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#23 | ||
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
22×5×72×11 Posts |
Quote:
Closer to home (my home, any way) some calls for the murder of British leaders were successfully prosecuted. For instance, in http://www.britains-smallwars.com/Palestine/kidnap.htm we find Quote:
For clarification: I am not accusing you of supporting the aims and/or methods of the Stern gang and I am most certainly not accusing you of hypocrisy. I am only pointing out that hardly anyone can justifiably criticise other religions for advocating murder but not their own (or non-religious belief system if that be the case) without facing accusations of hypocrisy themselves. The distinction between terrorist and freedom fighter is often a fine one, and is almost always coloured by the history and prejudices of the person drawing the distinction. Paul Last fiddled with by xilman on 2010-11-29 at 21:52 Reason: Important clarification |
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#24 | |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
24·389 Posts |
Quote:
It is not about what the bible (or whatever book you happen to be reading) says, it is about what people actually do. When confronted with any of the myriad of contradictions in the bible, all of the bible believers that I have met will tell me that: "we must use gods guidance to help us interpret it blah blah blah ...". And that answer is a get-out-of-jail-free card. It means you can interpret it in any way that pleases you and you'll always be right. Just make sure you have a convincing line of |
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#25 |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
26×131 Posts |
What is offensive is dependant on who you are:
niger is a word that is usually used in a context of dislike based on the color of a persons skin, queer is a word usually used to show dislike of someones sexual preference/ just someone in general. It all depends on if you want to take offense to a word/wording that matters. Last fiddled with by science_man_88 on 2010-11-30 at 00:43 |
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#26 |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101Γ103 Posts
2×4,909 Posts |
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#27 |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
26×131 Posts |
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#28 | |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
3×2,083 Posts |
Quote:
![]() It is a known tenet of the Christian faith that no human can be perfect; thus even the truest of Christians cannot be expected to follow what the Bible says all of the time. The idea is that God will help us to do what is right and has paid for our sins in advance for the times when we won't; His ongoing work in us will have advanced to fulfillment by the time our (earthly) life has completed. It is also a known fact of the Christian faith that not everyone who claims to be Christian necessarily is. This is addressed in Jesus' parable of wheat and tares (among other passages). The upshot is that there is no clear "litmus test" that can be used by us humans to determine genuine faith; rather we are to inductively determine whether someone is likely "born again" by their exhibited "fruit" (translated to modern English, this refers to the acts that one does and their observed character traits). Since this is by no means a sure test, if someone claims the Christian faith and has not exhibited any "fruit" overtly contrary to it, he is given the benefit of the doubt and assumed to be a real Christian until proven otherwise. (This is one of the reasons why the label "Christian" is used to refer to adherents of a somewhat wide range of philosophies.) Also, it is an observation of mine that many Christians do not do a very good job explaining and defending their faith. For some this is because they do not themselves have a good grasp of exactly what defines their faith (and these are often the ones swayed this way and that by whatever the latest popular philosophical ideas are). For others, they understand internally what they believe but have a hard time articulating it. This is why you will often see clearly flawed and vacuous arguments presented in support of the Christian faith; I have said before (not on this forum) that many church congregations could benefit quite a bit from a class in formal logic and argumentative reasoning. The only rationally sound way the Bible can be interpreted is with itself: that is, using the context of the entire book to interpret individual passges. The scope of the crazy conclusions that have been arrived at throughout history from Scripture taken out of context is immense, but when it is analyzed as a whole, as a self-contained ultimate standard for human reasoning, these ambiguities disappear and you are left with a beautifully simple and timeless philosophy. Of course, since we as humans are imperfect, it is not uncommon for two Christians to look at the same Scriptures and arrive at different conclusions. This is not because it has two different valid interpretations, but rather because sometimes it is not easy for one person to grasp a logical connection that is plainly obvious to another. This is where the "we must use God's guidance to help us interpret it" comes in. (Again, you will perhaps see how these little tidbits of Christian thought come out as logically vacuous when not articulated properly.) I unfortunately do not have the time right now to get into an involved discussion (as inevitably has happened every time I enter the Soap Box ), else I would lay out the full deductive proof of the accuracy and noncontradictory nature of the Scriptures. Thus, I write the above to shed some (hopefully well-articulated) light on some understandable misconceptions arrived at in a discussion of mostly (entirely, prior to my post?) nonadherents.
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#29 | |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
2×3×13×83 Posts |
Quote:
things changes, as if the thing is thereby swept under the carpet. Your first example is normally spelt with 2 g's and was obviously originally meant to describe a black man (perhaps from Nigeria) in line with the Latin for black (negro?), but more informally and familiarly. As for the second one, queer (= peculiar) is more obviously offensive, but nothing compared to the hijacking of the word "gay" (= joyful). (Having lit blue touch paper, will retire to a safe distance) David Last fiddled with by davieddy on 2010-11-30 at 01:41 |
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#30 | |
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Aug 2006
10111010110112 Posts |
Quote:
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#31 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
1E0C16 Posts |
Quote:
Two aspects of the Strict Father model ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strict_father_model ) are that it (1) condones corporal punishment for disciplining children, and (2) holds it important to control sexuality. Extensions of these to a societal scale lead to emphasis on controlling expressions of sexuality, while being more lenient about expression of violence. American censorship has historically been more a concern of Strict Father folks than of Nurturant Parent folks. |
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#32 |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
100000110000002 Posts |
nigrum is the root for black if I read correctly and they both come from it.
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#33 |
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Sep 2010
338 Posts |
It is not a coincidence that tit-for-tat is also an optimal strategy in game theory. Have you read Robert Axelrod's "The Evolution of Cooperation"?
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