Greek Easter
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Sorry I realise that I should of put Eastern Orthodox, but I did put Orthodox friends in the main body.ZoNi wrote:Just small adding - it was not Greek Eastern, it was Orthodox Eastern
Any way the Greek reply is Alithos Anesti or Alithos O Kirios
Which converts to "He has truly risen" or "He is truly our Lord" respectively
Vas
Well, since you put me on the spot I'll have to admit I don't know much about the finer points of Dennett's work. But the idea that consciousness and its contents are aspects of behavior and the brain seems right to me. He and Dawkins (and Sam Harris) make strong cases for the evolutionary/biological/neurological nature of what many folks lazily assume is, let's say, "divinely ephemeral" and "bequeathed from above." And the idea that consciousness is a naturally selected quality, "organic" or "home-grown," if you will, takes nothing away from the experience being conscious. I love it. For the most part, of course. And I want it to last for as long as the "most part" is love and wonder and amazement.nikos wrote:. . . brig, what's the angle on your behaviourist take on consciousness?
Me too. Although I lean more toward the philosophical approach than the hard scientific one--for reading enjoyment anyway.nikos wrote:the mystery of consciousness, free will and the like are my favorite reading topic -- i'm no expert but enjoy reading what's on.
Oh, I see. Yes, atheist to be sure.nikos wrote:I just didn't see your angle regarding easter. Are you making an atheist stance?
Dropping the names of a few prominent atheists into a discussion about Jesus and "rising" and all that, I was just trying to be a friendly smart aleck. I hope it was perceived as friendly.
At least Brig didn't mention Charles Darwin, Melville Dewey and Madalyn Murray O'Hare. That "trinity" of more commonly familiar names -- at least here in the States -- would have definately stirred the pot!
And a warm "He is risen indeed!" to everyone else!
And a warm "He is risen indeed!" to everyone else!
PJ in (sunny) FL
"The hardest thing to admit is what you don't know"
"The hardest thing to admit is what you don't know"
And much of the United States. You might be surprised by the extent and depth of superstition here. I took a class in linguistics a few years ago and one of the students liked to tell anybody who would listen that the Earth is 6,000 years old. This was in Detroit at a major public university.just stay away from orthodox countries (greece etc)
Indeed! Then again, three is just a good, strong number for lists--it's not just for theists and numerologists anymore.I took the three names you dropped as an alternative "Trinity" to stir the pot.
At least someone did! Big names from the past, for sure. (Although, all I know about Melvil Dewey is that he was a librarian and invented the Dewey Decimal System for book classification. Was he also an atheist/freethinker? John Dewey was a pretty good thinker.) And Darwin is always relevant. But Dawkins, Dennett, Hitchens, and Harris are the rock stars of atheism right now. (Dennett is the John Entwhistle of the group.)At least Brig didn't mention Charles Darwin, Melville Dewey and Madalyn Murray O'Hare. That "trinity" of more commonly familiar names -- at least here in the States -- would have definately stirred the pot!