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| Comparative Studies Comparing religious beliefs across human history and cultures |
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#16 (permalink) | |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,667
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Quote:
eh... what do you really expect... they even classify the Falun Gong as a "splittest" organization. of course.. one is left to wonder if those same "terrorists" would be doing anything to China if China was not occupying thier home land. |
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#17 (permalink) |
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General Member
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hmm
the taiwan situation is imho ridiculous, but i can see their point! regardless hasnt taiwan been a part of china for basically all of chinas history before the communist rule? because i really dont know, i think it was but i dunno
if it was and they are now trying to turn around and say the reason they deserve independence is because they have a seperate culture and all this, well then sorry..but your just full of it, and basically that isnt a good arguement! even though i dont think they are in the wrong for not wanting to be a part of china! and falun gong? does anyone even realise what falun gong is? falun gong should never be used in an arguement against china, trust me, its wrong. amitabha |
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#18 (permalink) | |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,667
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Quote:
they do have a seperate culture, the island has a native population that is different than any of the Chinese tribes... of course, today, there is plenty of mix in the population of the island so even this issue is mitigated to a certain degree. yes, i do know what falun gong is. it's not that i don't trust you.. i just don't agree ![]() |
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#19 (permalink) |
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General Member
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hmm
the way you ended your post leaves me to feel you either dont wish to discuss the subject further or maybe you just didnt think to, but some more detail on why you dont agree with me would be appreciated
regardless..falun gong, those two words just make me laugh and shiver at the same time, i love it hahahahahahaha amitabha ps brrrrrrrrrrrrr |
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#20 (permalink) |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,667
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Namaste zazen,
oh, not at all. i didn't mean to give you that impression. i'm happy to discuss it with you or anyone else for that matter. i disagree with your statement that it's wrong that is all. it is said that there are 84,000 Dharma Doors, each one reflecting the needs of a particular type of practiconer. Falun Gong is simply one of those doors. now, i should say that from my schools point of view, it is not the final door.. but then again, that is just our perspective. in any event, we say that if a tradition or practice teaches a moral and ethical path, they are a valid refuge. Falun Gong does that and thus is a valid refuge. again, according to my school, it's not the final refuge. in any event... for more information, the interested reader is directed to this site: http://www.religioustolerance.org/falungong.htm |
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#21 (permalink) | |
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Kemetic
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#23 (permalink) | |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,667
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Quote:
i should say that this is true of Buddhism as well. heck.. we are told not even to take the Buddha's word for it.. we are to investigate our selves.. and if we determine that its' true and is helpful, we are enjoined to put it into practice. if we find it's not true and/or not helpful, we are enjoined to put it aside. quite a refreshing change for a major world religion, don't you think? |
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#24 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Israel
Posts: 21
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hi
i am new to these forums. the subject of inter-relationship between religion and philosophy, is one of my favourites, so i decided to insert my first post here. I was not an actual philosophy student, but i studied a lot on my own. among the many which i've spent time reading were Kant, Hegel, Nitzsche, and Heidegger. I would think that the major breakthrough that kant made in the field of philosophy, was impossible to be made, unless religion had lost it's foothold as the regulator of the practice of thought in western culture and civiliazation. Nowdays many theologists prefer to say that kant's doctrine does not contradict religion, but in my opinion this is born out of the fact that kant's theories (both moral and epystemological) have become so an integral part in western philosophy, so that no serious thinker can successfully ignore them without risking having the "serious" separated from the noun. early christinanity has made Aristotales "the" Philosopher and i would assume metaphorically that if christiany was to be reborn today, it would have to intruduce many others to the honourary title. |
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#25 (permalink) |
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General Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 148
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I agree
Individuals gave us every work of art, not organizations. Some of the artists that created masterpieces paid lip service to the church while secretly dispising the cardinals and bishops that doled out the money to pay for their materials and room and board.
Organized religion is no different from an organized corporation. It is a COMMITTEE made up of individuals. Some individuals are good and others are just there to obtain as much power as can be obtained in the organization. In climbing to the top of any organization, people do whatever is necessary including lying, cheating, stealing and even murder. The church is a perfect example of this. From Louis... Just a note to express how much I agree with you ! The only philosophy I ever liked is called "Objectivism", ( website : www.aynrand.org ) although I don't agree with all they advocate. See my thread in Belief and Spirituality. |
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#26 (permalink) |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,464
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achnai, if you haven't already, you should read jonathan sacks' "one people", which discusses the effect on jewish philosophy of kantian epistemology in the context of the "haskalah".
b'shalom bananabrain |
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#27 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Michigan, USA
Posts: 912
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"hasnt taiwan been a part of china for basically all of chinas history before the communist rule? because i really dont know, i think it was but i dunno"Taiwan has been politically connected to China for only brief periods, and only in the recent history. It was occupied exclusively by aboriginal tribes (now only 1% of the population though many others have some degree of such ancestry), more closely related to Filipinos and Polynesians than to Chinese, until the 16th century. China knew of the existence of the island, but took no interest in it until the Portuguese (who called it "Formosa") began to colonize it.
China itself was being invaded from Manchuria at the time; a general Kuo Xing-hua, loyal to the overthrown Ming Dynasty, escaped to Taiwan and conquered it from Portugal (with help from the Dutch). Thus Taiwan served as a refuge for loyalists of the ousted regime, as in the 20th century, until it accepted the overlordship of the Qing (Manchu) emperors in 1685. It was then ruled from Beijing for a century and a half, until in the 1830's the Taiping Rebellion pretty much destroyed the administration in the whole south of China; when it was put down, China did not bother to re-establish control in Taiwan, which became a de facto independent pirate base. Many nations complained to the Chinese about letting Taiwan be a hazardous anarchy, and raided it from time to time; the British established a base at the port of Tainan, and got "treaty rights" there as in Hong Kong, but did not attempt to subdue the whole island. In the 1880's the emperor finally got around to appointing a governor of Taiwan again, who began a vigorous campaign of industrialization; but then the Japanese fought China, siezed the island, and made the Chinese (in the treaty of Shimonoseki) "renounce all claims to Taiwan forevermore". Taiwan continued as a Japanese province (it still has about 5% Japanese population) until the Americans took it in 1945, and gave it to Chiang Kai-shek, who could not however manage to take control of it until 1947, by which time he was losing control of everything else. |
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#29 (permalink) | |
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General Member
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 195
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Re: Religion vs Philosophy?
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#30 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 417
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Re: Religion vs Philosophy?
I think you are wrong. I have never departed from my philosophical Taoist roots in adventuring into practical Buddhism. I consider the philosophical nature that I have nurtured to be one of my greatest foundations for experimenting with practical methods. Theory and practice should always go hand in hand. The Greek philosophy, however, has been merely a point of amusement for me, than anything else. They try to invent problems which cannot be solved and then mince their brains over trying to solve them. It's always interesting, but it has no value other than intellectualism.
The biggest problem is there is no connection between their findings. Each philosophy comes up with some idea and then that's it. In the east, philosophers worked on what was known and tried to arrange those unsolvable problems so that there is a common thread running through them. I remember reading 'The Book of Tea' by a Japanese author. He says that Westerners fail to practise what they preach. In the east, philosophy is incorporated into daily life. Where the west was lacking in a means, this means, most obviously meditation, has been the key for the east. If one reads Abrahamic texts, the philosophy behind the actions are never made clear. There is rarely a logical explanation to the rules. About Taiwan... For one thing, they all speak Mandarin. In fact, many people travel between Taiwan and China on such a regular basis that they're quite keen to see it part of the mainland again. The military is out in force over here though. Conscription into the army lasts for 2 years. Some people chop off their trigger finger so they don't have to go. Personally I don't see Taiwan staying independent for much longer. Few countries acknowledge their independence and China is only getting stronger and stronger. The merge will happen eventually. Let's just hope China becomes more open and that things end peacefully, not like in Tibet, or what seems to be happening in Hong Kong. |
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