Good, I think we agree thenThat's only because those people are idiots. Regret to inform that a religion comprising 75% of a nation's people can expect to contain 75% of its mind-numbingly stupid ones.

Good, I think we agree thenThat's only because those people are idiots. Regret to inform that a religion comprising 75% of a nation's people can expect to contain 75% of its mind-numbingly stupid ones.
When I become rich, I'm going to buy copies of The Genesis of Science in bulk to hand out/mail to people who say/make things like that.
Only it is not so clearcut as that. Many scholars who advanced civilization during that period were indeed clergy because they were the ones who controlled all the institutions of higher learning and had the time and funding to pursue it.
The RCC was quite dogmatic and very slow to accept the scientific method and those whose discoveries defied their beliefs of how the world supposedly worked. While there were a few exceptions, the RCC did much to slow scientific progress ever since the persecution of Galileo.
They continued that policy until they finally got tired of advances in science repeatedly proving their religious dogma to be so much nonsense, which required them to eventually modify it. They finally took a much more rational approach by accepting science instead of fighting it to a large extent, but that was only after centuries of holding back scientific progress in any area which conflicted with their official religious views.
But I would agree that we really don't know what progress would have been made without the RCC, or how much further ahead or behind we would not be without them. They did provide the infrastructure which largely made those advances possible.
Hey, we were nice enough to give the rest of the world a headstart of a few centuries of dark ages, followed by a few centuries of religious stupidity, and we still managed to bridge up the gap and come out on top.
You can't blame us if they spent 1500 years twidling their thumbs !
Considering the staggering amount of evil that happened in the world, we can safely conclude that God is really one spiteful bastard.
This. I don't understand the problem. All the Christian man need do is continue with his everyday life. He does not need to talk to anyone, he does not need to study books, he does not need to engage in lively debate on any topic whatsoever. His life is his teaching.Western/Conservative Christianity is not misanthropic, but a reaction to the changing culture around them, that slipped by in their complacent western acceptance of the changing culture. Christian influence can only go so far. Fighting back to regain a foothold in culture is not the way to go about it. Whining about it is not the way to go about it. Setting the example is the only way, but it is not guaranteed to produce results. The problem with Christianity, is that they expect results and jump ship when it does not happen. Having free speech does not help matters, because while they can state their opinion, they cannot expect others to accept their opinion. There is no problem with one running for public office. The democratic process does not supercede the will of God. God is still in control of who wins and the democratic process still works, even if the Christian does not get elected. If Christianity looses all influence, it was not because Christians became complacent and let it happen. It was because God willed it to happen. I do not claim to know God's will, but just stating that Christians have about as much influence over it as any one does. God's Will is always done, even in man's free exercise thereof.
timtofly said:Setting the example is the only way
Doesn't that exactly cover the "spiteful bastard" part ?Or, He keeps on saying, "I told you so".
This. I don't understand the problem. All the Christian man need do is continue with his everyday life. He does not need to talk to anyone, he does not need to study books, he does not need to engage in lively debate on any topic whatsoever. His life is his teaching.
In what respect(s) is this untrue? I am intrigued. Please explain it to me.
Perhaps, though, I have simply misunderstood what you intend to say.
I agree completely, and I have a great deal of respect for the few people who actually do this. As I said earlier, I only personally know 1 family that lives the way Christ is supposed to have commanded.
The rest of your post is self-contradictory - Will of God conflicting with Free Will, but not.![]()
I realize that humans have rationalized that free will is self given and they have every right to do so, along with the right to believe there is no God. I am coming from the perspective that there is a God and the free will that He provided is that humans have their own volition. That volition will never supercede God, since He allowed it to begin with. The contradiction comes in if that is free will or not? I think some feel pretty free without the bonds of religion, or so they say, so it seems pretty free to me.
You get some ranty Calvinist types in town from time to time, but I'm never sure if they're Wee Free, Wee Wee Free, or something else altogether. All I know is that, for some reason, they don't share with the Mormons, JWs, etc., the belief that you get more flies with sugar than with nuclear waste.Have ye come across an specimens of the Wee Free?
Well, technically it was in a period of temporary disestablishment, but you're right enough that it's hard to keep track of the buggers. (Although the Levellers were a political tendency, rather than a religious sect; their membership varied from ultra-pious Independents to sober rationalists who verged on deism.)Can't beat the Civil War(s) period (there were three of them), for a plethora of twitterers (this was previous to the established church). Diggers, Quakers, Levellers, Adamites, erm...squillions of 'em.
I saw that web page and read some of the reviews before responding. Suffice to say, I'm not that impressed except for the caveats which I have already mentioned. The Galileo incident alone likely set back the progress of modern science by at least 50 years. While the RCC just recently apologized for how he was treated after reviewing the records for the umpteenth time before finally doing so, some are still trying to spin their treatment of him as being justified even today.
Screw that, why don't you read what Plotinus and his, uh, fellow academic historian of religion and philosophy Roger Pearse have had to say about the whole Galileo thing? On this very forum, no less.I saw that and read some of the reviews before responding. Suffice to say, I'm not impressed at all. You can start by googling Galileo.
Doesn't that exactly cover the "spiteful bastard" part ?
Okay, you can add "childish and full of grudge" if you want it to be more explicit. At least it does explain why people act like dick, considering what they supposedly highest role-model is ^^
Ah, now I understand your position.
The funny thing is, the more neurologists look, the less likely it is that humans have conscious free will. There's a gap your god can use to influence people.
But I find the implications of that completely evil. Gods causing mothers to strangle their babies, serial-killers to torture and torment their victims before mercifully extinguishing them, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians murdered because our stupid president thought he heard a voice in his head...
No, that's an awful world. Luckily there's no evidence at all that it's the one we live in.
Man, where's "turn the other cheek" gone ?May I use your sig to answer this?
I've already been through all that the first time this topic came up. And I believe you were too.Screw that, why don't you read what Plotinus and his, uh, fellow academic historian of religion and philosophy Roger Pearse have had to say about the whole Galileo thing? On this very forum, no less.
I mean, I don't really think you'll read the post, because last time I told you to, you summarily ignored it and didn't change your opinion. But still.
How big of them to finally admit they were wrong all along.The Church eventually lifted the ban on Galileo's Dialogue in 1822, when it was common knowledge that the Earth was not the center of the Universe. Still later, there were statements by the Vatican Council in the early 1960's and in 1979 that implied that Galileo was pardoned, and that he had suffered at the hands of the Church. Finally, in 1992, three years after Galileo Galilei's namesake spacecraft had been launched on its way to Jupiter, the Vatican formally and publicly cleared Galileo of any wrongdoing.