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02-06-2012, 08:19 PM | #11 | ||||
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Homoousian Quote:
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Have you read William's book on Arius? |
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02-06-2012, 08:24 PM | #12 |
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Have you read William's book on Arius? No, I didn't think so. Do yourself a favor and read it, and then point out where I am misrepresenting anything written in it.
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02-09-2012, 05:29 PM | #13 | |||||
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They are related via freethought and rationalism. They are both directed at what is was that Arius believed and did not believe. The Arians were the followers of the words of Arius. Quote:
I have presented evidence and citations above and elsewhere regarding the assessment of Arius of Alexandria by modern scholars in the sources. These assessments are indicating that Arius was familiar with Platonist philosophy published by Porphyry and containing the Eneads of Plotinus. In the sources, Constantine even calls Arius a "Porphyrian" in his circular letter sent to "ALL BISHOPS" immediately after Nicaea. In the sources, from the fragment of Philip of Side, the council of Nicaea is characterized between the Bishops and the PHILOSOPHERS. Same or Similar ESSENCE? 'homoousios' or homoiousios' ? In the sources, the Council of Nicaea is characterized about a controversy whether Jesus was to be classified as just SIMILAR to the supreme divinity, or as the SAME as the supreme divinity. Circumstantial evidence, such as the history of Eusebius, lends credence to the belief that the supreme divinity to which Jesus was being compared by the orthodox, and the Arians, was the same supreme divinity of the Jews, as outlined in Constantine's Bible. There is an alternative to consider. Namely that the supreme divinity to which Arius (and the Arians) were comparing Jesus, and finding Jesus SIMILAR to (What else could you say to Constantine's face and expect to live?), was not the supreme divinity located within the canonical books of Constantine and his followers, but the supreme divinity located within the canonical books of Plato and his followers. The Platonists liked to use the negative. How many of the five sophisms of Arius, recorded on the earliest creeds are couched as negative statements? There was time when He was not.Can anyone advise the underlying Greek for "subsistence/substance"? How is it related to "essence" - the Greek term .... οὐσία In this alternative consideration, Arius is representing the Platonist philosophers at Nicaea. We may presume that his detractors freely lied about his involvment with that cause, after his "damnatio memoriae". The Mystical Controversy at the heart of Nicaea may have at first been a political (and military) controversy. Quote:
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02-09-2012, 05:50 PM | #14 |
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02-25-2012, 06:52 AM | #15 | ||
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nondual οὐσία (essence)
Was the inexpressible essence οὐσία referred to by Arius
the SAME essence or a SIMILAR essence to the modern concept of nondual essence? From Nondualism#Christianity Quote:
From Nondualism#Gnosticism Quote:
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