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Old 04-15-2013, 06:37 AM   #401
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THE CHRISTIAN SCHEME - Pagan Roots: In the Beginning (Blavatsky)

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The fathers had decided to pervert the meaning of the word "daimon" ... [1]



[1] "The beings which the philosophers of other peoples distinguish
by the name "Daemons,' Moses names 'Angels'
," says Philo Judaeus.



εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
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Old 04-15-2013, 08:15 AM   #402
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
THE CHRISTIAN SCHEME - Pagan Roots: In the Beginning (Blavatsky)

Quote:

The fathers had decided to pervert the meaning of the word "daimon" ... [1]



[1] "The beings which the philosophers of other peoples distinguish
by the name "Daemons,' Moses names 'Angels'
," says Philo Judaeus.



εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
Sorry but to me it is wrong for a theologian to lean on the likes of Blavatsky who was a mystic and may have correct opinion but does not really know.

That is dangerous, of course, as look-alike Plato would say, that really is deprivation of the privation that they see now magnified in seeing the seer that they cannot be or they would be looking at themselves and write without leaning on anyone.
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Old 05-03-2013, 03:08 AM   #403
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Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
...


The author of this page also makes the claim that
Quote:
In the New Testament book Acts 17:18, Jesus is called a demon.

Someone disagreed with this, and stated "All texts basically refer to him as a caller of demons" (See the note)
In the text, the author of the Book of Acts claims that pagan philosphers said of Paul that he was calling up foreign gods or demons, meaning Jesus.
Young's Literal Translation
And certain of the Epicurean and of the Stoic philosophers, were meeting together to see him, and some were saying, 'What would this seed picker [i.e. Paul] wish to say?' and others, 'Of strange demons he doth seem to be an announcer;' because Jesus and the rising again he did proclaim to them as good news,

===OR ===

New International Version (©2011)
A group of Epicurean and Stoic philosophers began to debate with him. Some of them asked, "What is this babbler trying to say?" Others remarked, "He seems to be advocating foreign gods." They said this because Paul was preaching the good news about Jesus and the resurrection.
The term in question is


Xenōn daimoniōn
Ξένων δαιμονίων
Of foreign gods


I'm not sure how this helps your case. It looks like you have found a positive or neutral use of the term daimon in Christian literature.
It is incidental to the case since the source term is not "daimon" but "daimonion".




εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
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Old 05-03-2013, 03:16 AM   #404
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Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
I’m going to have one more go at this, and then I’ll leave this thread, since it has become clear to me that you have no real interest in discovering whether or not your claims are true or in arguing against evidence contrary to your claim in any way other than fallaciously, and that you are incapable of seeing not only that you have no case (even when you keep changing it) but how you have yourself undermined it. Further replies to your agenda driven postings are a waste of time.


Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Are you actually saying that Plato never thought that a δαίμων was an evil spirit?
What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit.
Leaving aside the matter that no one disputes this ......

So let me get this straight Jeffrey.

Does this imply that you are essentially in agreement with the OP?



Quote:
..... I note with interest that this is not what you claimed in the OP. Your claim in the OP was that Christians used the term with a meaning it had not previously possessed – a claim that is absolutely false as you yourself, perhaps unintentionally, which you are admitting now.

The term I used concerning the change of meaning was the term subversion, and I provided a definition of it:

Quote:
Subversion refers to an attempt to transform the established social order and its structures of power, authority, and hierarchy.



εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
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Old 05-09-2013, 09:59 PM   #405
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Further evidence that the subversion of the notion of the Greek "daimon" was continued by the 4th and 5th century Christians is found in Augustine.

I am reposting this evidence for discussion.



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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post

For interested parties there is also available the reply to Porphyry from the Egyptian priest:

Theurgia or The Egyptian Mysteries By Iamblichus
Reply of Abammon, the Teacher to The Letter of Porphyry to Anebo
together with Solutions of the Questions Therein Contained

Translated from the Greek by ALEXANDER WILDER, M.D. F.A.S.

As a contrast to the Greek conception of the "daimon" and the use of that term in Taylor's translation of Porphyry, we may turn and see what the Christian Augustine uninformatively and mistakenly writes about this very letter in NPNF1-02. St. Augustine's City of God and Christian Doctrine


Quote:
Originally Posted by Saint Augustine


Chapter 11.—Of Porphyry’s Epistle to Anebo, in Which He Asks for Information About the Differences Among Demons

It was a better tone which Porphyry adopted in his letter to Anebo the Egyptian, in which, assuming the character of an inquirer consulting him, he unmasks and explodes these sacrilegious arts. In that letter, indeed, he repudiates all demons, whom he maintains to be so foolish as to be attracted by the sacrificial vapors, and therefore residing not in the ether, but in the air beneath the moon, and indeed in the moon itself. Yet he has not the boldness to attribute to all the demons all the deceptions and malicious and foolish practices which justly move his indignation. For, though he acknowledges that as a race demons are foolish, he so far accommodates himself to popular ideas as to call some of them benignant demons.

