by sandy82 » June 21st, 2005, 12:19 pm
Mortal,
A much fuller response than I had anticipated...although I had hoped for some answers to Question No. 6. :)
You asked for suggestions, and therefore I will offer one or more.
There are several ways to conduct a debate/discussion, and the methods vary according to the purpose of the organizer. At the Oxford Union, the teams mean to win; second place is oblivion. In a senior seminar, a professor uses the technique to draw out students, express a variety of viewpoints, and not plump for one or another favored solution.
For my part, I don't favor discussions whose method is to suck in people with a seemingly non-controversial opening gambit...and from then on everything follows uphill (or downhill) with inescapable logic. That's what I meant in my original post in this thread: the a priori underpinnings of a discussion determine the winner before the first word is uttered.
I don't offer my view as a suggeston; I mention it as an example in contrast to the foregoing. I think it is factual. Morals in the western world are built primarily on Moses' Ten Commandments and Jesus' two commandments. There is explanatory commentary to fill entire libraries. St. Paul imported Greek notions of moderation and order; he was a Roman citizen with a Greek education. The 1/\[url=(https?:\/\/[^\s\[]+):$uid\](.*?)\[\/url:$uid\]/i/2 are the basis for most laws and ethical standards in the West, as they touch on moral values. With the spread of European empires in the 17th-19th centuries these Biblical/Greek/Western values became the basis of laws on much, perhaps most, of the planet. That's a process quite different from virtually identical values springing up in the souls of men the world over.
The empirical evidence for the former position is such areas as Papua New Guinea: anthropologists are reasonably certain what happened to the flesh of Nelson Rockefeller's son, but they haven't discovered his bones. I don't mean to sound macabre, but perhaps they have been made into earrings.
A fair discussion, in my view, presupposes a level playing field. On the question of morals, I would be upfront...as in the two preceding paragraphs. If I were to be excessively concerned that people might not take part, then I would be slouching toward the very proselytizing and
intellectual nimbleness (I do not use the word "dishonesty") that I had wanted to avoid.
I happen to believe that proselytizing, in its usual forms, is a sin. It presupposes that the instigator believes he knows better than others, that persuasive techniques of various abstruse kinds are permissible. Much of this proselytizing is, in equal parts, unchecked enthusiasm, pride, and guile. Often the guile is provided by a higher level to the foot soldiers, who may not even recognize it themselves.
I saw elements of this in your explanation of the source of morality. It's filled with non-sequiturs caused by your unwillingness to mention God too prominently, caused in turn by your eagerness to convince. You wound up with a construction parallel to that PR marvel called "intelligent design"--whose purpose, it seems to me, is first to undermine Darwin and second to reimpose the Genesis account of creation.
I am leery of such people and their hobby-horses. I grew up in a rural area where memories of the Blue Laws are still fresh. Under state law, you could buy band-aids in the drugstore on Sunday. But no candy bars. They were a violation of the state criminal code. Such laws used to prevail in a majority of states...and not so long ago.
If this country is supposed to have no established religion, why was the sale of candy bars on Sunday a violation of criminal law...while sale of candy bars on Friday and Saturday were just fine. Dare I say it: the majority in most state legislatures didn't give a rat's about Muslim or Jewish voters. And the majorities in certain Protestant denominations, believing that they hold the keys to the only true religion, thought that was fine and dandy. So much for tolerance and empathy.
Scratch the skin of a proponent of proselytizing and intelligent design and, chances are, you will find a former supporter of the Blue Laws. I part doctrinal company with such people early and often. They believe in only one sin associated with alcohol: it is evil to drink it. I believe in two. First, absent medical or age considerations, it is a sin not to drink alcohol. 8O Second, it is a sin to get drunk. Are French and Italian 1/\[url=(https?:\/\/[^\s\[]+):$uid\](.*?)\[\/url:$uid\]/i-year-olds destined to go to hell for drinking weak wine with their meals?
As to this site. I have not seen anything in the layout or management of this site that I would consider immoral. In fact, the opposite is true. If a file may cause dependence, it is labeled. If there is a "curse", it is labeled. Frankly, there's a dollop of humor in much of this. But the point is that the labeling is up front. And if someone believes that the present-day equivalent of an old cassette recording is going to turn them into a cat or a dog, well nobody--not even Jesus--can protect the invincibly ignorant from their own imaginations.
We live in a real world where all choices are less than perfect. By way of example, listening to a hypnosis tape for 3/\[url=(https?:\/\/[^\s\[]+):$uid\](.*?)\[\/url:$uid\]/i minutes is far to be preferred to spending an equal amount of time eating mercury-laced canned tuna. It's more moral too, when one considers the imperative to protect the mind, body, and soul.
My suggestion. Be upfront with people. Be more interested in the process of discussion than in your desired results. Check constantly to ensure that your belief systems are not affecting the way you deal with others.
I received your "Apology" via PM. No apology was appropriate, sought, needed, or desired. I noted your complimentary close. I hope your sentiments were genuine, but I don't accept "Love" from strangers...even if they intend for me to construe it as an expression of agape on their part.
Forgive me for impugning your veracity on at least one point. I don't think you're acting alone or without direction. I expect my view to become clearer in the weeks and months to come.
I offer best wishes. I suspect you have learned at least as much as the particpants and readers of your thread.
By the way, the University of Michigan has a website containing the entire King James Version of the Bible. It is indexed by every single word and phrase. It beats dictionary.com.