Theme: Religion

  • THE MURDEROUS JEWS, CHRISTIANS,AND MUSLIMS —“The Greek-Roman world was not…c

    THE MURDEROUS JEWS, CHRISTIANS,AND MUSLIMS

    —“The Greek-Roman world was not…converted to a new religion, but compelled to embrace it.” The Emperor Theodosian issued a series of decrees or rescripts in the years 341, 345, 356, 381, 383, 386 and 391 CE. They effect of these orders was to “suppress all rival religions, order the closing of the temples, and impose fines, confiscation, imprisonment or death upon any who cling to the older [Pagan] religions.” The period of relative religious tolerance in the Roman Empire ended as Pagan temples were seized and converted to Christian use or destroyed. Priests and Priestesses were exiled or killed. Christianity and Judaism became the only permitted religions. In Spain, bishop Priscillian, who taught some Gnostic beliefs was the first person to be condemned as a heretic and executed by his fellow Christians on religious grounds. The church used the power of the state to begin programs to oppress, exile or exterminate both Pagans and Gnostic Christians. By the end of the century, Pagan temples had been either destroyed or recycled for Christian use. Pagan worship became punishable by death. But government toleration was not without its cost. The Emperor Constantine and later political rulers demanded a major say in the running of the church and in decisions on its beliefs. “—


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-23 12:12:00 UTC

  • “The primary tool of feminist communication: gossip, shaming, PC language, which

    — “The primary tool of feminist communication: gossip, shaming, PC language, which has become the new religious orthodoxy and the new sins” — Dax Rayner

    (via Brandon Hayes)


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-23 08:42:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    https://voiceofeurope.com/2018/11/a-choice-has-to-be-made-the-choice-between-islam-and-freedom/#.W_MngfLUs6Q.twitter

    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-21 09:31:00 UTC

  • I am almost at the point where listening to economists sounds like listening to

    I am almost at the point where listening to economists sounds like listening to marxists, sounds like listening to theologians.

    All the same.

    Testimonialism is a necessity for human evolution.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-20 01:51:29 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1064697708823363584

  • ARYAN MYTH, ABRAHAMISM AND THE BEGINNING OF THE EUROPEAN CULTURAL NEUROSIS by Da

    ARYAN MYTH, ABRAHAMISM AND THE BEGINNING OF THE EUROPEAN CULTURAL NEUROSIS

    by Daniel Gurpide (worth repeating)

    The Indo-Europeans introduced not only practical techniques for the appropriation of the physical and biological world but also, above all, a new technique for organising socio-political and juridical relationships. It developed concepts such as ‘genos,’ ‘polis,’ and ‘imperium’—in their classical, medieval, or modern translations—and this constituted the difference that came to define Indo-European identity when confronted with other populations, cultures, and civilisations.

    Such a way of organising society derived from a particular Weltanschauung. This world view, expressed in all fields of human activity, gave birth to a cosmogonic myth, around which Indo-European man understood, explained, and organised the universe and history. Its unique character is better perceived when contrasted with the mentality and culture of the Book of Genesis. The latter narrative, in its religious and secularised forms, continues to obsess contemporary Western civilisation.

    What is most striking when studying Indo-European cosmogony is the solemn affirmation, found everywhere, of man’s primacy. Indo-European cosmogony places a ‘cosmic man’ at the ‘beginning’ of the current cycle of the world. It is from him that all things derive: gods, nature, living beings—and man himself as historical being. In the Indian world, the Rig Veda names him Purusha; his name is Ymir in the Edda; and, according to Tacitus, he was called Mannus among continental Germans. For the Vedic Indians, Purusha is the One through whom the universe begins (again). He is ‘naught but this universe, what has passed and what is yet to come.’ In the same fashion, Ymir is the undivided One: and by him the world is first organised. His own birth results from the meeting of fire and ice.

