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Old 01-25-2012, 06:53 AM   #11
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What would people make of Mark Twain's observations 2000 years from now?
As serious as they take them now.
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Old 01-25-2012, 07:02 AM   #12
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literacy rate
An inappropriate, anachronistic concept, as has been mentioned before.
Oh really? The 'all and sundry' population is either equipped to read the written word, or they are not. That is what is understood as 'literacy'.

So you think every other 3rd century BCE Avram, Yehud, and Miriam were well educated and literate scholars that had the luxury of spending their days sitting around reading obscure scrolls?
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Old 01-25-2012, 07:08 AM   #13
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An inappropriate, anachronistic concept, as has been mentioned before.
Oh really?
Really, really, really. One of the fundamental errors of those who somehow get themselves paid to slob around in undistinguished US universities is to suppose that if something was not written down, it did not matter. Even the brief history of the USA shows that a false premise.
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Old 01-25-2012, 07:16 AM   #14
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An inappropriate, anachronistic concept, as has been mentioned before.
Oh really?
Really, really, really. One of the fundamental errors of those who somehow get themselves paid to slob around in undistinguished US universities is to suppose that if something was not written down, it did not matter. Even the brief history of the USA shows that a false premise.
What the hell are you going on about? We are not discussing US universities nor the history of the USA.
The subject here is the book of Ecclesiastes, and the question of whom would have been able to read it.
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Old 01-26-2012, 03:52 AM   #15
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Because those who declared it canonical were incapable of error?
Because those who called it Scripture were under scrutiny by all and sundry. In effect, yes.
Fascinating hypothesis, there.

So, people who are "under scrutiny by all and sundry" become infallible. Does that always work, or just when religious matters are at issue?
Try it.
I have tried, and so have countless other people. It doesn't work.
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Old 01-26-2012, 04:06 AM   #16
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Because those who declared it canonical were incapable of error?
Because those who called it Scripture were under scrutiny by all and sundry. In effect, yes.
Fascinating hypothesis, there.

So, people who are "under scrutiny by all and sundry" become infallible. Does that always work, or just when religious matters are at issue?
Try it.
I have tried, and so have countless other people. It doesn't work.
That's easy to say. You have to try it here.

Go right ahead.
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Old 01-27-2012, 05:22 AM   #17
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Because those who declared it canonical were incapable of error?
Because those who called it Scripture were under scrutiny by all and sundry. In effect, yes.
Fascinating hypothesis, there.

So, people who are "under scrutiny by all and sundry" become infallible. Does that always work, or just when religious matters are at issue?
Try it.
I have tried, and so have countless other people. It doesn't work.
That's easy to say. You have to try it here.
Here in this forum? I've been here for over 11 years. Everybody sees everything I post, and I've made some mistakes. What are you talking about?
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Old 01-27-2012, 05:48 AM   #18
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Because those who declared it canonical were incapable of error?
Because those who called it Scripture were under scrutiny by all and sundry. In effect, yes.
Fascinating hypothesis, there.

So, people who are "under scrutiny by all and sundry" become infallible. Does that always work, or just when religious matters are at issue?
Try it.
I have tried, and so have countless other people. It doesn't work.
That's easy to say. You have to try it here.
Here in this forum?
Better than another, surely.
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Old 01-27-2012, 10:39 PM   #19
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Here in this forum?
Better than another, surely.
Whatever, it falsifies any claim that people who are "under scrutiny by all and sundry" become infallible.
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Old 01-28-2012, 05:18 AM   #20
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Here in this forum?
Better than another, surely.
Whatever
So a reason given in some unspecified/hypothetical forum elsewhere falsifies any claim that people who are under scrutiny by all and sundry becomes infallible? Or may we see it here?
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