rdhopeca wrote:
In fact, I do. I said, quite clearly, I was responding to a specific thing that was mentioned, that as part of whatever his point was, martyrdom is not sufficient justification for anything, nor proof of anything. That was the only point I was making, regardless of any point he was making.
This means one of two things. Either you are denying my point or your thought is non-sequitur to mine. In the latter case, it would be good to post your thought without quoting/referencing mine. (Then we don't need to go back and forth hashing out that your comment has nothing to do with mine.)
rdhopeca wrote:As someone who has been classified on this board as one of those "uninformed, unlearned, ignorant, unwilling to read up on all he does not know, and therefore incompetant to debate" types, I have been trying to only make points about things that I feel strongly about and can make a halfway decent case for. Sorry if I don't "balloon" those points out to make them apply to your entire arguments, but then I am sure I would again be told that I have not yet learned enough to comment intelligently.
On this I can only say "If the shoe fits...". Are these charges true? Are there things that you don't know about, yet comment about? If not, then comment away. If others do think there's something you don't know, they'll tell you - then you can examine the sources, determine whether they are reasonable or not, etc etc.
I think most, if not all of us in modern society, are trained, via schooling and media, to want to feel that we can have an opinion on anything, whether we know about it or not. "Have your say!" "What's your opinion?" "Vote now!" "Your opinion matters!" Such slogans and calls scream at us from every street corner and channel. And we reach out and 'vote' (what a profanation of something that once meant real power!) in all sorts of polls on a great many questions and subjects that we actually know very little about.
As someone who, for example, started learning about Russia by encountering the artificial hatred and bigotry fostered in the military against "enemies", and from there going on to learn the language, marry and ultimately settle down there, and then reading pompous comments from so-called "Russia experts" in, say, the New York Times, or hear them on CNN or whatever, who in fact have little basis outside college courses (themselves questionable) to be called experts, from the inside I see the paucity of their 'knowledge'. But they are, to a great extent, victims of our culture of "everybody's an expert". I can only know that because it became one of the things I really DID learn about.
Christianity is one of the things I really have learned a good deal about, especially over the past six years, and what is remarkable about what I've learned is that it contradicts and proves wrong much of what I had been taught, both as a Baptist youth and as an agnostic adult. At the very least, I have seen how both schooling and media are used to propagate the widespread ideas that I now see to be wrong through genuine experience.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton