Re: Funny anti-religious Internet pics
What are falsehoods ONLY according to the falsehoods to which you cling is what I propose to discuss... but you seem too afraid to get away from your own falsehoods.
You said something like the Bible is a mass of contradictions. That's false.
The only defense of your position on the Bible that's been made is Fundamentalist picking and choosing, refusing to read it as a whole book.
My "falsehoods" are called "reading the whole book" and using scholarship.
The "preservation and revival of learning" did not come through the Catholic church but through the Greek heretic Christian or Arab pagans miscreants:
Good at changing the subject, aren't you?
Your original assertion was that the Church destroyed technology and learning. That's false -- it preserved it, via the monasteries mostly. You keep jumping away from what you asserted to entirely later events.
Your assertion covered the collapse of Rome, so stick to the centuries between 300 and 700.
BTW, Western monasteries never stopped exchanging scholarship with their Eastern counterparts -- they were rather independent, that way.
we had it IN SPITE of the Catholic church, but that the church actually preserved and "advanced" even a small amount of that heritage is a lie repeated so many times that too many people accept it as a matter of faith without caring to examine the truth of it, and they consider that you are the liar if you deny and attack them for telling simply the truth that is there for anyone to read and understand. I wrote above what was actually that supposed "preservation" and "fostering".
LOL
I used to believe the fable you do. Then I ran into some books about medieval technology and invention, that had nothing to do with the Church -- except that consistently throughout, the places that those were preserved and improved were monasteries, which happen to be part of the Church. It doesn't really matter what the hierarchy and the asswipe in Rome were doing; the monasteries just kept improving what the Romans had and coming up with ideas of their own.
Interestingly, there's another theme running through that: a great deal of technological advancement in those monasteries had to do making wine and beer.
No, Liberation Theology is considered heretical because it tends to show that Catholic "truths" and dogmas are NOT Bible-based.
Hmm. I've read a few thousand pages of liberation theology, and they have a habit of referencing Marx and others quite frequently. Those figures aren't relevant to theology, and building theology relying on them is by definition heterodox at the least.
Finished the Greek part, starting over on it, and using my Easter vacation period to start the Hebrew part and test what are my profitings from the Hebrew handbooks I have been cramming the past few months. So far I have only gathered a few "interesting" points in translation here and there across the bibliography I use as a translator and translating geek.
Get back on me for next Christmas (provided we are still around) if you ever are actually interested in my progress with all that.
How many years of Greek? Have you gotten to where you can pick up Aesop's Fables or something by Aristotle and just read?
"Translator and translator geek"?
Religion is a claptrap in itself, whether alone or on the rocks.
The vast majority of the world, including many very educated and intelligent people, disagree with you.