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03-06-2003, 05:33 PM | #121 |
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"Fear", in the biblical sense of the word where it says to fear God, means to hold him in a position of awe and respect - not to shake in your sandals before him.
Perfect love casts out being afraid. Kevin |
03-06-2003, 06:29 PM | #122 | |
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Originally posted by spurly :
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03-06-2003, 09:14 PM | #123 | |
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Hi, Heretic! And welcome to the II boards! Apologetix is long gone (hasn't responded since 2/28); however, it would seem that spurly has taken up the xian torch of illogic. I re-quoted your wonderful post above because I think we should seriously consider turning your thoughts into "The Atheist Anthem" and suggest that all atheist children be allowed to read this anthem aloud while others pray. Or that, in court cases about public posting of the ten commandments, atheist rebutt with "Sure, post away; as long as we're allowed to hang the Atheist Athem right next to the 10C." Etc. etc. Only being slightly facetious here... __________________ I'm moving to a small town in the southwest. If you're sick of the hubbub of city life, and would seriously consider relocation, please PM me. |
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03-07-2003, 05:54 AM | #124 | |
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Your contrast between "making a spherical cube" and "learning something" is a false contrast. The former conjoins incompatible properties -- but each property, taken individually, is realizable. So it is a simple error of reasoning to take the conjunction of incompatible properties and compare it to a single realizable property, when the point to which you are attempting to respond is that "learning something" is no less incompatible with "being omniscient" than "being spherical" is with "being a cube". My patience for explaining this very straightforward point is now exhausted. |
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03-07-2003, 08:34 AM | #125 | |
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Re: Study
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I'm a Christian, and I find the Bible fascinating, in all it's contradictory, patchwork, chaotic glory. Not much different from human life and history in general. To me, it is indeed (as I said on another thread) a record of the ethical development of a culture--and an incomplete record at that, because it's the history of the church that helps to complete it, and even now it isn't complete, as many of you atheists take pains to note. I would agree that if you're looking for verse after verse of Perfect Instructions for Everyday Life, (or Satisfactory Solutions to Knotty Epistemological Questions) the Bible will surely let you down. But neither I nor the Christians I know think that's what it is. I'll admit many Christians seem to treat it as such. |
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03-07-2003, 09:08 AM | #126 | |||||
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Re: love+fear=cubic sphere
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And as a matter of fact, I do love strangers, and the police as well. And for that matter, if I love someone, I am afraid of hurting them. I think this fear would also include the fear of performing unethical acts. But the point is, those weren't the acts I had in mind in my example. Quote:
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But their triumphs have no moral authority over me. However, I bet you do in fact deeply respect moral laws. Are you trying to tell me you respect moral laws the same way you do atheletes? (See how hard it is to define words? Even in English!) Quote:
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03-07-2003, 10:08 AM | #127 | |
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This is fine, and you are obviously more than welcome to do so. However I would point out that if you try to establish credibility of the bible with others, you cannot simply dismiss that which is completely contradictory, vulgar or absurd. Unless, of course, you congregate with others of a like mind. |
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03-07-2003, 02:02 PM | #128 |
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Mt. 10:28- "And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell. "
"Respect", huh? Try plugging that in place of 'fear' in that verse. |
03-07-2003, 02:53 PM | #129 | |
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It's a deterrant, like the fear of the law or the needle. Folks do have option as believers. Granted, the non-believer doesn't have to concern himself with such a fear. I think this type of "God will get you for that." stuff is intended to intimidate people into walking the line for fear of being punished if they don 't . |
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03-07-2003, 07:30 PM | #130 | ||||||
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Once more into the fray...
Thomas Metcalf,
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The following two statements:
are different statements, no? They represent two different tasks, don't they? Of course they do, because the verbs here have different objects. To compare the relative abilities of different beings to complete the same task, the subjects should be changed like so:
note that only subjects have changed and not the objects or the verbs. Now if we had changed the objects along with the subjects, we would get two obviously incomparable statements as follows:
Trying to assess and compare the relative creative capabilities of you and me from these two statements would make no sense, because, since the objects are different, the tasks are different. Similarly, I have argued in previous posts that the nature of the verb to learn means that there is an inherent object that is not mentioned whenever we make the statement that "being X learns". Basically, since to learn expands to "to increase one's own knowledge", then the capacity of "one's own knowledge" becomes a relevant object, as much as cube or sphere were in the previous examples. Consider these possible expansions of learning.
Now those two statements in their expanded form are as different as the subject-object mismatch from before, even though in common parlance we would only say "I learn" and "you learn". Apples and oranges. So basically, trying to conduct analysis on these statements is doomed to failure. If you really want to do it right, you would have to compare the statements like this (omitting the own of course, so that comparisons can be made at all):
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I hope I've cleared everthing up. |
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