I can learn about Death by killing someone.NecronLord wrote:Satan gives knowlege
knowledge is good
Satan, therefore is good.
Knowledge is good.
Murder is good.
eh?
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
I can learn about Death by killing someone.NecronLord wrote:Satan gives knowlege
knowledge is good
Satan, therefore is good.
not as much as you can lear by suicicide.pecker wrote:I can learn about Death by killing someone.NecronLord wrote:Satan gives knowlege
knowledge is good
Satan, therefore is good.
Knowledge is good.
Murder is good.
eh?
You are quietly exchanging knowledge with action in your attempt to undermine the argument. Dishonest little hatfucker ...pecker wrote:I can learn about Death by killing someone.NecronLord wrote:Satan gives knowlege
knowledge is good
Satan, therefore is good.
Knowledge is good.
Murder is good.
eh?
According to the story, the sin wasn't aquiring the knowledge so much as the action that led to it. The sin was eating the apple that God said not to, not gaining the knowledge held within.Darth Wong wrote:You are quietly exchanging knowledge with action in your attempt to undermine the argument. Dishonest little hatfucker ...pecker wrote:I can learn about Death by killing someone.NecronLord wrote:Satan gives knowlege
knowledge is good
Satan, therefore is good.
Knowledge is good.
Murder is good.
eh?
While it would be interesting to shout INFLATION and see what you say. see the clarification. aboveSpoonist wrote:Knowledge is not subjectively good/bad, it's what you do with teh knowledge that can be good or bad.
Hence your Knowledge=Good is flawed.
Just like Time=Money is flawed.
NecronLord wrote:Actually, I can't really learn abotu death by suicide cuz I'll be 'Dead' before my cocsiousness can register it.pecker wrote:I can learn about Death by killing someone.NecronLord wrote:Satan gives knowlege
knowledge is good
Satan, therefore is good.
Knowledge is good.
Murder is good.
eh?
And the 'Knowledge of Good and Evil' is an iffy definition. The story went through generations of oral tradition before be written, translated, and retranslated. I'd like to look up what the original meaning was.
not as much as you can lear by suicicide.
more specifically satan gave knowlage of good and evil
We are speaking from the bible is true perspective, in which case you have an immortal soul.pecker wrote:NecronLord wrote:Actually, I can't really learn abotu death by suicide cuz I'll be 'Dead' before my cocsiousness can register it.pecker wrote: I can learn about Death by killing someone.
Knowledge is good.
Murder is good.
eh?
And the 'Knowledge of Good and Evil' is an iffy definition. The story went through generations of oral tradition before be written, translated, and retranslated. I'd like to look up what the original meaning was.
not as much as you can lear by suicicide.
more specifically satan gave knowlage of good and evil
Ooooh, OK.NecronLord wrote:We are speaking from the bible is true perspective, in which case you have an immortal soul.pecker wrote:NecronLord wrote: Actually, I can't really learn abotu death by suicide cuz I'll be 'Dead' before my cocsiousness can register it.
And the 'Knowledge of Good and Evil' is an iffy definition. The story went through generations of oral tradition before be written, translated, and retranslated. I'd like to look up what the original meaning was.
not as much as you can lear by suicicide.
more specifically satan gave knowlage of good and evil
This is also from the bible is absouloutely true perspective.
Ah, so you think that eating an apple is intrinsically wrong on its own merits, hence your comparison to murder? You're more fucked-up than I thought.pecker wrote:According to the story, the sin wasn't aquiring the knowledge so much as the action that led to it. The sin was eating the apple that God said not to, not gaining the knowledge held within.Darth Wong wrote:You are quietly exchanging knowledge with action in your attempt to undermine the argument. Dishonest little hatfucker ...
So, my original conclusion was correct. God wanted men to mindlessly obey him, rather than develop their own capacity for moral judgment, because if they did, they'd realize that all his hangups on sex and idol worship were complete bullshit.According to the story, the sin wasn't aquiring the knowledge so much as the action that led to it. The sin was eating the apple that God said not to, not gaining the knowledge held within.
