the myth of flat earth debunked again
- Non-Mainstream and Controversial Science
- 1324 Replies
When they say the road is straight, that means it doesn't deviate left to right.You live in Oz, maybe you can explain this.
Or this.
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
When they say the road is straight, that means it doesn't deviate left to right.You live in Oz, maybe you can explain this.
Or this.
Do they interrupt your religious services to do so?Thing is, as a Catholic, I get to hear my own friends and coworkers rag about my religion my entire life.
What do you think NDEs are about if not the afterlife and the survival of the self? I've studied this subject for the past 20 years. It includes reading more than 5000 accounts from around the world.
For a moment, but only for a moment, just long enough to decide that whether they were "innocent" civilians or civilians who were also suicide bombers. Any speeding vehicle that didn't stop pretty darned quickly was fired upon, whether it contained women and children or not.Even in wartime Iraq, troops tried to stop speeding vehicles, that could be suicide bombers, because they may be civilians.
I don't think you know how law works.These speed boats, may or may not be drug runners, but blowing them up without attempting to stop them by other, is illegal. If not, please give me a law which allows it.
Was Jesus ever sick or in pain?
They executed guards and soldiers who violated what was already international law treaties that Germany had ratified. In other words, they had violated the laws of their own nation.After WWII, war crime trials executed guards and soldiers which were following orders.
He killed himself because of misguided beliefs.
That's part of the problem that Democrats have, if anyone was "aligned with Trump" at any point, "you're dead to me...forever"
I would take a generic conservative over a loony hatemonger like her any day. The fact that she’s on the right side of the Epstein case doesn’t change that.But the reality is, she's in a solid red deep South district (where's she's won handily multiple times, by 75/25 margins). The notion that an unknown moderate, who's not explicitly "Trump-endorsed", is going to win that district is a pipe dream.
Her advantage as an incumbent (who already has name recognition as is well-liked in her district) would give her an advantage that a newcomer wouldn't have.
So I'll stand by my original statement... the Democrats would've been better off extending an olive branch (even if she only sides with them 20% of the time moving forward), vs. what they're going to get as her replacement.
You can bank on the fact that Trump will be watching that house election closely, and making sure to meddle in any way he can to make sure it's a loyalist far-right person who takes that seat... I'll send you $20 on venmo if I'm wrong lol
Yes, I get that ... I think it's fair to say that from Uthman (650 CE) until now the Quranic textual stability is indeed higher than that of the NT writings over that time-frame; yet it's also true the earliest Quran manuscripts we have definitely show variance going back to pre-Uthmanic era. And those variants sometimes indeed changed the meaning of a verse.Perhaps in a sense there is a higher fidelity, though that is at least a product of survivorship bias given the penchant for destruction of variants. But as far as I am aware, there isn't as open of a process for critical scholarship regarding the manuscripts that do exist. Also, there is the issue of what constitutes a variant given the dialect variance that exists within the manuscripts and the tolerance for at least seven distinct Arabic dialects or "readings". And in addition to the issues you mentioned, there is the unity of the text that is also in play given the relatively late collection into a single codex for the Bible compared to the Qu'ran. My minor quibble with what you had said was simply because it appeared to express a confidence in the Qu'ranic texts that the comparitive interest in critical scholarship creates a slight bias. There is also the issue of the oldest extant manuscript displaying a massive amount of variance from the later standardized texts from chapter order, number, and variant readings beyond the recognized "acceptable" variations.
12 is the number of lictor states in the original Roman Kingdom. To me this signifies it’s restoration. It doesn’t exclude the multitudes, who take part in the second resurrection, but the first fruits, or the first born, inherit the power structure.
We pray that you can healing, that the power of God will permeate your entire being. That any demonic involvement will be driven ut in the name of Jesus. I too once was struggling and asked God to send someone to help. A couple of months later an avengelist I had seen before was going to be in my area. I went to that meeting and recieved a healing.I don't feel like I can pray right anymore. I'm scared I'm going to hell. I hallucinated audible demons. I have diagnosed schizophrenia but it felt so real.
Maybe Del could explain that.
Thanks for the info!Technically, the UK doesn't have a state religion, but England does. The Church of England is established in England, but only in England. The Church in Wales, Church of Scotland (presbyterian not Anglican), Scottish Episcopal Church and Church of Ireland are not established churches.
