silentkid wrote:cksalmon wrote:"Distance has the way of making love understandable." No, that's not supposed to sound gay.
Chris
Radio Cure.
My mind is full of 'em.
guy sajer wrote:What is meant by "respecting" a religion. I respect people's right to believe as they like. I respect religion in the sense that I try not to make offensive comments or act offensive or inappropriately around people of faith (exception being this board). I respect people who live their life according to a set of reasonable moral principles.
I DO NOT respect silly, superstitious iron-age belief systems, particularly when believers attempt to impose this silly, superstitious iron-age belief system on others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that deny basic civil liberties or human dignity to individuals or groups, such as sexist, racist, or homophobic beliefs. I don't care if they are religiously based.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that use fear and guilt to manipulate and control others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that justify unethical behavior if it somehow serves "God's will."
Nor do I respect magical or superstitious thinking in its other various manifestations. People who believe in this kind s*** (some religions included) deserve to offended, though for propriety's sake, we may prefer other people to do the offending.
Chap wrote:Good try, but no cigar.
Are you really expecting us to believe that your experience of the normal native English-speaker's use of 'so-called' in a controversial context does not overwhelmingly and in nearly every case carry the sense of "people say it is one of these [e.g. a massacre] but it isn't really?"
Now I agree that in certain technical discussions 'so-called' may be a way of introducing a 'term of art': "In so-called 'gene splicing' one proceeds as follows". But that is not relevant here.
The example you cite to support your reading of DCPs post is in fact a neat parallel to it - an LDS apologist referring to something he can't dodge (DCP: there WAS a massacre; Martins: there WAS a priesthood ban) but would like to hold at arm's length. Use of "so-called' as a distancing/denigrating strategy ONLY happens when there is an undeniable historical fact to deal with. Other wise one would say something like 'alleged' - if one thought there was a chance of getting away with it, which in the cases of the massacre and the ban there is not.
Chap wrote:guy sajer wrote:What is meant by "respecting" a religion. I respect people's right to believe as they like. I respect religion in the sense that I try not to make offensive comments or act offensive or inappropriately around people of faith (exception being this board). I respect people who live their life according to a set of reasonable moral principles.
I DO NOT respect silly, superstitious iron-age belief systems, particularly when believers attempt to impose this silly, superstitious iron-age belief system on others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that deny basic civil liberties or human dignity to individuals or groups, such as sexist, racist, or homophobic beliefs. I don't care if they are religiously based.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that use fear and guilt to manipulate and control others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that justify unethical behavior if it somehow serves "God's will."
Nor do I respect magical or superstitious thinking in its other various manifestations. People who believe in this kind s*** (some religions included) deserve to offended, though for propriety's sake, we may prefer other people to do the offending.
Right on. Suppose I claim to be a convert to the Aztec sun cult. Do you then 'respect' my conviction that the sun will not rise tomorrow unless I am permitted to practice my religion by tearing the hearts out of living human victims?
Suppose I claim to be a convert to Thuggee, the Indian cult that demanded that I should show my devotion to Mother Kali by infiltrating groups of travellers and then murdering them by strangulation. Do you respect my religion then, in any meaningful sense?
Suppose I believe that the only way to cure the AIDS epidemic is for all left-handed people to recite 'Mary had a little lamb" at noon on alternate Fridays? Do you have to refrain from laughing so long as I tell you it is my religion that says that?
As to how a Calvinist views such statements, I'm not real sure as I don't know how far-reaching the belief in a lack of free will goes.
Gadianton wrote:[...] the Calvinist representatives on all the religious message boards I've encountered have been the most respectful out of anyone.
wenglund wrote:Chap wrote:guy sajer wrote:What is meant by "respecting" a religion. I respect people's right to believe as they like. I respect religion in the sense that I try not to make offensive comments or act offensive or inappropriately around people of faith (exception being this board). I respect people who live their life according to a set of reasonable moral principles.
I DO NOT respect silly, superstitious iron-age belief systems, particularly when believers attempt to impose this silly, superstitious iron-age belief system on others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that deny basic civil liberties or human dignity to individuals or groups, such as sexist, racist, or homophobic beliefs. I don't care if they are religiously based.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that use fear and guilt to manipulate and control others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that justify unethical behavior if it somehow serves "God's will."