///



We should sympathize with this great philosopher in the difficulty he experienced
in acquainting himself with and confidently assailing the whole fraternity of devils,
which any Christian old woman would unhesitatingly describe and most unreservedly detest
.

If a general reader were to read both texts above, and compare Porphyry's letter with Augustine's Christian treatment of the same letter, it may well become immediately apparent that Augustine is indulging in Christian propaganda.

Moreover it is clear that Augustine's Christian propaganda involves the subversion of Porphyry's Greek "daimon".

Hence the OP.




εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
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Old 05-10-2013, 01:52 AM   #406
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
I’m going to have one more go at this, and then I’ll leave this thread, since it has become clear to me that you have no real interest in discovering whether or not your claims are true or in arguing against evidence contrary to your claim in any way other than fallaciously, and that you are incapable of seeing not only that you have no case (even when you keep changing it) but how you have yourself undermined it. Further replies to your agenda driven postings are a waste of time.


Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Are you actually saying that Plato never thought that a δαίμων was an evil spirit?
What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit.
Leaving aside the matter that no one disputes this ......

So let me get this straight Jeffrey.

Does this imply that you are essentially in agreement with the OP?
Plainly no. Jeffrey's position seems not far from mine. Your o.p. is erroneous and you haven't supported your claims. You've shown that you aren't able to.

Understand: the terms we use are frequently polysemous. δαίμων is one example. You just haven't taken that idea on board. So, when Jeffrey writes "What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit" he says nothing different from what he has said consistently through this thread. But there are just so many ways one can say it, when you don't listen.

Josephus is a writer who knows a wide range of usage for the term, yet, in a passage I've already pointed out to you (AJ 8.45 [8.2.5], see post #21), Josephus uses δαίμων specifically in the sense of "demon" you want to have originated with christians:
And God granted him knowledge of the art used against demons for the benefit and healing of men. He also composed incantations by which illnesses are relieved, and left behind forms of exorcisms with which those possessed by demons drive them out, never to return.
His usage here is no different from later christians, yet it cannot be said to be derived from christians, so it must reflect a pre-christian usage of the word.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
..... I note with interest that this is not what you claimed in the OP. Your claim in the OP was that Christians used the term with a meaning it had not previously possessed – a claim that is absolutely false as you yourself, perhaps unintentionally, which you are admitting now.

The term I used concerning the change of meaning was the term subversion, and I provided a definition of it:

Quote:
Subversion refers to an attempt to transform the established social order and its structures of power, authority, and hierarchy.
You need to demonstrate that it was only christians who used δαίμων to indicate something different before you can argue for your notion of subversion, but you have failed to do so, despite your assertions. You have failed to show that the christian use is particularly different from the specific uses of the term that Jeffrey has already brought to your attention.

So, after 400 posts in the thread you still haven't got past your claims in the o.p.
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Old 05-10-2013, 10:19 AM   #407
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I, not Jeffrey, at post #392 wrote "What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit"




εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
I’m going to have one more go at this, and then I’ll leave this thread, since it has become clear to me that you have no real interest in discovering whether or not your claims are true or in arguing against evidence contrary to your claim in any way other than fallaciously, and that you are incapable of seeing not only that you have no case (even when you keep changing it) but how you have yourself undermined it. Further replies to your agenda driven postings are a waste of time.


Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Are you actually saying that Plato never thought that a δαίμων was an evil spirit?
What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit.
Leaving aside the matter that no one disputes this ......

So let me get this straight Jeffrey.

Does this imply that you are essentially in agreement with the OP?
Plainly no. Jeffrey's position seems not far from mine. Your o.p. is erroneous and you haven't supported your claims. You've shown that you aren't able to.

Understand: the terms we use are frequently polysemous. δαίμων is one example. You just haven't taken that idea on board. So, when Jeffrey writes "What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit" he says nothing different from what he has said consistently through this thread. But there are just so many ways one can say it, when you don't listen.

