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04-03-2009, 08:52 PM | #11 | ||
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He’s trying to get the people to serve the king who serves and dies for the people, instead of the kings who want the people to serve and die for them. The reason for the titles and stories of him doing impossible feats was just to make him seem more messiah like instead of just a poor guy who was executed. |
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04-04-2009, 07:38 AM | #12 |
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I'm not sure how far it is relevant, but it is IMO interesting that the Pseudo-Platonic Socratic Dialogue Theages (c 325 CE) does seem to make Socrates into a figure in close touch with the divine.
The mysterious sign of which Socrated speaks in the authentically Platonic dialogues becomes here a sort of divine voice; and being close to Socrates becomes an intrinsic source of spiritual enlightenment. Andrew Criddle |
04-04-2009, 08:05 PM | #14 | |
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Constantine: "Socrates critical questioning ... menace to the state"
Because according to Constantine "Socrates critical questioning ... menace to the state".
Here is the citation from Robin Lane-Fox. Quote:
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04-06-2009, 10:08 AM | #15 | |
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04-06-2009, 10:31 AM | #16 |
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Alexander the Great: A Life in Legend / by Richard Stoneman (Yale, 2008). Review.
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04-06-2009, 02:09 PM | #17 |
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Okay, so how many people actually believed the Alexander stories were true? Its one thing to write made up stories about people claiming they were a god for entertainment value and quite another for someone to start preaching these stories were fact (a.k.a. Paul).
If people were led to believe Alexander was, in fact, a god, where is his Paul? Christmyth |
04-06-2009, 02:42 PM | #18 |
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04-06-2009, 02:59 PM | #19 | |
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Jiri |
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04-07-2009, 09:33 AM | #20 | |
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As for being a "god" - if you believe in "guiding spirits" (your daemon) then it is logical that the great have greater guides. Socrates too had a daemon guide, presumably a great one. The extent to which this was a "being" as opposed to part of your soul or a higher soul inducing your soul differed with the writer and audience. Plotinus focused on soul - later men, wrote as if daemons were lofty neighbors. This interplay of "god-soul" and "man-soul" caused problems for the Christians. Did Jesus' "god-soul" replace his "man-soul" and if so, when? Or did he always have both - it's a mystery! |
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