Elysiumfire
Ex Member
|
Hi Don,
Your attempt to presume that I require syntatic tutoring from you in order to make my self clear and understandable makes me smile. I suppose if I substitute 'are' for 'were' that would less offend your tender academic mind? Please, I was not writing a thesis there. My language and structure was purely colloquial, and served to place emphasis upon the point I made. The logical equivalence of the structural syntax of the separate sentences you formulate - 'no S are P' and 'all S are P' posit unequal meanings. The first denies the second (or vice versa). However, the structure used for the original sentence I wrote offered no other alternative meaning than that that was intended for it to convey. It simply posited the improbability of Mary Magdalene being Jesus' aunt, and for economy, the use of the parenthesis was to set up the identification (in the paragraph following) of the three females disparate sources have identified as Mary Magadalene. It may have been unsound structurally, but the contradiction was resolved in the next paragraph. The intended meaning was successfully conveyed. Your response with belittlement was truly academic and redundant.
Regarding your own self-contradictory statement, and whereas mine own resolves itself, yours does not. The meaning you intended to convey - 'platonic' as opposed to 'romantic' - is not successfully conveyed. You used the term 'lovers' not 'friends', and thus by any stretch of one's imagination, 'lovers' always carries the meaning of romance, not simply friendship. Thus your meaning is self-contradictory, even if the sentence is sound structurally.
Regarding the issue of sin. I maintain my stance. Sin has no existential reality of its own. It is relationally equal with man in the same terms as his history, they both arise out of his actions, out of what he does, how he behaves. Becoming cognizant of this, is the beginning of accepting one's self-responsibility for one's actions: you cannot repent until you do this. The dogma and doctrine of institutionalised religion would have us believe that the Devil would tempt us into sin, and in sinning, and in being unrepentant, God would condemn us to eternal hell-fire and dammnation. Fortunately, the reports from the experients of the NDE deny that this is so. Their emphasis for repentance is on 'self', and that it is not God that condemns us, but we ourselves, by not accepting self-responsibility for our own actions. This echoes quite clearly what Jesus is said to have taught as I have highlighted. Using the devil as the scapegoat for sin, is merely the non-acceptance of self-responsibility.
Regarding Nicea: the intimation is that the various disparate Christian sects holding to their own traditionally-held beliefs prior to Nicea, had to have discussed the issue of scripture prior to the convening. Nicea was to set up a universally-acceptable creed, that in itself requires a discussion on the 'interpretation' of scripture as held by the disparate groups. Most of the discussion would have taken place prior to Nicea, and associations would have been formed; it was almost a political process. Nicea was in total indifference to Jesus' adjuration that no other law be set upon His teachings than those He gave. The threat of being 'put to the sword', perhaps, held part of the persuasion in forgetting His adjuration?
Regarding the alleged personal attacks upon you...perhaps, you bring it upon yourself, although, that does not make it right. We can add pride to your (academic) ego, you sinful person, you!
Regards Don
|