Josephus is a writer who knows a wide range of usage for the term, yet, in a passage I've already pointed out to you (AJ 8.45 [8.2.5], see post #21), Josephus uses δαίμων specifically in the sense of "demon" you want to have originated with christians:
And God granted him knowledge of the art used against demons for the benefit and healing of men. He also composed incantations by which illnesses are relieved, and left behind forms of exorcisms with which those possessed by demons drive them out, never to return.
His usage here is no different from later christians, yet it cannot be said to be derived from christians, so it must reflect a pre-christian usage of the word.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
..... I note with interest that this is not what you claimed in the OP. Your claim in the OP was that Christians used the term with a meaning it had not previously possessed – a claim that is absolutely false as you yourself, perhaps unintentionally, which you are admitting now.

The term I used concerning the change of meaning was the term subversion, and I provided a definition of it:

Quote:
Subversion refers to an attempt to transform the established social order and its structures of power, authority, and hierarchy.
You need to demonstrate that it was only christians who used δαίμων to indicate something different before you can argue for your notion of subversion, but you have failed to do so, despite your assertions. You have failed to show that the christian use is particularly different from the specific uses of the term that Jeffrey has already brought to your attention.

So, after 400 posts in the thread you still haven't got past your claims in the o.p.
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Old 05-10-2013, 02:22 PM   #408
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
I, not Jeffrey, at post #392 wrote "What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit"
If it always had the possible meaning of being an evil spirit, then Christians did not change the meaning or subvert it. We're back where we started.

Is there anything more to be said in this thread?
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Old 05-10-2013, 07:57 PM   #409
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
His usage here is no different from later christians, yet it cannot be said to be derived from christians, so it must reflect a pre-christian usage of the word.
"Rubbish".
Of course not.
Josephus' text MAY reflect "pre-Christian" usage of δαίμων, indicating an exclusively evil, sentient, anthropomorphic creature, or, alternatively, since neither spin, nor anyone else, on this forum or elsewhere on planet earth, to date, has anything like an "original" text from the quill of "josephus", one MUST consider the possibility of FRAUD, which is sometimes called "interpolation", by those who consider the "Patristic" writings of the second and third centuries, to be largely veracious. I consider the entire Christian genre to be fake, until proven otherwise. Josephus' text in particular, is ESPECIALLY dubious. I would no more trust ONE WORD attributed to that author, then I would trust USA government officials to speak truthfully about the atrocities committed by USA during the "Korean campaign".

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman
What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit.
So, there is a concrete, well defined assertion. It ought to be child's play, for a Greek linguistics expert, like spin, or Jeffrey, to either confirm, or repudiate the notion that Plato had written, or had not written, some passage elaborating with specificity the Satanic character of δαίμων, without resorting to all manner of irrelevant and extraneous name calling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson
... it has become clear to me that you have no real interest in discovering whether or not your claims are true or in arguing against evidence contrary to your claim in any way other than fallaciously, and that you are incapable of seeing not only that you have no case (even when you keep changing it) but how you have yourself undermined it.
Either Plato's texts demonstrate, uniformly, and with great consistency, the central concept of δαίμων as representing an EXCLUSIVELY evil, sentient, anthropomorphic deity, or they do not.

DOES any forum member, whether Jeffrey or spin, or anyone else, have evidence to demonstrate that the Christians simply adopted the prevailing, conventional meaning of δαίμων, a meaning which, centuries before the arrival of Jesus, had already been specified with utter clarity, and unequivocal consistency? I argue, that mountainman's central thesis, remains correct, until proven wrong. That thesis, as I understand it, is this: The Christians changed the meaning of δαίμων, from a figure possessing the qualities of "Pneuma", (not a real life anthropomorphic creature), to one, savagely distinct, a genuine "sarka", capable of climbing vertical walls like a lizard man, and arguing with Jesus, like Satan himself--a completely, thoroughly, 100% horrible, anthropomorphic deity.

I haven't found support for Jeffrey's contention that this idiosyncratic, "Christian" definition of δαίμων had been widely acknowledged in ancient Greek literature, long before the arrival on the scene of Mark's gospel, or the writings of Tatian or Justin, if they in fact wrote in the second century, as no one knows for certain. What I observe, is that δαίμων represented, in ancient Greek literature, not an anthropomorphic, sentient, exclusively evil deity, akin to the figures portrayed in Marcion's ideas, but rather, an entity of neutral disposition, (in other words, a spirit, not flesh, of undetermined character, not intrinsically, or innately, EXCLUSIVELY evil) serving as a kind of metaphor for a parent or guardian, or guiding light, not a synonym for Satan, as represented in the Christian writings attributed to the sole extant, manuscript, copied, supposedly in fidelity, in an Italian monastery during the Inquisition, of Justin Martyr's three essays (but, from where sprang Justin's original text? Does Origen comment on Justin? How about Clement? Tertullian?).

