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Topic: GOOD AND EVIL ??
Krimsa's photo
Fri 09/12/08 09:32 AM
Edited by Krimsa on Fri 09/12/08 09:34 AM
Well read what you are writing there. All you need is a big bronze staff and a flowing robe and a long white beard and you would be Moses himself proclaiming his infallibility upon the mountain. Take it down a notch. This is a casual discussion as far as I understood it. :tongue:

tribo's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:02 AM



So what was there understanding then? What did they know? If they knew neither good or evil what comprehension did they have then?


first of all, I don't like the translation. You are using the fundie Bible.

second of all, the only comprehension of good or bad that the characters in tale had is the fact that God give them an instruction. An instruction which is imprinted in their soul (As ourselves we know that killing is bad (unless for self-defense) that is imprinted, yet the characters in the tale decided go their own way.
The same as the murderer (not talking about the mentally insane) decides to kill even if he/she knows it's wrong.
That's it. Human beings have some sort of moral code inprinted in their souls. Such moral code is what we know divine or eternal law from which natural and human laws are derived. Whenever a human being decides to go against such inprinted moral code, is when we have evil.


do you men me TLW? i'm using the LXX - septuigent? not KJV or ARSV - the LXX predates any fundie book. 2nd century ad - long before fundies/evangelicals???

MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:06 AM

Well read what you are writing there. All you need is a big bronze staff and a flowing robe and a long white beard and you would be Moses himself proclaiming his infallibility upon the mountain. Take it down a notch. This is a casual discussion as far as I understood it. :tongue:
flowerforyou I think you and Tribo are great. Dont change a thing for me. Both of you are adults and intelligent enough to stand a little "heat".I just felt like this citation stuff was kind of silly.But hey whatever works. It was interesting. Both you and Tribo are interesting. flowerforyou

SkyHook5652's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:10 AM

flowerforyou Oh by the way Tribo, I was right about the true history of religion. And I dont need to cite any sources. I am the source. If its such a big deal to you then YOU can cite sources to prove me wrong. But you cant do it because Im NOT wrong.laugh The best you will be able to do is maybe argue some kind of semantic definition of a particular word or two. laugh Thats usually how these discussions go isnt it?flowerforyou I stand by my statements. The earth gods preceded and were replaced by the skygods. Happens in every society when it evolves from nomadic hunter/gatherers to an agricultural society.:smile: And you know the more I think about it,the more it bothers me. I deal with this stuff everyday. I live it. :smile: I dont have to prove squat.I dont have to cite sources because I know and comprehend the material. I dont need to make stuff up like other people around here do, and ask the same old questions over and over and over again:smile: Because I understand and I have the answers.:smile: You people are the ones asking the questions, not melaugh I can answer questions from my own personal knowledge because I am the source.:smile:
From a solipsistic viewpoint, that is a perfect (if maybe a little "impolite") expression of the solipsistic viewpoint - which is no less valid than any other viewpoint flowerforyou

tribo's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:13 AM



flowerforyou Oh by the way Tribo, I was right about the true history of religion. And I don't need to cite any sources. I am the source. If its such a big deal to you then YOU can cite sources to prove me wrong. But you cant do it because I'm NOT wrong.laugh The best you will be able to do is maybe argue some kind of semantic definition of a particular word or two. laugh That's usually how these discussions go isn't it?flowerforyou I stand by my statements. The earth gods preceded and were replaced by the sky-gods. Happens in every society when it evolves from nomadic hunter/gatherers to an agricultural society.:smile: And you know the more I think about it,the more it bothers me. I deal with this stuff everyday. I live it. :smile: I don't have to prove squat.I don't have to cite sources because I know and comprehend the material. I dont need to make stuff up like other people around here do, and ask the same old questions over and over and over again:smile: Because I understand and I have the answers.:smile: You people are the ones asking the questions, not melaugh I can answer questions from my own personal knowledge because I am the source.:smile:




