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06-21-2007, 02:33 PM | #21 |
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What he actually said was, "to others it seems like a bunch of sayings from different hands in different times." Your willful distortion of gurugeorge's statement is the kind of blackguardry that evidently puts you well outside the bounds of goodwill.
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06-21-2007, 02:44 PM | #22 | |
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That's cos I was being lazy and couldn't be arsed to scroll up to recopy the below:
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06-21-2007, 02:46 PM | #23 | |
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I think the importance of the HJ (for most Christians--I'm taking a cue from No Robots and speaking for them) is that regardless of what it fails to prove about the mythological attributes of the Christ figure, it helps to establish a starting point. That is, if there is no HJ then why even argue for the rest of the biblical attributes or legend? I don't think most Christians accept this idea that there was a HJ, but he was only a man who died. They want the whole shebang, but, ultimately they certainly cannot conclude much of anything about his story if it is based entirely on a mythical figure who never actually lived. --- As for the issue of Atheists being able to draw inspiration or philosophical meaning from the teachings/sayings of the biblical Christ, well, I think for the most part his message of self-control, compassion and altruism are noble. It's that whole punishment for disbelief (requiring, confusingly, a gross lack of compassion), warnings of hellfire (symbolic or not), and an insane desire to accept and follow the teachings of what would become the OT law, along with various accounts of fig trees, donkeys, etc. which cause a distasteful opinion of he and his story. |
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06-21-2007, 02:52 PM | #24 | |||
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06-21-2007, 03:01 PM | #25 |
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The point is that you deliberately hacked up a quotation and tacked it onto a phrase of your own construction in order to make a false impression of a writer's view. This quote-mining is indeed commonly regarded, even here, as blackguardry. The fact that you try to weasel out of it by adding another quotation does not exculpate you. And, as for the new quotation, I would simply say that gurugeorge has demonstrated over the course of our discussion an admirable and sadly rare generosity of spirit.
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06-21-2007, 03:07 PM | #26 |
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Cut out the name-calling and stick to the topic, please.
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06-21-2007, 03:11 PM | #27 | |||
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06-21-2007, 03:21 PM | #28 | |||
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06-21-2007, 03:48 PM | #29 | |
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All apologies if I assumed anything else. |
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06-21-2007, 03:56 PM | #30 |
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An important book is Derrida's Of Spirit: Heidegger and the question. Derrida finds that Heidegger identifies spirit with fire. If we apply this to Christ, we see a man whose self-identification with spirit amounts to a self-identification with fire. As we know, fire both warms and burns.
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