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Re: Funny anti-religious Internet pics
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Good at changing the subject, aren't you?
I don't "jump": again, I do what you do not, namely elaborate. You are the one jumping to CONCLUSIONS as if they were self-evident and came from nowhere but your own conviction, and jumping OUT of precisely that frame of Late Antiquity, from the Constantinean era to the beginning of the VIIth century, as you do jump when you plainly state that "Western monasteries never stopped exchanging scholarship with their Eastern counterparts" which using the tone and phrases you seem so fond to use on this thread IS totally, not just inaccurate, but false: it would be only inaccurate if you had said that there were exchanges through the so-called Middle Ages, because it would hint at a continuity of centuries that never was the case, but by pretending that the exchange actually was continuous, you are planily lying.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.
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.![]()
They are at least open and explicit in their references, while the claims of fundamental dogmas about the Virgin Mary have more in common with old pagan traditions that with anything that can be found IN the Bible. Of course, you can always poke as much as you want AROUND the Bible.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.
Some "helper" put mine in storage when I was relocating a few years ago, and I haven't seen it since. As Jockboy could attest, my Hebrew is deteriorating rapidly.
BTW, have you got the one with the introduction(s) in German, in Latin, or both?
No, being gay, black, white, red-headed, short, ugly, sick, etc., are things which we do not choose. They are neither right nor wrong. They just are.
Religion, on the other hand, is a choice to believe in incorrect information. If people insisted on running around arguing that 2 + 2 = 5 and 10/2 is 3, despite being given ample evidence to the contrary, I'd make fun of them too.
You're the only one stating any such argument.
That is what you call my simply trying to elaborate and clarify on the mysteric one-liners that you slovenly let drop as hints that what you say is right just because you are sure you are.
I don't "jump": again, I do what you do not, namely elaborate. You are the one jumping to CONCLUSIONS as if they were self-evident and came from nowhere but your own conviction, and jumping OUT of precisely that frame of Late Antiquity, from the Constantinean era to the beginning of the VIIth century, as you do jump when you plainly state that "Western monasteries never stopped exchanging scholarship with their Eastern counterparts" which using the tone and phrases you seem so fond to use on this thread IS totally, not just inaccurate, but false: it would be only inaccurate if you had said that there were exchanges through the so-called Middle Ages, because it would hint at a continuity of centuries that never was the case, but by pretending that the exchange actually was continuous, you are planily lying.
As I said in previous posts, there were punctual tidal flows of learning from the Greek and Arabic-speaking areas, particularly during the Late Middle Ages precisely, as I pointed out, when the economic and social and, therefore, intellectual system in the Western European area was developing independently from the church (although, of course, not totally FREE from it).
What you adscribe to the monacal system as flowering, only was ever so in the urban context: the beautiful, technologically savvy environment you depict in your vision of the monastery communities is the rosy wet dream of world- and civilization-weary survivalists, the Omega Men pathetically and unawarely defiling the the rags and loose threads of civilization they pretend to preserve and honor as precious whole garments...
Read again: I said that it didn't even care THAT much (apart from some barbaric burning and so) but that the church couldn't and wouldn't cope with the challenge of sustaining a complex and enlightened civilization, and that it simply took a couple (almost literally) of anecdotical and testimonial, in the technological context, and nitpicked manipulated texts in the case of textual heritage and tradition, as sustaining elements of their new parodic new Christian order.
Did the church preserve the industry and agricultural productivity, the communication, trade, monetary, urban and general social system of the Roman Empire? did Rome "fall" trying to preserve that but, oh, the church DID succeed?
They are at least open and explicit in their references, while the claims of fundamental dogmas about the Virgin Mary have more in common with old pagan traditions that with anything that can be found IN the Bible. Of course, you can always poke as much as you want AROUND the Bible.
Intro in German, English, French, Spanish and, finally, Latin. Why do you ask?
 ](*,)](/images/smilies/bang.gif)
omg! i have been saying this for years!
Why God created man.
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In the last two posts, four of the images merely show the ignorance of the person who made the image, two are childish, two are sadly true.