good for you mirror, that's great, continue with your new found fearlessness - flowerforyou
flowerforyou Well, I didn't plagiarize anyone and its not my opinion and its not a research paper so I'm not sure what sources you and Krimsa expected me to cite.The best I could do on short notice was cite my college textbook. When you tell someone that the sky is blue you don't need to cite a source, do you? I just felt like that was an unfair expectation you and Krimsa threw on me.I'm not sure if you were accusing me of plagiarism or saying that what I stated was inaccurate.:smile: But it is accurate, and I am the source.flowerforyou So I guess in this instance, I could be used as a source citation.laugh


my dear daseti, i was not accusing you of any thing you state, i did not really understand that this was yours in the sense of what your felt was the core of what you had leaned and put together for a final statement, i apologize if you felt that i was being even so much as concerned with you "plagiarizing others work, or anything else you may have thought i was doing. my asking for citations was merely i wanted to read or have you tell where you came up with what you were saying sweet and simple nothing else attached to it - i merely was hoping you could expand on the info you provided. and your most assuredly correct in the above statement it is yours and your views based on what you've studied and the author of your statement, no problem. no further need to concern your self with my motives or think that what i was saying had anything to do with not believing you or thinking you were plagiarizing anyone. thnx daseti

tribo's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:15 AM

A little more information about the "Skygods"


The Peripheral Invaders

At first it was like the proverbial biblical cloud "no bigger than a man's hand"-the activities of seemingly insignificant nomadic bands roaming the less desirable fringe areas of our globe seeking grass for their herds. Over millennia they were apparently out there in the harsh, unwanted, colder, sparser territories on the edges of the earth, while the first great agricultural civilizations spread out along the lakes and rivers in the fertile heartlands. To these agricultural peoples, enjoying humanity's early peak of evolution, peace and prosperity must have seemed the blessed eternal state for humankind, the nomads no more than a peripheral novelty. We have nothing to go by but speculation on how these nomadic bands grew in numbers and in ferocity and over what span of time.' But by the fifth millennium B.C.E., or about seven thousand years ago, we begin to find evidence of what Mellaart calls a pattern of disruption of the old Neolithic cultures in the Near East.' Archaeological remains indicate clear signs of stress by this time in many territories. There is evidence of invasions, natural catastrophes, and sometimes both, causing large-scale destruction and dislocation. In many areas the old painted pottery traditions disappear. Bit by devastating bit, a period of cultural regression and stagnation sets in. Finally, during this time of mounting chaos the development of civilization comes to a standstill. As Mellaart writes, it will be another two thousand years before the civilizations of Sumer and Egypt emerge.6 In Old Europe the physical and cultural disruption of the Neolithic societies that worshiped the Goddess also seems to begin in the fifth millenniUM B.C.E., with what Gimbutas calls Kurgan Wave Number One. "Thanks to the growing number of radiocarbon dates, it is now possible to trace several migratory waves of steppe pastoralists or 'Kurgan' people that swept across prehistoric Europe," reports Gimbutas. These repeated incursions and ensuing culture shocks and population shifts were concentrated in three major thrusts: Wave No. 1, at c. 43004200 B.C.E.; Wave No. 2, c. 3400-3200 B.C.E.; and Wave No. 3, c. 30002800 B.C.E. (dates are calibrated to dendrochronology).' The Kurgans were of what scholars call Indo-European or Aryan language-speaking stock, a type that was in modern times to be idealized by Nietzsche and then Hitler as the only pure European race. In fact, they were not the original Europeans, as they swarmed down on that continent from the Asiatic and European northeast. Nor were they even originally Indian, for there was another people, the Dravidians, who lived in India before the Aryan invaders conquered them. But the term Indo-European has stuck. It characterizes a long line of invasions from the Asiatic and European north by nomadic peoples. Ruled by powerful priests and warriors, they brought with them their male gods of war and mountains. And as Aryans in India, Hittites and Mittani in the Fertile Crescent, Luwians in Anatolia, Kurgans in eastern Europe, Achaeans and later Dorians in Greece, they gradually imposed their ideologies and ways of life on the lands and peoples they conquered.

There were other nomadic invaders as well. The most famous of these are a Semitic people we call the Hebrews, who came from the deserts of the south and invaded Canaan (later named Palestine for the Philistines, one of the peoples who lived in the area). The moral precepts we associate with both Judaism and Christianity and the stress on peace in many modern churches and synagogues now obscures the historical fact that originally these early Semites were a warring people ruled by a caste of warrior-priests (the Levite tribe of Moses, Aaron, and Joshua). Like the Indo-Europeans, they too brought with them a fierce and angry god of war and mountains (Jehovah or Yahweh). And gradually, as we read in the Bible, they too imposed much of their ideology and way of life on the peoples of the lands they conquered.

These striking similarities between the Indo-Europeans and the ancient Hebrews have led to some conjecture that there may here be some common origins, or at least some elements of cultural diffusional' But it is not the bloodlines or cultural contacts that cannot be found that are of such interest. It is what seems most definitely to unite these peoples of so many different places and times: the structure of their social and ideological systems. The one thing they all had in common was a dominator model of social organization: a social system in which male dominance, male violence, and a generally hierarchic and authoritarian social structure was the norm. Another commonality was that, in contrast to the societies that laid the foundations for Western civilization, the way they characteristically acquired material wealth was not by developing technologies of production, but through ever more effective technologies of destruction.


thnx for that K

Krimsa's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:15 AM
I cited my sources because the content that I had submitted for observation warranted that. I didn't want people to assume it was simply me making things up or summarizing my own opinions. It was taken from the texts of actual scientists in their various fields. People who have spent a significant portion of their lives compiling this data. That is why I cited my sources. If you dont want to cite yours or do not feel it necessary, I dont care. I never asked for them. Maybe Tribo did? I dont know. I lost track of that aspect of the conversation because it was not significant to me.

tribo's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:22 AM


flowerforyou Oh by the way Tribo, I was right about the true history of religion. And I dont need to cite any sources. I am the source. If its such a big deal to you then YOU can cite sources to prove me wrong. But you cant do it because Im NOT wrong.laugh The best you will be able to do is maybe argue some kind of semantic definition of a particular word or two. laugh Thats usually how these discussions go isnt it?flowerforyou I stand by my statements. The earth gods preceded and were replaced by the skygods. Happens in every society when it evolves from nomadic hunter/gatherers to an agricultural society.:smile: And you know the more I think about it,the more it bothers me. I deal with this stuff everyday. I live it. :smile: I dont have to prove squat.I dont have to cite sources because I know and comprehend the material. I dont need to make stuff up like other people around here do, and ask the same old questions over and over and over again:smile: Because I understand and I have the answers.:smile: You people are the ones asking the questions, not melaugh I can answer questions from my own personal knowledge because I am the source.:smile:
From a solipsistic viewpoint, that is a perfect (if maybe a little "impolite") expression of the solipsistic viewpoint - which is no less valid than any other viewpoint flowerforyou



i'm in full agreement with you SH, never meant for it to be taken as MM not being able to summarize his own beleifs, i was looking for info that i could read to expand my knowlwdge on this that he had stated - nothing more, nothing less.flowerforyou

davidben1's photo
Fri 09/12/08 10:25 AM


9 And God made to spring up also out of the earth every tree beautiful to the eye and good for food,

and the tree of life in the midst of the garden,

and the tree of learning the knowledge of good and evil.

{from the LXX]

>>>Is this saying - that Adam and Eve did not know not only evil, but goodness either? That they were made without knowledge of either?<<<

NKJV

9) and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.


So what was there understanding then? What did they know? If they knew neither good or evil what comprehension did they have then?


Well - it doesn't really say - so obviously, we don't know. But that's never stopped anyone of us from having pages and pages to write about it.

