Re: Theism and Moral Realism are separate concepts
Posted: Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:38 pm
Neither is a Scotsman, apparently.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:24 pm Moreover, a man is not a Christian just because he says he is,
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Neither is a Scotsman, apparently.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:24 pm Moreover, a man is not a Christian just because he says he is,
Quite true. A Lithuanian who says he's a Scotsman isn't a Scotsman. A Scotswoman who says she's a Scotsman isn't a Scotsman. So what's your point, really?Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:38 pmNeither is a Scotsman, apparently.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:24 pm Moreover, a man is not a Christian just because he says he is,![]()
Once again, you are talking nonsense. Do you believe in freedom of speech? Do you believe brilliant academics (like Marx) should be allowed to write predictions without bring condemned for it?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:24 pmI don't believe you even think that's true. It's too obviously absurd. Such an argument strains the bounds of common sense past the breaking point. You're not a fool; and I'm certain you can see how absurd such a suggestion is. All it takes is basic common sense.As you surely know, a person is condemnable for what he said, not what he spoke against. He's responsible for those who followed him obediently, never for those who grossly disobeyed him and refused to do what he taught them. Common sense again. Moreover, a man is not a Christian just because he says he is, if indeed Torquemada ever claimed he was anything but a Catholic. He's a Christian only if he follows Christ; and that's definitional.If Marx is guilty of the sins committed in his name, so is Jesus.
Torquemada, a Catholic (See https://www.gotquestions.org/Catholic-Christian.html) is said by encyclopedia.com to have responsibility for the deaths of 2,000 people, allegedly. Let's say that's true, and we can put every one of those on him. That's one-seventy-thousanthof the people known to be killed as a result of Marx.
Meanwhile, Marx taught evil and caused evil; his followers, the Marxists, do exactly what he taught them to do, which is to create perpetual, violent revolution.
And the number killed by those obeying Jesus? 0. Not a one. And countless millions saved from misery and death by the ethics and practices of Jesus, and by His followers, who have established charities, hospitals, addiction-relief programs, schools, personal freedoms, international aid programs, universities, poverty-relief organizations, prison reforms...and so on, as a result of His teachings. Not so by Marx: dialectical materialists are myopically devoted to creating their "utopia" at any cost, not on relieving suffering.
And you think you can draw a parallel?You haven't 'got a prayer' of making that case.
140 million dead are "irrelevant" to you?Your...repetition of the numbers of dead is irrelevant.I doubt it. If it were true, you'd be somebody who would excuse anything...for there's nothing worse ever done that you could possibly have left to excuse. Nobody's killed so many people. The blood is all on Marx's hands, by the same logic by which you condemn the Catholic inquisitor, Torquemada.
You're swimming upstream against all logic, all history, all that Marx himself said, and all the facts. Not buying it.![]()
Of course.
No, I don't believe that Marx was "brilliant." I believe he was a grifter, a plagiarist from Hegel, essentially, and a fomenter of deceptions. And history bears that impression out.Do you believe brilliant academics (like Marx)...
Not if you can count. And it's at least 140 million, and how many more...we really can't say. Despots don't like to keep statistics beyond what we can already count by our own means, and beyond they are actually forced to admit. We can be quite sure there were considerably more.In addition, 100 million vs. 2000 is utterly irrelevant,
But his poisonous ideas were not. They have outlived that spotty, squalid, narcisisistic little man, and caused more misery than anything else in history. So he's a great cautionary tale, an example of the words Shakespeare wrote for Mark Anthony: "The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones.” What evil he has done is immeasurable. If he did any good, apparently nobody knows about it.Marx was long dead by the time of the Russian revolution.
Except, as you seem incapable of understanding, he didn't perform the evil deeds. Others did. As far as I know, Marx never even whipped any money lenders.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 4:53 pm What evil he has done is immeasurable. If he did any good, apparently nobody knows about it.
Well, you should read a biography of Marx. You'll find he was no saint. Even favourable biographers admit that he economically ruined his own family, and spent the rest of his time sponging off Engels. He raped his handicapped housekeeper, then abandoned the illegitimate child he created. He was known for explosive fits of temper and resentment, and for vinctive attitudes to anyone who failed to pay his bills for him. He was, by all accounts, a thoroughly difficult and unpleasant individual. But all this was small-scale.Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 6:03 pmExcept, as you seem incapable of understanding, he didn't perform the evil deeds. Others did. As far as I know, Marx never even whipped any money lenders.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 4:53 pm What evil he has done is immeasurable. If he did any good, apparently nobody knows about it.
You seem incapable of understanding your own religion or a simple analogy. If a prophet must bear the guilt if his acolytes, Marx and Jesus are both guilty.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 6:35 pm
The greatest wickedness he did was to create an ideology that gave those "others" of whom you spoke the means and motive for the killing of 140,000,000 people, at the very minimum, and the ruination of every economy in which his ideology was implimented, resulting in the immiseration, starvation and social destruction of innumerable other ones. They may have been his "arms," but he was their "brain" and "mouth." That's evil. That's all on Marx.