WHY should the ancient Greeks care about Satan? Satan represents a Jewish notion. What? Plato copied not only Moses, but also Chronicles? Hey, yeah, why not, maybe Plato was circumcised?

To convince me, if no one else, that Pete errs in his thinking, all one needs to explain, is why the ancient Greeks had the slightest interest in ANYTHING Jewish. No, Plato did not copy Moses. No, Aristotle was not enchanted by proverbs authored by David or anyone else. There is a fixation, on this forum, with introducing the idea that Judaism represents some kind of ultimate philosophy, and that everything else of importance, flows from this most exalted form of human creativity. Next we will read that Jewish emigration, following the sack of Jerusalem, by the Romans, in the first century, inspired the Dao De Jing. Lao Zi, it turns out, was also, like Plato, of the circumcision. I am so lucky to belong to that elite group, myself.

Taylor's book elaborates these points. yup, Hippocrates is irrelevant to understand the Therapeutae. Did Hippocrates write about δαίμων? Did he quote Moses, or rely upon David, when he described Trephanation? Of course, we know that the Egyptians who used Trephanation long before Hippocrates, relied upon Jewish physicians to teach them, what little the Egyptians had been capable of absorbing from their Jewish masters. Fortunately, we have Taylor to rely upon, to remove the gossip of heathen like me, who assert that the Therapeutae, described by Hippocrates, had nothing to do with Judaism, just as δαίμων, in ancient times, had nothing to do with Satan, or Satanic concepts.
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Old 05-11-2013, 12:24 AM   #410
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Quote:
Originally Posted by avi View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
His usage here is no different from later christians, yet it cannot be said to be derived from christians, so it must reflect a pre-christian usage of the word.
"Rubbish".
Of course not.
Josephus' text MAY reflect "pre-Christian" usage of δαίμων, indicating an exclusively evil, sentient, anthropomorphic creature, or, alternatively, since neither spin, nor anyone else, on this forum or elsewhere on planet earth, to date, has anything like an "original" text from the quill of "josephus", one MUST consider the possibility of FRAUD, which is sometimes called "interpolation", by those who consider the "Patristic" writings of the second and third centuries, to be largely veracious. I consider the entire Christian genre to be fake, until proven otherwise. Josephus' text in particular, is ESPECIALLY dubious. I would no more trust ONE WORD attributed to that author, then I would trust USA government officials to speak truthfully about the atrocities committed by USA during the "Korean campaign".
avi's contribution here is apparently that no-one can know anything about ancient texts for fear that they have theoretically been perverted or fraudulently produced. Deep, avi, deep.

Quote:
Originally Posted by avi View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman
What I have been actually saying here is that we have no evidence whatsoever that Plato (and Plotinus and other Greeks who followed him) never thought that a δαίμων was exclusively an evil spirit.
So, there is a concrete, well defined assertion. It ought to be child's play, for a Greek linguistics expert, like spin, or Jeffrey, to either confirm, or repudiate the notion that Plato had written, or had not written, some passage elaborating with specificity the Satanic character of δαίμων, without resorting to all manner of irrelevant and extraneous name calling.
FFS, no-one except moutainman has claimed any different. Here is mm's original blunder:
What purpose would the Gospel authors have had for subverting the original Greek meaning of the term "daimon"? The Greek usage of the term "daimon" [δαίμων] in the Gospels (an evil spirit) appears to be distinctly different from how the term is used in the Greek classical tradition (a god, a goddess or an inferior deity, whether good or bad).
That δαίμων could mean an evil spirit outside christian texts has been demonstrated here several times.

Quote:
Originally Posted by avi View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson
... it has become clear to me that you have no real interest in discovering whether or not your claims are true or in arguing against evidence contrary to your claim in any way other than fallaciously, and that you are incapable of seeing not only that you have no case (even when you keep changing it) but how you have yourself undermined it.
Either Plato's texts demonstrate, uniformly, and with great consistency, the central concept of δαίμων as representing an EXCLUSIVELY evil, sentient, anthropomorphic deity, or they do not.
This exclusivity you inject here is irrelevant to all but mountainman's initial fallacious claim. The claim that the gospel use of δαίμων (=an evil spirit) "appears to be distinctly different", is just plain wrong. First, the gospels tend to use the diminutive δαιμονιον. Second, the later christian usage in fact represents one meaning of the term. So the christian usage may represent a restriction of usage, but certainly one that existed prior to christianity. If that restriction reflects in anyone's mind a "subversion" then almost any language change would be considered such a subversion.

[Remaining reverie excised.]
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