Is it safe to assume that they knew what was around them was good? Since they were tossed out of the garden, it would tend to back up the idea that at least they were surrounded with all that was good. Hard to believe they didn't notice that. Obviously, they knew a lot more when they got out of the garden than when they were in it. Or did they? They likely had the same things to look at, just from two different perspectives when they got outside of the garden. It will be interesting to see where this goes though.


where is the only place in text that is said to be all "bliss and good"?

seems then we do know where they "were"......

it would seem that if one was in all bliss, and never knew anything but bliss, no ahtred, no violence, no strife, no physical effort, then to come to be in a place or new environment where all such exists would as "open the eyes to good and evil", as before the sight would have only been of all "good"........

and as learning and eating of the tree of knowledge of good and evil bring to an emotional death, as it is evidenced they did not die physically, then traveling this "mortal path" of "good and evil" would itself be the "path" that lead to redemption, or just what MUST BE COMPLETED for points of reference needed to be reunited back to origin or god or wisdom or truth or greater higher place........

as indeed, they become as gods, or as connected back to true self, becoming as one flesh, not seperated into TWO......

seems ironic that TWO spirits were said to be sent out into ALL THE WORLD.......

there are TWO trees of greater significance in the "garden".....

when one is cast form the garden, as "piece" of the garden is within, that is as a ambilical cord to origin........

there are TWO as greater powers, GOD and SATAN.....

LOTS OF TWOS IT SEEMS......

all things in the unniverse have TWO sides.....

all things have an OPPOSITE......TWO SIDES....

SUN AND MOON......TWO things that TOTALLY CONTROL ALL ENVIRONMENT ON EARTH..........

man has even called his COINS the head and the tail......TWO.....the HEAD and the TAIL....

the great DRAGON with it's tail cast the stars to earth......

was not abrahams seed to be as the stars, and as INFINITE as the sands of the seas.....

was not GOD said to be the HEAD of the church, the head of the body.......

could it be the subconscious or heart or god in all things "mimics" all things from origin in all things it create......

just observations......just ideas elijay.....

great thoughts and points you make my friend....

peace.....






MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 09/12/08 11:56 AM



flowerforyou Oh by the way Tribo, I was right about the true history of religion. And I dont need to cite any sources. I am the source. If its such a big deal to you then YOU can cite sources to prove me wrong. But you cant do it because Im NOT wrong.laugh The best you will be able to do is maybe argue some kind of semantic definition of a particular word or two. laugh Thats usually how these discussions go isnt it?flowerforyou I stand by my statements. The earth gods preceded and were replaced by the skygods. Happens in every society when it evolves from nomadic hunter/gatherers to an agricultural society.:smile: And you know the more I think about it,the more it bothers me. I deal with this stuff everyday. I live it. :smile: I dont have to prove squat.I dont have to cite sources because I know and comprehend the material. I dont need to make stuff up like other people around here do, and ask the same old questions over and over and over again:smile: Because I understand and I have the answers.:smile: You people are the ones asking the questions, not melaugh I can answer questions from my own personal knowledge because I am the source.:smile:
From a solipsistic viewpoint, that is a perfect (if maybe a little "impolite") expression of the solipsistic viewpoint - which is no less valid than any other viewpoint flowerforyou



i'm in full agreement with you SH, never meant for it to be taken as MM not being able to summarize his own beleifs, i was looking for info that i could read to expand my knowlwdge on this that he had stated - nothing more, nothing less.flowerforyou
:banana: okay sorry for the misunderstanding Tribo. :banana: I thought maybe you were saying I plagarized.:banana: I'll see if i can find some websites to elaborate on my statements for you.:banana:

Krimsa's photo
Fri 09/12/08 12:16 PM
No one plagiarized that I was aware of? Did you?

MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 09/12/08 12:39 PM

No one plagiarized that I was aware of? Did you?
huh not that Im aware ofhuh

Krimsa's photo
Fri 09/12/08 12:55 PM
You admitted that you were summarizing and paraphrasing in your own words which is fine. Im not sure who brought up plagiarism. Anyway....spock

Mirror I added a post that went into a little more detail about who the "skygods" were exactly and where they came from. I also have dates for their invasions and what went down exactly. At least in theory.