Don't you already know any of this?![]()
Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 10:35 pmYou seem incapable of understanding your own religion...Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 6:35 pm
The greatest wickedness he did was to create an ideology that gave those "others" of whom you spoke the means and motive for the killing of 140,000,000 people, at the very minimum, and the ruination of every economy in which his ideology was implimented, resulting in the immiseration, starvation and social destruction of innumerable other ones. They may have been his "arms," but he was their "brain" and "mouth." That's evil. That's all on Marx.
Don't you already know any of this?![]()
Who told you that? It's far from true. But then, maybe you'll have to tell me more about my own religion, before I'll know that.The numbers are not relevant to the sin, according to the Chtistian ethic.
Since you ask, I'll comply, although I doubt it will do you any good. Acc. To Augustine and Acquinas, sin is "a thought, word or deed against the eternal law." The sinner need not murder one person (let alone 100 million). His desire to do so is enough to separate him from God.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 10:47 pm
Who told you that? It's far from true. But then, maybe you'll have to tell me more about my own religion, before I'll know that.![]()
Well, no. It depends on what he does with that. Has he realized his sin? Has he confessed it? Has he repented and begged forgiveness? Is he forgiven? The sin of murder can be forgiven, you know. In that case, the very fact of murder is erased from his account. And he is not separated from God, consequently. He has no "body count" at all.Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 11:23 pmSince you ask, I'll comply, although I doubt it will do you any good. Acc. To Augustine and Acquinas, sin is "a thought, word or deed against the eternal law." The sinner need not murder one person (let alone 100 million). His desire to do do is enough to separate him from God.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 10:47 pm
Who told you that? It's far from true. But then, maybe you'll have to tell me more about my own religion, before I'll know that.![]()
The body count is irrelevant.
Out of respect, for the creed if not for you, I won't say "rhe devil is on the details."Nonetheless, my assessment is correct in general, as Saints. Augustine and Acquinas would attest. Perhaps you know better.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2024 2:51 amWell, no. It depends on what he does with that. Has he realized his sin? Has he confessed it? Has he repented and begged forgiveness? Is he forgiven? The sin of murder can be forgiven, you know. In that case, the very fact of murder is erased from his account. And he is not separated from God, consequently. He has no "body count" at all.Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 11:23 pmSince you ask, I'll comply, although I doubt it will do you any good. Acc. To Augustine and Acquinas, sin is "a thought, word or deed against the eternal law." The sinner need not murder one person (let alone 100 million). His desire to do do is enough to separate him from God.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 10:47 pm
Who told you that? It's far from true. But then, maybe you'll have to tell me more about my own religion, before I'll know that.![]()
The body count is irrelevant.
On the other hand, for those who are unrepentant and have sought out no forgiveness, there are clearly degrees of punishment -- all bad, all involving separation from God, but some being termed "the greater condemnation." (John 19:11, Matt. 23:14, for examples) And a man who has done worse things gets a condemnation greater than one who has committed fewer, it would seem.
So you'll have to try a different argument. Your theology is off, there.
Than your interpretation of those "church fathers'? Sure. Why not? I gave you the Scriptures that prove I'm right about that. Did you look them up?Alexiev wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2024 4:11 amNonetheless, my assessment is correct in general, as Saints. Augustine and Acquinas would attest. Perhaps you know better.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2024 2:51 amWell, no. It depends on what he does with that. Has he realized his sin? Has he confessed it? Has he repented and begged forgiveness? Is he forgiven? The sin of murder can be forgiven, you know. In that case, the very fact of murder is erased from his account. And he is not separated from God, consequently. He has no "body count" at all.Alexiev wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 11:23 pm
Since you ask, I'll comply, although I doubt it will do you any good. Acc. To Augustine and Acquinas, sin is "a thought, word or deed against the eternal law." The sinner need not murder one person (let alone 100 million). His desire to do do is enough to separate him from God.
The body count is irrelevant.
On the other hand, for those who are unrepentant and have sought out no forgiveness, there are clearly degrees of punishment -- all bad, all involving separation from God, but some being termed "the greater condemnation." (John 19:11, Matt. 23:14, for examples) And a man who has done worse things gets a condemnation greater than one who has committed fewer, it would seem.
So you'll have to try a different argument. Your theology is off, there.
No point, really; I was just thinking how Scotsmen tend to have their nationality stripped from them more than most others.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:42 pmQuite true. A Lithuanian who says he's a Scotsman isn't a Scotsman. A Scotswoman who says she's a Scotsman isn't a Scotsman. So what's your point, really?Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:38 pmNeither is a Scotsman, apparently.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:24 pm Moreover, a man is not a Christian just because he says he is,![]()
Words do have ranges of meaning. Even "Scotsman" has a limited range of meaning. That which is simply outside the reasonable range of meanings of "Scotsman" is not a Scotsman.Harbal wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2024 9:26 amNo point, really; I was just thinking how Scotsmen tend to have their nationality stripped from them more than most others.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 3:42 pmQuite true. A Lithuanian who says he's a Scotsman isn't a Scotsman. A Scotswoman who says she's a Scotsman isn't a Scotsman. So what's your point, really?