EAllusion wrote:Given his admirable self-awareness, I think he would appreciate the symmetry and would be off-put by any sanctimony of leaving him untouchable because he just died.
I don't want to touch a dead person. Gross!
EAllusion wrote:Given his admirable self-awareness, I think he would appreciate the symmetry and would be off-put by any sanctimony of leaving him untouchable because he just died.
DarkHelmet wrote:
It is easy to do when their beliefs are drummed into your head daily for 30 years.
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I need a break from the MDB (I am exhausted!)
See you all after the New Year!!!!!! :)
Peace to you all and Merry Christmas to you and yours!
Ceeboo
Kishkumen wrote:I am really bummed out that Hitchens has passed. I was sad to hear of his illness, so it is not like I didn't know this was coming, but I will miss him. It is not like I agreed with his special disdain for religion, but he was an intelligent and witty fellow, with a ready quip to unsettle the self-satisfied and complacent. His book god is not Great was not very good, especially on things Mormon, but it was a real pleasure to watch him debate, even though I didn't agree with him about a lot of things.
Again, I will miss seeing him debate and appear on shows.
On a further note, I guess I am somewhat saddened by the argument that people are only significant if they can be physically immortal. I believe that everyone is immortal in the impact they leave on this world, no matter how small that impact may be. We all interact with other people and our planet, and in those interactions we contribute to the trajectory of history. My reverence for this idea is one of the reasons I feel more attached to my Mormon roots than ever. I pay tribute to my LDS ancestors and feel attached to them in finding appreciation for their beliefs.
Finally, I would recommend Paul Woodruff's book Reverence: Renewing a Forgotten Virtue as good holiday reading for people of all philosophies and beliefs. In respectful recognition of Ray's latest approach to the board, I offer it to you as a decent argument for the importance of reverence to human society, whether one is atheist, Christian, Muslim, or Scientologist.
mikwut wrote:I will miss his humor and wit, to wit:
It was early last September,
as near as I remember,
I was falling down the street in drunken pride,
when I fell into the gutter thinking thoughts I dare not utter,
and a pig came up and lay down by me side.
As I lay there in that gutter thinking thoughts I dare not utter,
a fair young maid came by and she did say,
you can tell a man who boozes by the company he chooses,
and that the pig got up and walked away.
mikwut