SkyHook5652's photo
Fri 09/12/08 01:29 PM



flowerforyou Oh by the way Tribo, I was right about the true history of religion. And I dont need to cite any sources. I am the source. If its such a big deal to you then YOU can cite sources to prove me wrong. But you cant do it because Im NOT wrong.laugh The best you will be able to do is maybe argue some kind of semantic definition of a particular word or two. laugh Thats usually how these discussions go isnt it?flowerforyou I stand by my statements. The earth gods preceded and were replaced by the skygods. Happens in every society when it evolves from nomadic hunter/gatherers to an agricultural society.:smile: And you know the more I think about it,the more it bothers me. I deal with this stuff everyday. I live it. :smile: I dont have to prove squat.I dont have to cite sources because I know and comprehend the material. I dont need to make stuff up like other people around here do, and ask the same old questions over and over and over again:smile: Because I understand and I have the answers.:smile: You people are the ones asking the questions, not melaugh I can answer questions from my own personal knowledge because I am the source.:smile:
From a solipsistic viewpoint, that is a perfect (if maybe a little "impolite") expression of the solipsistic viewpoint - which is no less valid than any other viewpoint flowerforyou



i'm in full agreement with you SH, never meant for it to be taken as MM not being able to summarize his own beleifs, i was looking for info that i could read to expand my knowlwdge on this that he had stated - nothing more, nothing less.flowerforyou

I can understand that. My post was really just a "drive-by". I haven't followed this thread very closely. It's just that MM's post caught my eye and I though it was an interesting monologue so I thought I'd comment on it. flowerforyou

tribo's photo
Fri 09/12/08 01:38 PM




flowerforyou Oh by the way Tribo, I was right about the true history of religion. And I dont need to cite any sources. I am the source. If its such a big deal to you then YOU can cite sources to prove me wrong. But you cant do it because Im NOT wrong.laugh The best you will be able to do is maybe argue some kind of semantic definition of a particular word or two. laugh Thats usually how these discussions go isnt it?flowerforyou I stand by my statements. The earth gods preceded and were replaced by the skygods. Happens in every society when it evolves from nomadic hunter/gatherers to an agricultural society.:smile: And you know the more I think about it,the more it bothers me. I deal with this stuff everyday. I live it. :smile: I dont have to prove squat.I dont have to cite sources because I know and comprehend the material. I dont need to make stuff up like other people around here do, and ask the same old questions over and over and over again:smile: Because I understand and I have the answers.:smile: You people are the ones asking the questions, not melaugh I can answer questions from my own personal knowledge because I am the source.:smile:
From a solipsistic viewpoint, that is a perfect (if maybe a little "impolite") expression of the solipsistic viewpoint - which is no less valid than any other viewpoint flowerforyou



i'm in full agreement with you SH, never meant for it to be taken as MM not being able to summarize his own beleifs, i was looking for info that i could read to expand my knowlwdge on this that he had stated - nothing more, nothing less.flowerforyou

I can understand that. My post was really just a "drive-by". I haven't followed this thread very closely. It's just that MM's post caught my eye and I though it was an interesting monologue so I thought I'd comment on it. flowerforyou


gotcha!

MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 09/12/08 02:07 PM

You admitted that you were summarizing and paraphrasing in your own words which is fine. Im not sure who brought up plagiarism. Anyway....spock

Mirror I added a post that went into a little more detail about who the "skygods" were exactly and where they came from. I also have dates for their invasions and what went down exactly. At least in theory.
happy interesting.flowerforyou The transition pretty much happens in any culture that advances from hunter/gatherer nomads to agrarian based cites.flowerforyou

Krimsa's photo
Fri 09/12/08 02:15 PM
Well thats not exactly what the post was saying. I think that's more what Mirror Mirror was claiming. :tongue:

"There is evidence of invasions, natural catastrophes, and sometimes both, causing large-scale destruction and dislocation. In many areas the old painted pottery traditions disappear. Bit by devastating bit, a period of cultural regression and stagnation sets in. Finally, during this time of mounting chaos the development of civilization comes to a standstill. As Mellaart writes, it will be another two thousand years before the civilizations of Sumer and Egypt emerge. In Old Europe the physical and cultural disruption of the Neolithic societies that worshiped the Goddess also seems to begin in the fifth millenniUM B.C.E., with what Gimbutas calls Kurgan Wave Number One."

MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 09/12/08 03:38 PM

Well thats not exactly what the post was saying. I think that's more what Mirror Mirror was claiming. :tongue:

"There is evidence of invasions, natural catastrophes, and sometimes both, causing large-scale destruction and dislocation. In many areas the old painted pottery traditions disappear. Bit by devastating bit, a period of cultural regression and stagnation sets in. Finally, during this time of mounting chaos the development of civilization comes to a standstill. As Mellaart writes, it will be another two thousand years before the civilizations of Sumer and Egypt emerge. In Old Europe the physical and cultural disruption of the Neolithic societies that worshiped the Goddess also seems to begin in the fifth millenniUM B.C.E., with what Gimbutas calls Kurgan Wave Number One."
flowerforyou Okay. What is the ancient name of this particular goddess that the neo Pagans are always talking about? flowerforyou There were and still are many goddesses.flowerforyou

Krimsa's photo
Fri 09/12/08 04:18 PM
Edited by Krimsa on Fri 09/12/08 04:24 PM
Neo pagans? So are you referring to Wiccans today? Well generally the most common Goddess found in the Wiccan tradition is the Triple Goddess. The triple moon is a Goddess symbol that represents the Maiden, Mother, and Crone as the waxing, full, and waning moon. It is also associated with feminine energy, mystery and psychic abilities. At her sacred grove at Aricia, on the shores of Lake Nemi a triplefold Diana was venerated from the late sixth century BCE as Diana Nemorensis. The Latin Diana was conceived as a threefold unity of the divine huntress, the Moon goddess, and the goddess of the nether world.

There were several Goddesses of the Neolithic period. One of the most famous excavations that you might find of interest is that of Catalhoyuk. It is one of the largest excavations ever discovered in southern Anatolia in Turkey. It dates at about 7500 BCE. A striking feature of Catalhoyuk are its female figurines. Mellaart, the original excavator, argued that these well-formed, carefully made figurines, carved and molded from marble, blue and brown limestone, schist, calcite, basalt, alabaster, and clay, represented a female deity of the Great Goddess type. Although a male deity existed as well, “…statues of a female deity far outnumber those of the male deity, who moreover, does not appear to be represented at all after Level VI”.To date, eighteen levels have been identified. These careful figurines were found primarily in areas Mellaart believed to be shrines. One, however – a stately goddess seated on a throne flanked by two lionesses – was found in a grain bin, which Mellaart suggests might have been a means of ensuring the harvest or protecting the food supply.


MirrorMirror's photo
Fri 09/12/08 04:39 PM
Edited by MirrorMirror on Fri 09/12/08 04:51 PM

Neo pagans? So are you referring to Wiccans today? Well generally the most common Goddess found in the Wiccan tradition is the Triple Goddess. The triple moon is a Goddess symbol that represents the Maiden, Mother, and Crone as the waxing, full, and waning moon. It is also associated with feminine energy, mystery and psychic abilities. At her sacred grove at Aricia, on the shores of Lake Nemi a triplefold Diana was venerated from the late sixth century BCE as Diana Nemorensis. The Latin Diana was conceived as a threefold unity of the divine huntress, the Moon goddess, and the goddess of the nether world.

There were several Goddesses of the Neolithic period. One of the most famous excavations that you might find of interest is that of Catalhoyuk. It is one of the largest excavations ever discovered in southern Anatolia in Turkey. It dates at about 7500 BCE. A striking feature of Catalhoyuk are its female figurines. Mellaart, the original excavator, argued that these well-formed, carefully made figurines, carved and molded from marble, blue and brown limestone, schist, calcite, basalt, alabaster, and clay, represented a female deity of the Great Goddess type. Although a male deity existed as well, “…statues of a female deity far outnumber those of the male deity, who moreover, does not appear to be represented at all after Level VI”.To date, eighteen levels have been identified. These careful figurines were found primarily in areas Mellaart believed to be shrines. One, however – a stately goddess seated on a throne flanked by two lionesses – was found in a grain bin, which Mellaart suggests might have been a means of ensuring the harvest or protecting the food supply.


flowerforyou So "the Goddess" is the Greco-Roman deity Artemis/Diana?flowerforyou

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