Dude, I'm not some fundie moron. I'm not saying I believe any of this. And you are reading WAAAAY too far into my example. And you are twisting my words around. You're makign up issues I never brought up.Darth Wong wrote:Ah, so you think that eating an apple is intrinsically wrong on its own merits, hence your comparison to murder? You're more fucked-up than I thought.pecker wrote:According to the story, the sin wasn't aquiring the knowledge so much as the action that led to it. The sin was eating the apple that God said not to, not gaining the knowledge held within.Darth Wong wrote:You are quietly exchanging knowledge with action in your attempt to undermine the argument. Dishonest little hatfucker ...
BECAUSE THE GARDEN OF EDEN, AND PRETTY MUCH THE ENTIRE BEGINNING OF THE BIBLE, ARE NOT FACT!Durandal wrote:So, my original conclusion was correct. God wanted men to mindlessly obey him, rather than develop their own capacity for moral judgment, because if they did, they'd realize that all his hangups on sex and idol worship were complete bullshit.According to the story, the sin wasn't aquiring the knowledge so much as the action that led to it. The sin was eating the apple that God said not to, not gaining the knowledge held within.
Adam and Eve had no concept of good and evil prior to eating the apple. They were like children. You don't eternally punish children for disobeying you, nor do you kill them. God has done both.
I'm amazed that so many people blindly follow such a narcisisstic tyrant.
It doesn't matter if they're fact or fiction. It does not change the implications and lessons of the story. Those implications and lessons are that following a narcisisstic tyrant is good, and that making your own decisions is bad.BECAUSE THE GARDEN OF EDEN, AND PRETTY MUCH THE ENTIRE BEGINNING OF THE BIBLE, ARE NOT FACT!
I always figured it was more of not giving into the temptation of doing thigns you know are wrong. But hey, that's what interperetation is forDurandal wrote:It doesn't matter if they're fact or fiction. It does not change the implications and lessons of the story. Those implications and lessons are that following a narcisisstic tyrant is good, and that making your own decisions is bad.BECAUSE THE GARDEN OF EDEN, AND PRETTY MUCH THE ENTIRE BEGINNING OF THE BIBLE, ARE NOT FACT!
Well, I figure I may as well make my debut post here. In the early Chruch (according to Justo Gonzalez' Christian Thought Revisited), there were three major branches of theology; the first two, Type A and Type B, are best represented by Tertullian and Origen, respectively. Type A is notable for its focus on the Bible as a book of law; Type B for its focus on the Bible as a book of revealed knowledge. Type A has had the most influence on mainstream religion through most of history and type B influenced and was influenced by the Gnostics (and a bit of the Russian Orthodox church). Trust me, this has a point. The third type is Type C, which is getting more attention in the present day (by people like John Hick and, IIRC, Dietrich Bonhoeffer) is Type C, represented by Irenaeus. Type C views the Bible and the OT as primarily historical.Durandal wrote:It doesn't matter if they're fact or fiction. It does not change the implications and lessons of the story. Those implications and lessons are that following a narcisisstic tyrant is good, and that making your own decisions is bad.BECAUSE THE GARDEN OF EDEN, AND PRETTY MUCH THE ENTIRE BEGINNING OF THE BIBLE, ARE NOT FACT!
w00t! Welcome to the club of liberal Christian theologians!Frank_Scenario wrote:I'm neither a fundamentalist nor a moderate-I'm a liberal (theologically). I don't think you'll find many fundamentalists actually reading serious theology/philosophy of religion (though I'm sure there are some), and most moderates I know tend to go for lighter apologetics.
BattleTech for SilCoreStanley Hauerwas wrote:[W]hy is it that no one is angry at the inequality of income in this country? I mean, the inequality of income is unbelievable. Unbelievable. Why isn’t that ever an issue of politics? Because you don’t live in a democracy. You live in a plutocracy. Money rules.
No, but there are a lot who claim they've read it. I'm glad you're a liberal - between Jonathan, Creationistalltheway and the CW.org invasion, we've got quite enough fundamentalism to go around for the time being.Frank_Scenario wrote:I'm neither a fundamentalist nor a moderate-I'm a liberal (theologically). I don't think you'll find many fundamentalists actually reading serious theology/philosophy of religion (though I'm sure there are some), and most moderates I know tend to go for lighter apologetics.