...it takes more than a lifetime eighthO .....
A courteous, intelligent and informed discussion about religion
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cavatina
Vinteuil: I can think of one eminently practical way to prove some people are more sensitive and skilled at deception (and detecting it) than others: may I challenge you to a cordial game of heads-up poker? Bring plenty of money.
Though I suppose a large part of the reason I absolutely kill at poker is I have such a baby face and soft voice, nobody would ever suspect me of being a ruthless aggressive b**** who has the mathematical ability to calculate odds in the middle of a hand. I suppose once you know that, I lose some of my edge, but hey! I'm game.Last edited by Guest; 07-08-11, 14:22.
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Originally posted by cavatina View PostVinteuil: I can think of one eminently practical way to prove some people are more sensitive and skilled at deception (and detecting it) than others: may I challenge you to a cordial game of heads-up poker? Bring plenty of money.
Though I suppose a large part of the reason I absolutely kill at poker is I have such a baby face and soft voice, nobody would ever suspect me of being a ruthless aggressive b**** who has the mathematical ability to calculate odds in the middle of a poker hand. I suppose once you know that, I lose some of my edge, but hey! I'm game.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWhat about the Pāli Tipitaka?
Buddhism came to Japan as a gift to the emperor in a form of scholarly volumes and not a set/series of teaching. There is no one book to which common/ordinary people can refer to. There was already well established Shinto then (can’t remember, 6 or 7th century) and now things are co-existing or mixed-up, depending on the way you choose to look at it. Either way, it is a very different way of existing from that of Christianity.
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostSorry, I should have said ‘in Japan’.
Buddhism came to Japan as a gift to the emperor in a form of scholarly volumes and not a set/series of teaching. There is no one book to which common/ordinary people can refer to. There was already well established Shinto then (can’t remember, 6 or 7th century) and now things are co-existing or mixed-up, depending on the way you choose to look at it. Either way, it is a very different way of existing from that of Christianity.
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That’s a useful reminder, ds, that the protestant model of scripture is not the only one (and indeed I could argue at length it is neither the authentic nor helpful Christian one – for most of Christian history the majority of believers did not have their own printed copies.)
I would suggest that to say “Buddhism isn’t a religion, it’s a spirituality” is a cop out, like saying “heritage” instead of “history”. Normative religion isn't necessarily evangelical protestantism (which only developed in the late 1600s.)
I’ve been talking about individual religious experience, but there is also a communal aspect, which implies commitment to a community. This is where the power bit comes in so appallingly, as membership of the religious community becomes a means of coercion. It is tempting to call the communal thing with the possibility of control “religion” and the personal thing “spirituality”
Religion can cut both ways: it can be a way of maintaining the status quo which it can symbolise. It can also empower the oppressed to stand up for their dignity, and defy the Prince of this World. Think of the of the parliamentarians in the English Civil War, the Tolpuddle Martyrs (good Methodists all), William Wilberforce, Martin Luther King, Ghandi or Lech Walesa. (Most of those examples are protestants.)
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostFF - Please feel free to remove if considered not quite appropriate.
http://flowingdata.com/2011/08/05/fl...-the-internet/
Why haven't I looked at this thread before today?! It's a riot"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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StephenO
Originally posted by Don Basilio View Postthe protestant model of scripture is not the only one (and indeed I could argue at length it is neither the authentic nor helpful Christian one – for most of Christian history the majority of believers did not have their own printed copies.)
Later translations of the Bible, including the King James Version, drew heavily on Tyndale's. 85% of the KJV comes directly from his version. Most Bibles used in churches today, like the New International Version, are heavily indebted to Tyndale. If anything, his translation is probably the most accurate and reliable source of Christian scripture and the closest to the original writings.
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Anna
For anyone interested in William Tyndale there are two books readily available
God's Secretaries by Adam Nicholson and William Tyndale by Brian Moynahan. I think Nicholson did some religion programmes for BBC4
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by cavatina View PostThe short answer? Read Schopenhauer.
In other words God is not knowable to us, nor could He ever be. Rowan Williams, by definition, does not "know" any more about God than I do. It's all down to faith, and belief. You can't choose to have faith.
With a bit of luck cavatina can expand on this when she gets back from the Prom
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Originally posted by StephenO View PostI'm not quite sure what you mean by "the Protestant model of scripture".
The orthodox view is that Jesus Christ is the incarnate word of God. The Bible is the authoritative witness to him, but it took some three hundred years before the Christian community agreed which books constituted the canon, reflecting their experience.
The pre-protestant view was that scripture worked on a number of levels as well as the literal. Indeed the literal level wasn't that important. Whether or not there was a man who went down to Jericho and fell among thieves is irrelevant to whether we should care for strangers in need.
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Originally posted by Don Basilio View PostThe pre-protestant view was that scripture worked on a number of levels as well as the literal. Indeed the literal level wasn't that important. Whether or not there was a man who went down to Jericho and fell among thieves is irrelevant to whether we should care for strangers in need.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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