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09-14-2013, 05:42 AM | #21 | ||
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And you would be still wasting your time trying to judge Genghiz Khan by today's standards. If he were alive today performing his feats, then you might have something to bleat about, but you will never make sense of the past by ignoring the values of the time and projecting your own biases into those events. And does it make any sense whatsoever comparing him to two translators who worked in Spain? That's just plain... meaningless. Serfdom was just starting to fail in Europe. The Europeans had fought a couple of useless wars to gain and maintain the Levant. Constantinople got sacked by knights on their way east. It wasn't too long before William Wallace was hanged, drawn and quartered. Such executions were still public entertainment through to the Elizabethan era and beyond. Judge the past by the past. |
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09-14-2013, 05:59 AM | #22 | |||
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09-14-2013, 06:44 AM | #23 | |
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I am wrong. I should not have mentioned a brutal military conqueror. I should have found a fourth century religious cleric, who did not believe, as Augustine taught, in "original sin". Mandeaism, and Manichaeism. Neither proliferated by the sword. Both rejected orthodox Judaism, ultimate source of Augustine's positions on many subjects: "holy scripture". The standards of that era, third and fourth century, did include military conquest, but also embraced learning, kindness, and beneficence. Why not compare Augustine with someone who preached humility, instead of elitism? I am not going to defend Augustine, as a man of his generation, or of that era. His writings, his ideas, represent Christianity, and must be rejected, not dismissed as, small deviations, but fundamentally in harmony with the thinking of the times. Augustine may not have held Khan's sword in his hand, but his tracts, outlining the need to expand Christianity, and remove the heathen (the "ignore list" of that era) justified the subsequent adoption of Genghis' method, by the church. Ask Giordano Bruno what happened, subsequently. Sam |
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09-14-2013, 07:25 AM | #24 | ||||
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09-14-2013, 08:03 AM | #25 | |||||
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History is not a mix and match affair. Quote:
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09-14-2013, 10:12 AM | #26 | |
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The very development of human society must take into account what was considered wrong or right in the past to GUIDE us today and even for the future. |
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09-14-2013, 11:10 AM | #27 | ||
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I should have cited Arius and other presbyters who had defied the official hierarchy. One reason for citing a guy like Bruno, is that someone recorded the atrocity of his execution. I am relatively confident that the same kind of crime has gone on in history, since ancient times, in many cultures, throughout the world. Quote:
I think he represented orthodox Christianity, rather well, and laid it out: straight. It isn't Augustine's texts per se, that I object to, but, rather, Christianity, its Jewish precursor, and its Muslim successor, though, as for that, I don't like any religion, or any faith based ideology. I disagree with you, that the church in Augustine's time, was fundamentally different from Christianity today--it remains "reactionary": need to acknowledge the divinity of Jesus to gain admission to Heaven, punishment of eternal damnation for those who ignore Jesus' divinity, need to punish the heathen (disbelievers). Sam |
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09-14-2013, 11:39 AM | #28 |
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I must confess that I also try to judge people from the past.
But whenever I try to cite them to appear in court, they always decline... |
09-14-2013, 12:29 PM | #29 | |
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What is the history of America if one cannot make judgments about Lincoln? |
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09-14-2013, 12:32 PM | #30 |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo
He was a hedonist who converted to Christianity and preaching getting a hard on is evil. The prototype of the modern Christian views on sex. '...For Augustine, the evil of sexual immorality was not in the sexual act itself, but rather in the emotions that typically accompany it. In On Christian Doctrine Augustine contrasts love, which is enjoyment on account of God, and lust, which is not on account of God.[121] For Augustine, proper love exercises a denial of selfish pleasure and the subjugation of corporeal desire to God. He wrote that the pious virgins raped during the sack of Rome, were innocent because they did not intend to sin.[122][123] Augustine's view of sexual feelings as sinful affected his view of women. For example he considered a man’s erection to be sinful, though involuntary,[124] because it did not take place under his conscious control. His solution was to place controls on women to limit their ability to influence men.[125] He equated flesh with woman and spirit with man.[126] He believed that the serpent approached Eve because she was less rational and lacked self-control, while Adam's choice to eat was viewed as an act of kindness so that Eve would not be left alone.[125] Augustine believed sin entered the world because man (the spirit) did not exercise control over woman (the flesh).[127] Augustine's views on women were not all negative, however. In his Tractates on the Gospel of John, Augustine, commenting on the Samaritan woman from John 4:1–42, uses the woman as a figure of the church...' |
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