    Kalidasa’s poem Kumarasambhava—one of the summits of Indian poetic reflection on the traditions of the Vedas—marvellously explains the allusions of the Indo-European cosmogonic myth. The opposition between Purusha (cosmic man) and Prakriti (which corresponds, approximately, to natura naturans) is revealing. Through being able to see without depending for this on Prakriti, Purusha is at the origin of the universe.

    Since the universe is but indistinct chaos, devoid of any sense or significance, it is only by means of the outlook and word of cosmic man that the multitude of beings and things may emerge—including man fully realised as such. Purusha’s sacrifice is the Apollonian moment at which is affirmed the principium individuationis—‘cause of all that exists and shall exist’—until that time when the world will crumble: the Dionysian end that is also the condition of new beginning.

    The universe does not derive its existence from something not part of it. It proceeds from the being of cosmic man: his body, his gaze, his word—and his consciousness. There is no opposition between two worlds—between created being and uncreated being. On the contrary, there is incessant conversion and consubstantiality between beings and things, between heaven and earth, between men and gods.

    (h/t: brandon hayes)


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-18 10:50:00 UTC

  • They are all reduced to secular theology now. As far as I know (and it is what I

    They are all reduced to secular theology now. As far as I know (and it is what I do) Social Sciences are solved within the domain of rational choice, and philosophy consists almost entirely of the study of discontinuous paradigms defended by sophisms: as resistance movements.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-16 20:03:04 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1063522862689071104

    Reply addressees: @sapinker @qz

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1063226337471676418


    IN REPLY TO:

    @sapinker

    Philosophers philosophizing about philosophy on world philosophy day https://t.co/GLOh6e06XO via @qz

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1063226337471676418

  • “Did you ever read Aeschylus’ “Agamemnon”? Some things can only be learned by su

    —“Did you ever read Aeschylus’ “Agamemnon”? Some things can only be learned by suffering–enduring the consequences of your agency.”—Chip Sills

    This kind of conflation of heroic effort with suffering is a christian mental disease. if it is some kind of suffering for you then you are mentally, physically, emotionally unfit or inferior…

    its just work.

    cancer, serious illness, pain, divorce, loss, this is not suffering but endurance.

    suffering is loss regardless of action. all else is work.

    If you make the choice it may be Work to achieve or Tragedy to fail to achieve, but Suffering is due to that which is beyond your actions.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-16 08:27:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1045323/russia-news-military-church-vladimir-putinhttps://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1045323/russia-news-military-church-vladimir-putin


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-14 19:30:00 UTC

  • WOTAN GIVES US A HARD HEART (worth repeating) “‘Wotan placed a hard heart in my

    WOTAN GIVES US A HARD HEART

    (worth repeating)

    “‘Wotan placed a hard heart in my breast,’ is what an old Scandinavian saga says: the poet who said this caught correctly what springs straight from the soul of a proud Viking. Such a type of man is proud of the very fact that he has not been made for compassion: which is why the hero of the saga adds in warning, ‘If a man does not have a hard heart when young, it will never harden’. The noble and the brave who think like this are the furthest from that morality that sees the badge of morality precisely in compassion or in doing things for others or in désintéressement; one’s faith in one’s self, one’s pride in one’s self, a basic animosity and irony towards ‘selflessness’ belongs just as definitely to noble morality as a mild contempt and wariness towards compassionate feelings and the ‘warm heart’”— Nietzsche, from the Genealogy of Morals.

    <thanks to Freyr Björnsson>


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-14 13:09:00 UTC

  • THE WEST AND TRAGEDY VS SUFFERING If you don’t understand Nietzsche’s insight th

    THE WEST AND TRAGEDY VS SUFFERING

    If you don’t understand Nietzsche’s insight that tragedy was the west’s alternative to semitic suffering, which socialized the problem of difficulty rather than privatizing it, then you do not understand either Nietzsche nor the uniqueness of the west.

    Heroism bred Tragedy. And it is Tragedy vs Suffering that separates the west from the rest.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-11-14 11:10:00 UTC