguist. I am surprised that you do not get this. Peter. |
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09-02-2010, 08:36 AM | #59 | ||
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And are you really still pursuing your redefinition of "fundamentalist", when you've reduced it to meaninglessness? "[S]traight on target"? Your meaning, "[f]undamentalism is about separatism..." has nothing to do with Wallace's use of the term. Quote:
Yes, I agree. He was prepared to say anything for a dig, no matter how lacking in relevance. As I said at the beginning -- Who needs to comment on the irony?It is transparent: your boy went for the cheap shot. And your repackaging and redefining won't change that fact. spin |
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