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- From: btd@iastate.edu (Benjamin T Dehner)
- Subject: Re: Faith Healing
- Message-ID: <btd.721893016@pv7413.vincent.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames IA
- References: <n0e4ct@ofa123.fidonet.org> <1992Nov16.024312.22635@hfsi.uucp>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 05:50:16 GMT
- Lines: 159
-
-
- I haven't really been following this thread, but I saw something
- I just had to respond too.
-
- In <1992Nov16.024312.22635@hfsi.uucp> ata@hfsi.uucp (John Ata - FSO) writes:
-
- >In article <n0e4ct@ofa123.fidonet.org> David.Rice@ofa123.fidonet.org writes:
- >>
- >>JA-FSO> "Of course, because people can twist the definition of sin
- >>JA-FSO> to suit their purposes does not make it an invalid concept."
- >>
- >>Sin: failure to follow the dicta of the rich, powerful, ruling elite,
- >>whom use the illusion of divine authorization. Do you have a better,
- >>valid definition? "Sin" is arbitrary, and subject to change without
- >>notice.
-
- >How about Sin: 1) A willful violation of some religious or moral principal.
-
- A perhaps workable definition. Of course, keep in mind that since
- religious/moral principals change from person to person and culture to
- culture, this makes the concept of 'sin' a very relative and subjective
- idea.
-
- > 2) Any wrong or evil act.
-
- THIS is redundant. How do you define 'wrong' or 'evil' EXCEPT in
- the bounds of some moral or religious precepts?
-
- >>
- >>Sure. Most Christian churches think "homosexuality" is a "sin."
- >>This, however, is not about what is "right" and "wrong," but an
- >>issue of CONTROL. A few Christian churches consider abortion a
- >>"sin," but it is also an issue of control. That is why I likened
- >>most religions, and specifically Christianity, as a control-freak.
- >>Jerk a person's sexuality and watch them dance!
-
- >But you can say that about any moral precept. To someone who has no
- >intentions of honoring it, it is just an issue of control. To others,
- >it is God's way of showing us the best way to behave.
-
- But the precept was not established by God -- it was established
- by those who claim to speak in God's name. And when it becomes a matter
- of regulating other peoples behavior (such as laws) then it definitely
- does become a matter of control.
-
- >>Breaking law is not sin!
- >>
- >>We were (I was?) talking about "sin." People do not fail to kill
- >>others because it is a "sin;" they fail to do so because it is
- >>wrong to do so, or they fail to kill their neighbors because they
- >>fear retribution from the State or from the family / friends of
- >>the potentially dead neighbor.
-
- >We were talking about whether it is healthy to supress natural
- >desires which you stated that Christianity did and was therefore
- >unhealthy. I merely pointed out that it is not only Christianity that
- >supresses natural desires but society as well. Why do you not call it
- >unhealthy when society does it?
-
- One of the fundamental precepts of Christianity is that mankind
- (peoplekind? :) are by there very nature evil and unworthy ('fallen'),
- and so all basic human desires should be surpressed. In other words,
- it lays out a guilt trip for simply being human and having human wants and
- desires. The only allowable way to feel good about yourself is in
- sanctioned behaviors.
- In other words, they invent the crime, 'sin', and then say the
- only way out of it is to follow them.
-
- >>JA-FSO> You have made the case for seeing Christianity as perverting
- >>JA-FSO> sexuality. May I present an alternate viewpoint? Let us say
- >>JA-FSO> that I buy something like a dishwasher. With it comes an
- >>JA-FSO> instruction manual that tells me how to load it, tips for
- >>JA-FSO> arranging the dishes in an optimum way for cleaning, which
- >>JA-FSO> settings to use and under what circumstances, etc. Now I
- >>JA-FSO> can look at the instruction manual and say, "This is just
- >>JA-FSO> a bunch of meaningless regulation, I do not want to be
- >>JA-FSO> confined by it" and proceed to operate the dishwasher in a
- >>JA-FSO> manner contrary to the instruction mannual. At best, the
- >>JA-FSO> dishes won't come out very clean, at worst I could break
- >>JA-FSO> the dishwasher. And who was to blame?"
-
- You obviously haven't worked with computers much. I find
- much of the documentation lying around at best useless, often
- misleading, and occaisionally downright wrong. This would proba-
- bly be even worse if I lived in another country, and English was
- a second language, trying to understand the directions on how to
- use a complicated piece of equipment.
-
- >>Theist falsehood #1: "people as 'things,' such as a dishwasher."
- >>That's not what you meant, just what you implied. My concern is
- >>a human one. Life is not a machine.
-
- >Anti-theist falsehood #1: Take an analogy that was trying to
- >describe something, ignore the point of the analogy and find some
- >difference between the thing the author was trying to describe and
- >the object of the analogy. Then proceed to label the analogy
- >false and useless.
-
- Analogy is a weak form of arguement. I took your above
- analogy, changed 'dishwasher' to 'computer', and came out with totally
- different conclusions.
-
- >>Theist falsehood #2: "people come with instruction books." There
- >>is no instruction manual for human beings.
-
- >Anti-theist falsehood #2: Take things as literally as possible. If you
- >mean that no one is born with an instruction booklet, I agree. But that
- >is not what I was saying.
-
- Anti-theists aren't the only ones who take things literally as
- possible. Look at talk.orgins sometime.
-
- >>Theist falsehood #3: "all people can be, and should be, governed
- >>by one set of instructions." People come is all kinds, shapes,
- >>colors, paradigms, social structures, intelligences, knowledge
- >>bases, biases, etc. To force all peoples into a mold is what
- >>all tyrants try to do--- those who do not fit are removed.
-
- >Anti-theist falsehoold #3: There is no general guiding principal
- >that could govern a persons behaviour. Let's see, we usually eat
- >when we are hungry and have food readily available. We usually
- >drink when we are thirsty and have liquids readily available. And
- >we all excrete when nature demands it of us. Sounds like pretty
- >general principals guiding all people in the physical arena. Why
- >couldn't there be spiritual precepts or guidelines in the
- >spiritual arena?
-
- Theist axiom #1: there IS an underlying guiding principal to
- all peoples behaviors, given (or idealized) by God. I cannot debate
- the validity of this proposition, because it is an axiom and not a
- conclusion.
- The only way to judge this axiom is by it's utility; where
- does believing this get you, as compared with not accepting it? This,
- however, is also futile, because you STILL need some standard by
- which to judge the results, which falls back on whether or not you accept
- the above axiom as a fundamental precept.
- Whether or not I would LIKE to believe in the existence of some
- absoulute guiding moral principal (whether or not a divine one) is
- irrelevant to the fact that I cannot DEMONSTRATE the existence of any
- such principal, so I cannot use this concept anywhere.
-
- >>--- Maximus 2.00
-
- >--
- >John G. Ata - Technical Consultant | Internet: ata@hfsi.com
- >HFS, Inc. VA20 | UUCP: uunet!hfsi!ata
- >7900 Westpark Drive MS:601 | Voice: (703) 827-6810
- >McLean, VA 22102 | FAX: (703) 827-3729
-
- Ben
-
- "We did, in fact, find everything we needed to know yesterday."
- -- annon. astronomer at the 2nd Conference on Faint Blue Stars
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Benjamin T. Dehner Dept. of Physics and Astronomy
- btd@iastate.edu Iowa State University
- Ames, IA 50011
-
-