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09-14-2006, 10:53 AM | #11 |
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Geoff/Malachi,
You are making yourself look very bad here. You just make allegation after allegation without ever backing them up. Please provide some references for your previous claims before making anymore. Honestly, it is bad for atheism that it is represented by people like you who refuse to justify what they say, just like the worst fundamentalist. Best wishes Bede PS: Hero's work is here: http://www.history.rochester.edu/steam/hero/ |
09-14-2006, 11:19 AM | #12 | |||
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Besides, this isn't even the major point anyway, the major point is that the ideas and the process and the freedom of inquery that existed prior to Christianity was squashed by the Christians. As Celsus said: Quote:
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This is so freaking obvious, every element of history speaks to it. |
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09-14-2006, 11:33 AM | #13 |
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09-14-2006, 11:39 AM | #14 | |
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Evidentlly we have xians to thank for that. |
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09-14-2006, 12:37 PM | #15 | |||
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And here are more: http://www.island-of-freedom.com/ARISTOT.HTM Quote:
Most of what we have from the Greeks comes from the Arabs. Just because we have a work today doesn't mean it was saved by "Christians". And when you say "Christians", who are you talking about? There were many sects of Christiasn, all of which became defined as heretical except the Catholics in the West/Byzantine. Most of these that became defined as heretics were defined as such because they continued to accept, learn, and teach pre-Christian Greek philosophy. Yes, some of these "Christians" copied Greek works early on, they then became defined as heretics, their schools were shut down, and they either fled with their works and they ended up in the hands of the Arabs, or their works were destroyed, or perhaps and I don't know this one way or the other, perhaps the copies they made were kept somewhere. Now, everyone know that the works of Aristotle were absent from the Christian work from bascially the 6th century until the 12th or 13th, some 500-700 years, and when they were re-introduced it was with much timmidity because some of the stuff contradicted scripture, so only "selected" works and parts of works were openly published and taught. Even at that, ARISTOTLE WAS AN IDEALIST WHO WAS A MAJOR OPPONENT OF DEMOCRITUS, EPICURUS, and the whole system of atomism, materialism, and non-teleological explanations for events! You still aren't getting back to the ideas that were once openly discussed in the Greek and Roman world, as in the case of Cicero's The Nature of the Gods, whcih discusses Stiocism, Epicureanism, Platonism, etc. That whole discussion was SHUT DOWN. Let's go for some more: Quote:
When you talk about "Christians", doing this or that, you have to qualify things. There are Catholic Priests today who have pro-gay congregations, and preach in favor of allowing gay marriage, etc. But that is not the policy of the Church, and these people have to watch out because they can become excommunicated or demoted or re-assigned to a different job. Now are you going to tell me how Christianity is such a boon to gay rights because you can come up with a few examples of Christians who favor gay marrige? Its a laughing stock argument! The same has always been true. There have always been some monks and teachers, etc. who went against the rules or against the majority view, and did things that "they weren't supposed to do". That's how we got Copernicus, Newton, Galileo, etc. There are also many others. Joseph McCabe was a monk for 12 years, then became an atheist, now you are going to tel me that the Church promotes atheism. John Locke was a self described Christian, he is also one of the leaders of British empericism and materialism, who refuted books and books of Christian doctrine, now are you going to tel lme that the philosophy of Locke "comes from Christianity"? Yes, you can lable these people "Christians", they lived in a society in which you HAD TO BE a Christian in order to be allowed to live, and in which they were raised with certian beliefs from birth. But, the fact that some rogue monk copied a text on his own in secret in his chamber while he hid it from the higher bishops, or that even some bishop off on his own decided he liked the works of some Greek poet, doesn't make a "Church policy". Church policy was the abolition of "heathen philosophy", and the sequestering of knowledge. What little books were copied in Greek and Latin certianly weren't made available for general use or disseminated to even the average monk. They were copied, packed away, and not used to infrom the worldview or certianly to challenge the faith. And, again, most fo what we have comes from Arab sources anyway. |
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09-14-2006, 12:41 PM | #16 |
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09-14-2006, 02:28 PM | #17 |
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09-14-2006, 02:38 PM | #18 |
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Malachi/Geoff,
You are showing a quite profound ignorance of history. Have you heard of the Byzantine Empire? Do you understand how it differs from the Western Empire that fell in the fifth century AD? Do you appreciate that the Byzantines were Greek speakers and the West spoke Latin? Aristotle and Plato were never 'lost' to Christians. They remained part of the core curriculum in Byzantium right the way through the first millennium. They were lost in the West because they were in Greek and after the barbarian invasions (the Franks, Huns, Vandals, Saxons and Vikings were pagans by the way) no one understood Greek in Western Europe. The Nestorians were Christians and hardly heretics. Their differences with the Emperor were political and they paid the price for that. Your article gave no references for the burning or banning of any of the authors you listed. Give me the references. I want the page reference from How the Irish Saved Civilisation that mentions any of Euclid, Galen Aristotle etc. I want the list of 'most' church fathers who said the Earth was flat - you have so far produced none at all. And don't you dare call Cosmas a church father. As I said, you are making atheism look very bad. I think you owe it to your fellow infidels to pull your finger out and not just make idle claims or link to work you don't understand. Best wishes Bede |
09-14-2006, 03:43 PM | #19 |
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I've got no dog in this hunt, though I'm inclined to agree with the general contours of Bede's position (nice review, by the way). It is all the more disappointing that he should write that Malachi is "making atheism look very bad." What on earth does any of this have to do with atheism per se?
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09-14-2006, 04:03 PM | #20 | ||||||||||
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<inflammatory comments edited>
Let's look at the review: Quote:
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From Paul: Quote:
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Plus, the effect of Clement is overblow in his statement anyway, by the 4th and 5th century things had progressed well beyond this and there was a much more negative view of Greek philosophy. And he didn't REALLY embrace philosophy of Plato anyway, he didn't embrace the ideas of human derived knowledge via reason and observation, he just embraced the conclusions of Plato, not his process, which is THE KEY. Quote:
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What planet are you living on if you claim that the Nicene Creed is an example of the use of Greek philosophy: Quote:
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<edit> You can't just dismiss the quotes I've already provided, there is no dismissing them. You can't dismiss the fact that Christian Emperors, Popes, and Bishops shut down schools of phislosophy all across the Empire, and you can't dismiss the fact that philosophy and FREE THOUGHT in general, went on a massive decline RIGHT AFTER THE CHRISTIANS CAME TO POWER! |
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