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01-30-2013, 12:47 PM | #421 |
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The dumbest discussion ever
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01-30-2013, 12:49 PM | #422 | |
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We have basic assumptions that monasteries are related to modern ideas of libraries, healing and caring. We have throughout the med huge "temple" complexes that were actually healing and caring institutions with huge libraries and some very impressive skills and techniques, and a very long tradition of healing, albeit on completely incorrect knowledge foundations! These were systematically destroyed from the 300's onwards. It would be a very useful bit of propaganda to state that actually this new religion was using these ideas. I must note from googling that I have not been able to find clear descriptions of the Kos complex, actually, maybe Google Earth.... |
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01-30-2013, 01:00 PM | #423 | |
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It's like playing battleship. You don't know exactly where the whole ship is because you can't see it. But you've just scored two hits at H5 and G5. You know its not a two hole ship because the other guy didn't say 'you sunk me ship.' You don't know if the rest of the ship is at I5 and down or F5 and up and how big the ship is. But we know approximately where it is (the 5 row) and something of the character of the group because of (a) the person making the reference and approving of them and (b) the group he associates them with (i.e. the Essenes) and (c) his description of the group connecting them to Israel, the Jewish scriptures, prophesy etc. |
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01-30-2013, 01:49 PM | #424 | ||||||||||
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At least, that's my reason for participation in this forum. It is unclear to me, what stephan intends to accomplish here at the forum. Many of his comments, indeed, entire threads, strike me, at least, as "out in left field". Here's my three choices, arranged in descending chronological fashion (selected from among only the most recent topics on the forum) for "dumbest discussion ever". Of course these are not actually the threads which meander the most meaningless path possible, there are other threads, even more absurd, but, these three strike me, at least, as being far less amenable to receipt of some kind of praise, than most other threads, in recent months..... 1. "Why does it have to be 'Either Or' In the Mythicist Debates?" Date: 26 January 2013 OP, Post 1 stephan huller Quote:
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01-30-2013, 02:28 PM | #425 | |||
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The following is extracted from Philo in Early Christian Literature by David T. Runia ... Quote:
But immediately following this is what I see as the reason for the thesis of Lucius, supported by Zeller, Harnack and Schtirer: Quote:
The reason appears to be based on evidence for monastic settlements, and its lack, before the 4th century. The author of "VC" describes a monastic settlement that is not attested to before the Pachomian movement in the 4th century. Furthermore it may be reasonably inferred that the Pachomian movement provided alternative shelter and community living arrangements - at least in part - for the 4th century class of pagan "therapeutae" whose temples were destroyed by Constantine, and who's traditional service and presence in the empire for centuries was effectively made redundant overnight. (For an example of some evidence for this inference see the discussions between Hermes and Asclepius in the Nag Hammadi codices.) |
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01-30-2013, 02:49 PM | #426 |
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In Deutsch Altertumswissenschaft in English 'study of antiquity.'
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/...mswissenschaft |
01-30-2013, 03:00 PM | #427 | ||||
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The generic term "therapeutae" had been previously associated with the pagans and the pagans alone. Quote:
When we understand why the author of "VC" borrowed (or stole) the term from the ancient and well attested pagan (non Jewish) heritage and applied it to this group of people of supposedly 1st century people, we may be half way there. Quote:
A very useful identity theft. Quote:
It might be argued that a universal pagan church was represented in part by the Sacred Assembly of the Pagan Priests (who in turn represented the pagan therapeutae) to the Lord God Caesar and Pontifex Maximus. If the universal church of Christian ... Jewish ... pagan therapeutae was hijacked by the Centralised Monotheistic State Christian church in part by means of its preservation fabrication of the treatise "VC" (supposedly by Philo) then it follows that the "inferred memory" [via Eusebius] of the earliest Christians may have been invented. This invention may have been necessary later in the 4th century to explain to all the new centralised monotheistic state canonical Christians who the very well respected therapeutae actually were - even if the temples were in disrepair. Who were the therapeutae in antiquity? What does the Emperor's propaganda machine say? Shall we make an appeal to authority? Let's see what "Philo" says and close our eyes to the rest of the evidence. |
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01-30-2013, 03:06 PM | #428 | ||||
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01-30-2013, 03:09 PM | #429 | |
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You argue that there were NO Christians of the Jesus cult before the 4th century yet you are trying to implicate Philo's "On the Contemplative Life" when it actually supports your own position. No other Apologetic source before Church History ever claimed the Therapeutae were Christians or Christians of the Jesus cult which corroborates your own position. "On the Contemplative Life" was NOT composed by the 4th century Church because it lacks all the elements and the profile of writings composed by the Church of Rome. If you want to know what the Church wrote examine the Donation of Constatine, Church History, Against Heresies, "Against Marcion, Epistles of Polycarp, Epistle of the Church of Rome [1 Clement] and the Epistles of Ignatius. |
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01-30-2013, 03:11 PM | #430 |
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There should be a special section at the forum for this nonsense
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