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06-30-2010, 03:58 AM | #21 |
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I don't want to bore people, so I'll make this my last post on this thread.
It would be good if Dave31 -- as the last word on this particular matter -- could clarify Acharya's position on the Pygmies, the "sky people" and the Garden of Eden in the Mountains of the Moon in central Africa, and whether the cruciform images represented death, as raised in my post on Page 4. |
06-30-2010, 04:20 AM | #22 | ||
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I have no clue about the Pygmies, as this is the first time I have ever heard of such a hypothesis. So, having not read the books, I can't say what here hypothesis is based on, but I believe that she is a member of this forum, so maybe you could message her and see if she is willing to explain. |
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06-30-2010, 06:48 AM | #23 | |
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...and she's not alone. Even qualified scholars ruin their reputations when they are insufficiently uncritical. You really have to have a finely honed BS detector to play the game she's trying to play. |
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06-30-2010, 06:53 AM | #24 | ||
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07-16-2010, 01:06 PM | #25 | |
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Toto,
Humm, now that's interesting that you chose to split the John the Baptist stuff to create its own thread, which I thought was far more on topic than the Pygmy crap that belongs in the thread already in existence here. Those who've actually read her book can see how GakuseiDon needed to fallaciously take quotes out of context and offer a giant leap of faith in order to create a connection with Pygmies and the mythicist position topic of this thread, where none exists. Demonstrated by the fact that none of the articles, excerpts or the mythicist position video or the mythicist position itself mentions a single word about Pygmies. As mountainman already commented in post 118: Quote:
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07-16-2010, 01:33 PM | #26 |
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This is a quick and dirty split - I selected all posts that mention "pygmies" and moved them here, so Dave can address the issue, if he can.
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07-16-2010, 03:40 PM | #27 |
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Thanks Toto. It would be good to see Dave discuss this topic.
Dave, I went to great pains to make sure that I quoted Acharya S correctly. You write that I "fallaciously take quotes out of context". Can you identify which quotes I took out of context, please? |
07-17-2010, 01:47 AM | #28 | |||
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Let's make sense of this thread. Why Pygmies?
In the Freethoughtnation thread, Acharya S posts: Quote:
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So Schebesta was a Catholic missionary-anthropologist, on a mission to show that primitive people had a concept of monotheism. (It is part of Catholic belief that all religions are pale imitations or precursors of Catholicism.) The story that Hallet reports does not ring true, although it is hard to know if Hallet embellished what Schebesta told him, or if Schebesta spun the yarn, or if Schebesta was just wrong about the possibility of the Pygmies having heard these stories from neighboring Christian missionaries or Christian Africans. |
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07-17-2010, 02:41 AM | #29 | |
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So I'm not surprised to see Christian scholars looking for Christianity-styled monotheism among African tribes... and finding it! |
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07-17-2010, 06:21 AM | #30 | |
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1. Schebesta seems, from the casual reading I have done, to be somewhat more than just another Catholic missionary. He had studied Japanese, in preparation for going to Japan, prior to WWI, then, instead was transferred to Mozambique. I am unclear about how much time he spent in the "Belgian" Congo. I am even less clear about his knowledge of the Pygmy languages of the region--they are NOT similar to Bantu. 2. Schebesta seems to have spent considerably more time in Malaysia, studying, and living with a Negroid, dwarfed population living as hunter gatherers in remote locations of the rain forest. Their language is related to Khmer, not the languages of Africa, furthermore, they are genetically quite distinct from the African pygmies, so, some have suggested that they evolved into their current Negroid features, over tens of thousands of years. In other words, there would seem to be neither close genetic nor linguistic links between the two populations, hence, generalizations linking their belief systems may be fraught with peril. 3. It is unclear to me if Schebesta, particularly in his later years, agreed with the doctrine of missionary conversion to Roman Catholicism. In brief then, I am not in agreement with Toto's summary above, I imagine that there is room for a great deal of investigation, and at least two books written by Schebesta to read, first......Bottom line, I doubt any link whatsoever, between "monotheism" and Pygmy traditional folklore. But then, on the hand, I completely reject the assertion, offered yesterday, I think it was, on one of the threads, not sure which one, that Judaic monotheism represented the foundation of western civilization. What crap. avi |
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