Nor do I respect magical or superstitious thinking in its other various manifestations. People who believe in this kind s*** (some religions included) deserve to offended, though for propriety's sake, we may prefer other people to do the offending.
Right on. Suppose I claim to be a convert to the Aztec sun cult. Do you then 'respect' my conviction that the sun will not rise tomorrow unless I am permitted to practice my religion by tearing the hearts out of living human victims?
Suppose I claim to be a convert to Thuggee, the Indian cult that demanded that I should show my devotion to Mother Kali by infiltrating groups of travellers and then murdering them by strangulation. Do you respect my religion then, in any meaningful sense?
Suppose I believe that the only way to cure the AIDS epidemic is for all left-handed people to recite 'Mary had a little lamb" at noon on alternate Fridays? Do you have to refrain from laughing so long as I tell you it is my religion that says that?
While I may not agree with certain religious practices, and I may even think it disadvantageous to society to allow certain religious practice (such as what you mentioned of the Thuggee), and I may even prefer other curative alternatives (both secular and religious) to some religious denominations, I don't find intollerance and mockery to be edifying to anyone, particularly when interjected into interfaith dialogue. But, that may just be me.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
Doctor Steuss wrote:Chap wrote:Good try, but no cigar.
Thank goodness that my consumption of Camacho Coyolar Puro is not dependant upon your approval.Are you really expecting us to believe that your experience of the normal native English-speaker's use of 'so-called' in a controversial context does not overwhelmingly and in nearly every case carry the sense of "people say it is one of these [e.g. a massacre] but it isn't really?"
I’m not expecting “us” to believe anything. When I do have expectations of people being swayed by the evident context of a passage in a given book based on the author’s own words and not the reader’s presuppositions, I tend to keep those expectations relatively low.Now I agree that in certain technical discussions 'so-called' may be a way of introducing a 'term of art': "In so-called 'gene splicing' one proceeds as follows". But that is not relevant here.
The mere fact that he follows up (after referring to it as the “so-called priesthood ban”) with a clarifier of what it was (I.e. “the practice prior to 1978 of denying ordination to the Church’s priesthood to male members with Black African ancestry”) should be enough evidence that Dr. Martins was using the term in the sense of “commonly referred to as” or “commonly known as” or “often referred to as.”
But, it being evident to someone familiar with a “normal native English-speaker’s” use of a conjunction followed by an explanation of the previous term preceded by the adjective of “so-called” probably isn’t relative here either.The example you cite to support your reading of DCPs post is in fact a neat parallel to it - an LDS apologist referring to something he can't dodge (DCP: there WAS a massacre; Martins: there WAS a priesthood ban) but would like to hold at arm's length. Use of "so-called' as a distancing/denigrating strategy ONLY happens when there is an undeniable historical fact to deal with. Other wise one would say something like 'alleged' - if one thought there was a chance of getting away with it, which in the cases of the massacre and the ban there is not.
The example I cited was to support my reading (and anyone else with nominal reading comprehension) of Martins’ use of “so-called.” Beastie asked why he used “so-called” and I provided clarification that in this particular case (despite the prevalence others have towards obsession, not everything I say has to do with DCP), Martins was using the #1 (primary) definition in the Fourth Edition of The American Heritage Dictionary for “so-called” (I.e. “commonly called”).
For you to even imply that Martins’ (a man who adamantly argues against the notion that “…discussion of the priesthood ban and the old ideas related to it are irrelevant and inconsequential and that they should be set aside for good”) doesn’t believe there was a priesthood ban, or he is somehow engaging in some form of strategy by using “so-called,” or that he is in someway trying to downplay the practice is simply ridiculous.
Good try, but no Marlboro Menthol Ultra-light 100’s.
guy sajer wrote:I DO NOT respect beliefs that use fear and guilt to manipulate and control others.
I DO NOT respect beliefs that justify unethical behavior if it somehow serves "God's will."
Nor do I respect magical or superstitious thinking in its other various manifestations. People who believe in this kind s*** (some religions included) deserve to offended, though for propriety's sake, we may prefer other people to do the offending.