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12-25-2006, 06:20 AM | #161 | |
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A review of the Closing of the Western Mind
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12-25-2006, 12:50 PM | #162 | ||
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I have far more facts at my disposal than you can possibly imagine.
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And you'd be hard pressed to find any group of people fighting oppression, that don't use asymmetrical tactics. Feel free to try, however. Quote:
The brutal truth is that this ideology is not a "middle class fantasy." If it were, then it wouldn't have any toehold in the depressed slums of the Mideast, which -- I can assure you -- it most certainly does. Unless you think those slums are middle class or something. What's more, the ideology traces itself back through Afghanistan of the 1980s - do you think that mujahideen resistance to the Soviet invasion was rooted in "middle class fantasy"? Your analysis is shallow, regurgitated talking points from the neocons. No wonder it crumbles under inspection. |
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12-25-2006, 01:11 PM | #163 |
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please note that this thread was resurrected after being dormant for several months, and that this is BCH, not PD.
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12-25-2006, 02:15 PM | #164 | ||||||||
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countries -- or even well-defined regions of countries -- that are overwhelmingly christian, yet are being occupied by Islamic countries or an Islamic elite. I'm talking about regions, provinces, etc. that have borders to them (i.e., Chechnya, the West Bank, the five muslim provinces of Thailand). Pointing to a region and saying "the south" does not satisfy the definition. The problem with using cardinal compass points is that no one can say where the area begins or ends; i.e., where does southern Indiana begin? Which towns are included, and which are not? Who gets to decide? Moreover, Southern Sudan does not fit the requirements I set for (above) for another reason: it is not overwhelmingly christian. With caveats: Quote:
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And note how the Christian SPLA is behaving - red: Quote:
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And what you leave out is that there is now a peace treaty, one which the south refused to sign until it got concessions on adding certain areas that were known to be oil-rich. Quote:
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12-27-2006, 03:15 PM | #165 | |
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By sparing the (mostly) Christian monastaries which had preserved such knowledge. Like Freeman, you cast about for any kind of indictment for a straw man you call Christianity in the vernacular sense, and don't realize the breadth of your brush. It was Christian scholarship that retained much of Roman culture in the Iberian peninsula. It was also Christian culture which maintained much of Hellenist writing in Syria. Granted, one reason was simply that they valued parchments, even used parchments, above many other things so some was simply circumstantial; however, why do you think Euclid's Geometrica is so well known? The Etruscans certainly didn't preserve it for us. |
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12-27-2006, 03:27 PM | #166 | |
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I'm not saying, nor has anyone, that every last person who called them self a Christian was engaged in the destruction of learning, but that the destruction of learning WAS a result of the rise of Christianity, i.e. the people who were responsible for it, were Christians. Christianity is completely ideologically opposed to naturalism and the ideas of Epicurus, so I still want to see anyone present an example of a Christian that promoted Epicurean ideas, or the idea that the universe is not guided by providence and there is no afterlife. There is simply no way that you or anyone else can every claim or show that the rise of Christianity wasn't responsible for a decline of these previously popular ideas. |
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12-27-2006, 03:47 PM | #167 | |
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For another, your criticism is a double edged sword; you cannot prove an alternate history would have been realized without Christianity. I am very skeptical of modern believers, because they have (in my mind) the tools necessary to grow beyond the paradigm of religion. But for someone in, say, the 10th century Byzantium, who had skeptical leanings and a curiosity about the natural world, how would they nurture those leanings and advance science? By joining a monastary, of course. You seem to criticise it all as somehow bad or evil, and I see it as just another permutation of human nature, just a political juggernaut gone wild, like many other political juggernauts. But I'll indulge your request for examples; how about Gregori Mendel's contribution to genetics? too late in history? How about Roger Bacon. Still too late for you? How about Bede? Lose your hatred and the logic will delight you more. |
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12-29-2006, 10:41 AM | #169 | ||
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12-29-2006, 11:21 AM | #170 |
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