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Religion
In reply to the discussion: "Other ways of knowing," aka Different Cognitive Styles [View all]Deep13
(39,157 posts)108. So what's the difference?
If the premise of Christianity is that God made us, we sinned and are therefore "fallen," and that we must believe that Jesus is God's son and our savior to escape damnation, what about that is myth and what is theology.
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If you recognize the condition, how can you continue to suffer from it without being equally insane?
NoOneMan
Dec 2012
#56
The possibility that something is true has no relation to the number of people who believe it.
trotsky
Dec 2012
#46
So then, if one juror thinks a defendant is guilty, he's guilty, but if all 12 say he's not guilty,
humblebum
Dec 2012
#47
Never said it did. But I did say that there was a higher probability of guilt
humblebum
Dec 2012
#83
In terms of their adaptational advantage, for humans, being part of a tribe could be critical.
cbayer
Dec 2012
#77
It is interesting that those most discriminated against or who suffer the most have
cbayer
Dec 2012
#79
The two examples you chose actually illustrate two disjoint sets of "knowing".
Warren Stupidity
Dec 2012
#3
"fails to respond to challenges to describe in detail these 'other ways of knowing'" - still
humblebum
Dec 2012
#10
Don't make me laugh. The subject has been covered and examples given ad nauseam as
humblebum
Jan 2013
#91
Where do you get the idea that there is no theology associated with Native American
humblebum
Jan 2013
#97
Agreed, though all of us came from tribal cultures similar in many ways to those
humblebum
Jan 2013
#101
There does seem to be some equivocation regarding what constitutes theology.
humblebum
Jan 2013
#109
Again, there does seem to be an ambiguity here. I hardly see theology as related solely
humblebum
Jan 2013
#117
I find Curtis' explanations, to be simplistic and demeaning to human variety, but your last....
Humanist_Activist
Dec 2012
#80
basically you are claiming that reality is determined by popular vote, which is the most idiotic...
cleanhippie
Jan 2013
#85
Learn about things before spouting off about them otherwise you come off...
Humanist_Activist
Jan 2013
#124
He seems to know exactly what he talking about and what he is talking about IS taught
humblebum
Jan 2013
#125
A problem with your example, the word "pretty" is itself subjective...
Humanist_Activist
Jan 2013
#129
He argues that the art student must rely on intuitive rather than rational information processing ..
AlbertCat
Jan 2013
#89
rely on parts of your brain that do not depend on such "rational" divisions.
AlbertCat
Jan 2013
#112
May I suggest that you try to draw a rounded object using 1- or 2-point perspective?
okasha
Jan 2013
#118