KMRblue1027
Deity
That's why I prefer she. Or maybe even they.
They? Does that make God the Q Continuum then?
That's why I prefer she. Or maybe even they.
That's why I prefer she. Or maybe even they.
That's certainly true. I don't think it contradict's Narz's point however.
No. We use the singular. God uses the plural.
J
They? Does that make God the Q Continuum then?
They is also a singular pronoun.No. We use the singular. God uses the plural.
The word they (with its counterparts them, their, and themselves) as a singular pronoun to refer to a person of unspecified sex has been used since at least the 16th century. In the late 20th century, as the traditional use of he to refer to a person of either sex came under scrutiny on the grounds of sexism, this use of they became more common. It is now generally accepted in contexts where it follows an indefinite pronoun such as anyone, no one, someone, or a person, as in ‘anyone can join if they are a resident’ and ‘each to their own’ . In other contexts, coming after singular nouns, the use of they is now common, though less widely accepted, especially in formal contexts. Sentences such as ‘ask a friend if they could help’ are still criticized for being ungrammatical. Nevertheless, in view of the growing acceptance of they and its obvious practical advantages, they is used in this dictionary in many cases where he would have been used formerly.
No. We use the singular. God uses the plural.
J
Your way of thinking has me confused, Mr Hawk. I confess it freely.
Are you, by any chance, a Christian fundamentalist?
Who's more likely to have gotten it right?
edit: wait, looking into this. The people who thought God used 'we' also thought God destroyed nearly all animal life with a global flood (except for animal pairs), I'm not sure we can really consider their opinion to be gospel.
"I just missed a call, I wonder what they wanted."Well, it isn't really a singular pronoun. Though it is sometimes misused as one.
I am perfectly aware of the gender-neutral role of "he", I just don't want to send the message that using it sends.Unwillingness to learn/accept that grammatical rules can include gender-neutral "he" have meant that PC uses have trumped objective practicality on this one. Which is fine, people take moral/religious stances on how they want to world to be in ways other than "efficient" all the time.
I am perfectly aware of the gender-neutral role of "he", I just don't want to send the message that using it sends.
It don't even understand what practicality has to do with it. Unless you count being stuck in questionable social structures as more "practical" because it is more comfortable for you.
Are we not all slaves then?
You can try all you like to make the word "objective" work but it'd be better just to give it up & admit you can't.There is, but it requires a lot of meta-level thinking ("if this, then that" type rules). BUT, the point is that a person has a personal objective healthy lifestyle that you can either strive towards or move away from.
Except we can't. Beyond basic common sense it's very hard to say what's best, what's right, what's healthy. That's why there are a million different diet books, a million different exercise books, etc. And no matter how in tune with yourself you are you never know for sure what we work & must constantly keep adapting.It's objectively unhealthy for me to drink cyanide right now. Once we recognise this objective truth, you can just keep adding objective truths.
There is no "truth". Truth is just a human concept. "It's 45 degrees outside" could be considered a "true" statement but objectively it's meaningless & not even correct. By the time you say it the temperature has changed a few millidegrees & is slightly different a few blocks away.That said, there's no implicit insistence that need to be able to discern an objective truth for it to be true. There are a certain number of photons hitting my face right now, despite the fact that I fundamentally cannot ever know the objective truth.
I agree that we our slaves to our motivations. And I respect Christians for trying to sculpt the best human being they can out of themselves, overcoming the lusts that are not so adaptive anymore. That said, I don't do it for God or Jesus but simply because I recognize the best way to be a hedonist is to tame & control my passions.The apostle Paul would have it so. You can be a slave to God or a slave to carnal desires. Saying we are slaves to our motivations is not a stretch.
J
It's not. There are some people who cannot divorce personal taste from morality and a bunch more people who can. There are some people who can't divorce legality from ethics from morality and others who can.Aside from the fact that justice, laws, and morality are all wrapped up in each other in this ridiculous species of ours? They can be cut apart using specific language as he's doing, to separate specific concepts and actions, but they're so tied at the hip in practice that attempting to claim that they actually fuction independent of each other is a rather serious mistake.
It doesn't. It does, though, make more sense than saying that if God created a "correct" morality then it's still God's own subjective morality is false because God is a teaching God, which is how this side debate started.Which begs to debate whether God changed or we did.
J
See, this doesn't score you any points, bear with me.It means "Are you nihilist?" Why bother.
Wait, that would be apathetic.
J