Also this can be the case of something being normal but being done in violation of the law and only now did somebody care enough to sue.
Ah, thanks for the info!It was normal, in England, back in the sixties, when I was at school. We had a religious assembly before lessons with a hymn and prayer. Those of other religions (not many in those days) could opt out. Some students and teachers who didn’t believe just sat quietly but most of us joined in. At some point, between then and now, it stopped happening but I'm not sure when that was. Northern Ireland has always been more religious than the rest of the UK and, having it's own parliament, presumably kept the practise going for longer.
Btw what you call public schools is what we call state schools. I just mention that to prevent confusion. (Our public schools are expensive fee paying ones, like Eton and Harrow.)![]()
What do you think NDEs are about if not the afterlife and the survival of the self? I've studied this subject for the past 20 years. It includes reading more than 5000 accounts from around the world.That is not an evaluation of NDEs. It is a claim about an afterlife.
Technically, the UK doesn't have a state religion, but England does. The Church of England is established in England, but only in England. The Church in Wales, Church of Scotland (presbyterian not Anglican), Scottish Episcopal Church and Church of Ireland are not established churches.Thanks for sharing.
I thought in the UK it was normal to have prayer in public schools because they had a state religion? The more you know!
The Bristol Channel is no more than 40 miles wide below Swansea
You are incorrect.He doesn't care what the article says. He saw LGTBQ+ and the rest doesn't matter.
It falls to you to show the philosophical error, as well as the Scriptural basis regarding "free will,"Thank you for demonstrating your incorrect notion of philosophy as well as Theology
Basically, that the resurrection evidence is weak and that it doesn't warrant the conclusion that Christians claim. For example, most of the testimonial evidence is secondhand or hearsay and that there is very little corroboration other than the same story being repeated by other Christians. I'll get to how you evaluate good testimonial evidence versus bad testimonial evidence later.Yes, that's true. Some here won't be familiar with him and some will give up reading your exposition after the first or second post, but I'm hanging in here for the moment. The main reason I know of Wittgenstein is because I had to read a portion of his Tractatus years ago for a 20th Century Analytic Philosophy course I took, along with a small smattering of bits of his work regarding his idea of Language Games.
What I find interesting here is that you've shared that you're an older fellow and a former Christian. I'm just wondering what the main locus of relevance is that you're wanting to share here in regard to the Resurrection.
My conclusion is that we do survive the death of the body with our identity intact. So, there is an afterlife, but you have to read the book to get the full impact of the argument. It's not an easy read for people. I'll give some of the argument later in another thread.And what was the conclusion of your evaluation of NDEs? This is an empirical test of yer episemological frame work.
Yeah, teaching a (pretty much) phoneticly written language as though it was Chinese characters was less than brilliant. There was a reason why the design for written Korean (Hangul) is purely phonetic. It's just inherently easier to learnWe know about the sight reading fiasco that the education industry hasn't given up yet.
AFAIK, Asians all teach columnar arithmetic, although I could be wrong. But I know they emphasize the "drill and kill" method of teaching maths, where you do the various operations in various forms and levels of complexity until they're as ingrained as the alphabet. They also requite the memorization of the multiplication table and various rules of operations, and beat them into the students heads by repetition. They prove the truth of the old axioms that "practice makes perfect" and "use makes mastery". But ask any "academic" why we don't use their proven effective methods as opposed to our succession of proven ineffective methods, and they'll give you a scholarly recitation of "reasons " why the Asian Paradign Just Won't Work Here. Apparently American kids are just genetically unable to understand methods that actually work everywhere tjhey're used.But in the 80s the "new math" concept is also a disaster.
I've never seen that one in use. The Korean kids I've turored all seem to their ciphering the same way I was taught back in the stone age, with some minor variations. Then again I don't tutor in Maths. Too many years as an engineer rendered me unable to add 2+2 without grabbing a calculator or writing a fortran function.I have to quickly point out that a change from the columnar arithmetic we learned up until the 80s to the relational arithmetic used in most of the rest of the world
Thank you for demonstrating your incorrect notion of philosophy as well as TheologyCorrect. . .that is the way philosophy sees it, "free will" being a philosophical notion, not a Biblical notion.