Source: Original Site Post

  • Teach the way they can comprehend

    Some people need to be taught principles. Some people need to be taught rules. Some people need to be taught fear. Teach those who are worth teaching in the way they can comprehend. Its all a man can do. —Noah J Revoy

  • Teach the way they can comprehend

    Some people need to be taught principles. Some people need to be taught rules. Some people need to be taught fear. Teach those who are worth teaching in the way they can comprehend. Its all a man can do. —Noah J Revoy

  • Truth is a merciless, zero-tolerance, weapon.

    Truth is merciless. Truth is the scientific, legal, political, educational, and religious means of defeating the abrahamisms. But Truth is not a selective weapon. It is indescriminate – a weapon of zero tolerance. It will destroy your Christianity along with the first generation abrahamic religions: judaism, christianity, and islam, and second generation abrahamic religions: marxism (Judaism), feminism, and postmodernism (Christianity), and fundamentalist islam.

  • Truth is a merciless, zero-tolerance, weapon.

    Truth is merciless. Truth is the scientific, legal, political, educational, and religious means of defeating the abrahamisms. But Truth is not a selective weapon. It is indescriminate – a weapon of zero tolerance. It will destroy your Christianity along with the first generation abrahamic religions: judaism, christianity, and islam, and second generation abrahamic religions: marxism (Judaism), feminism, and postmodernism (Christianity), and fundamentalist islam.

  • Gods

    THE ARCHETYPES – THE FAMILY Central to Greek religion in classical times were the twelve Olympian deities headed by Zeus. Each god was honored with stone temples and statues, and sanctuaries (sacred enclosures), which, although dedicated to a specific deity, often contained statues commemorating other gods.[1] They were a family of gods, the most important consisting of the first generation of Olympians, offspring of the Titans Cronus and Rhea: Zeus, Poseidon, Hera, Demeter and Hestia, along with the principal offspring of Zeus: Athena, Apollo, Artemis, Ares, Aphrodite,[3] Hephaestus, Hermes, and Dionysus. The city-states would conduct various festivals and rituals throughout the year, with particular emphasis directed towards the patron god of the city, such as Athena at Athens, or Apollo at Corinth.[1] THE RELIGION OF REAL AND HISTORICAL HEROES Religious practice would also involve the worship of heroes, people who were regarded as semi-divine. Such heroes ranged from the mythical figures in the epics of Homer to historical people such as the founder of a city.[1] THE NATURAL WORLD WAS DENSELY POPULATED At the local level, the landscape was filled with sacred spots and monuments; for example, many statues of Nymphs were found near and around springs, and the stylized figures of Hermes could often be found on street corners.[1] ALEXANDER MIXED EUROPEAN AND CENTRAL ASIAN In the aftermath of the conquests of Alexander the Great, Greek culture spread widely and came into much closer contact with the civilizations of the Near East and Egypt. The most significant changes to impact on Greek religion were the loss of independence of the Greek city-states to Macedonian rulers; the importation of foreign deities; and the development of new philosophical systems.[4] THE NEAR EAST BROUGHT DECLINE ***Older surveys of Hellenistic religion tended to depict the era as one of religious decline, discerning a rise in scepticism, agnosticism and atheism, as well as an increase in superstition, mysticism, and astrology.[5]*** THE ARCHETYPAL GODS ARE SENSIBLE DIVISIONS OF THE WORLD: -THE MASCULINE WORLD- ZEUS (FATHER): King of the gods. God of the sky, lightning, thunder, law, order and justice ATHENA (WISDOM/POSITIVE) Goddess of wisdom, strategy, warfare and skill. ARES: (PASSION/NEGATIVE) God of war, violence and destruction. The force of destruction, savage warfare and bloodlust. -THE REAL WORLD- APOLLO (UPPER): God of light, the sun, prophecy, philosophy, truth, inspiration, poetry, music, arts, medicine, healing. HERMES(MIDDLE): god of travel, trade, diplomacy, persuasion, writings and athletics. HEPHAESTUS(WORKING): god of craftsmanship, blacksmiths and stonemasonry. -THE FEMININE WORLD- HERA (MOTHER): Queen of the gods and the goddess of marriage, women, childbirth and family. APHRODITE (DAUGHTER): goddess of love, beauty, pleasure and procreation. HESTIA(YOUNG DAUGHTER): Virgin goddess of hearth, the domestic affairs and home. -THE NATURAL WORLD- POSEIDON(NATURE’S POWER): God of the seas, water, storms, hurricanes, earthquakes (and horses). ARTEMIS(BEASTS): Goddess of hunting and wilderness DEMETER (AGRICULTURE): Goddess of the harvest, fertility, agriculture, nature and the seasons DIONYISUS God of wine, festivals and pleasure.

  • Gods

    THE ARCHETYPES – THE FAMILY Central to Greek religion in classical times were the twelve Olympian deities headed by Zeus. Each god was honored with stone temples and statues, and sanctuaries (sacred enclosures), which, although dedicated to a specific deity, often contained statues commemorating other gods.[1] They were a family of gods, the most important consisting of the first generation of Olympians, offspring of the Titans Cronus and Rhea: Zeus, Poseidon, Hera, Demeter and Hestia, along with the principal offspring of Zeus: Athena, Apollo, Artemis, Ares, Aphrodite,[3] Hephaestus, Hermes, and Dionysus. The city-states would conduct various festivals and rituals throughout the year, with particular emphasis directed towards the patron god of the city, such as Athena at Athens, or Apollo at Corinth.[1] THE RELIGION OF REAL AND HISTORICAL HEROES Religious practice would also involve the worship of heroes, people who were regarded as semi-divine. Such heroes ranged from the mythical figures in the epics of Homer to historical people such as the founder of a city.[1] THE NATURAL WORLD WAS DENSELY POPULATED At the local level, the landscape was filled with sacred spots and monuments; for example, many statues of Nymphs were found near and around springs, and the stylized figures of Hermes could often be found on street corners.[1] ALEXANDER MIXED EUROPEAN AND CENTRAL ASIAN In the aftermath of the conquests of Alexander the Great, Greek culture spread widely and came into much closer contact with the civilizations of the Near East and Egypt. The most significant changes to impact on Greek religion were the loss of independence of the Greek city-states to Macedonian rulers; the importation of foreign deities; and the development of new philosophical systems.[4] THE NEAR EAST BROUGHT DECLINE ***Older surveys of Hellenistic religion tended to depict the era as one of religious decline, discerning a rise in scepticism, agnosticism and atheism, as well as an increase in superstition, mysticism, and astrology.[5]*** THE ARCHETYPAL GODS ARE SENSIBLE DIVISIONS OF THE WORLD: -THE MASCULINE WORLD- ZEUS (FATHER): King of the gods. God of the sky, lightning, thunder, law, order and justice ATHENA (WISDOM/POSITIVE) Goddess of wisdom, strategy, warfare and skill. ARES: (PASSION/NEGATIVE) God of war, violence and destruction. The force of destruction, savage warfare and bloodlust. -THE REAL WORLD- APOLLO (UPPER): God of light, the sun, prophecy, philosophy, truth, inspiration, poetry, music, arts, medicine, healing. HERMES(MIDDLE): god of travel, trade, diplomacy, persuasion, writings and athletics. HEPHAESTUS(WORKING): god of craftsmanship, blacksmiths and stonemasonry. -THE FEMININE WORLD- HERA (MOTHER): Queen of the gods and the goddess of marriage, women, childbirth and family. APHRODITE (DAUGHTER): goddess of love, beauty, pleasure and procreation. HESTIA(YOUNG DAUGHTER): Virgin goddess of hearth, the domestic affairs and home. -THE NATURAL WORLD- POSEIDON(NATURE’S POWER): God of the seas, water, storms, hurricanes, earthquakes (and horses). ARTEMIS(BEASTS): Goddess of hunting and wilderness DEMETER (AGRICULTURE): Goddess of the harvest, fertility, agriculture, nature and the seasons DIONYISUS God of wine, festivals and pleasure.

  • Paradigms Consisting of Constant Relations

    I ONLY WORK WITH AND I ONLY CONSTRUCT PARADIGMS CONSISTING OF CONSTANT RELATIONS THAT REMAIN CONTIGUOUS ACROSS DISCIPLINES In other words, Logic > Mathematics > Physics > Chemistry > Biochemistry > Biology > Sentience > Consciousness > Reason > Calculation > Computation. So when you ask me “Hey have you hear of X nonsense?” I hear “Hey have you heard of this set of fictional paradigms that are discontiguous with existential, observable, testifiable, reality?” No. Fairy stories. I like fairy stories. But only when they are in fact fairy stories, not fairy stories claiming to be something else. There is only one most parsimonious paradigm. And that most parsimonious paradigm is that which consists of constant relations contiguous across the disciplines. CONTIGUOUS 1 : being in actual contact : touching along a boundary or at a point – the 48 contiguous states 2 : touching or connected throughout in an unbroken sequence – contiguous row houses contiguous vineyards 3 : next or near in time or sequence -The fires were contiguous with the earthquake. DISCONTIGUOUS 1 : not contiguous – intermittent · sporadic · broken · fitful · interrupted · on and off · disrupted · erratic · disconnected CONSTANT RELATIONS 1 : properties shared between two or more referents. 2 : properties remaining constant between two or more states. INCONSTANT RELATIONS 1 : properties not shared between two or more referents. 2 : properties not constant between two or more states.
    Jul 02, 2018 7:20pm
  • Paradigms Consisting of Constant Relations

    I ONLY WORK WITH AND I ONLY CONSTRUCT PARADIGMS CONSISTING OF CONSTANT RELATIONS THAT REMAIN CONTIGUOUS ACROSS DISCIPLINES In other words, Logic > Mathematics > Physics > Chemistry > Biochemistry > Biology > Sentience > Consciousness > Reason > Calculation > Computation. So when you ask me “Hey have you hear of X nonsense?” I hear “Hey have you heard of this set of fictional paradigms that are discontiguous with existential, observable, testifiable, reality?” No. Fairy stories. I like fairy stories. But only when they are in fact fairy stories, not fairy stories claiming to be something else. There is only one most parsimonious paradigm. And that most parsimonious paradigm is that which consists of constant relations contiguous across the disciplines. CONTIGUOUS 1 : being in actual contact : touching along a boundary or at a point – the 48 contiguous states 2 : touching or connected throughout in an unbroken sequence – contiguous row houses contiguous vineyards 3 : next or near in time or sequence -The fires were contiguous with the earthquake. DISCONTIGUOUS 1 : not contiguous – intermittent · sporadic · broken · fitful · interrupted · on and off · disrupted · erratic · disconnected CONSTANT RELATIONS 1 : properties shared between two or more referents. 2 : properties remaining constant between two or more states. INCONSTANT RELATIONS 1 : properties not shared between two or more referents. 2 : properties not constant between two or more states.
    Jul 02, 2018 7:20pm
  • Buddhism vs Stoicism

    The problem with teaching stoicism is that it’s expensive in teaching-time. Buddhism expensive in personal time. And by comparison religion allows mass production on the cheap.

  • Buddhism vs Stoicism

    The problem with teaching stoicism is that it’s expensive in teaching-time. Buddhism expensive in personal time. And by comparison religion allows mass production on the cheap.