Is there any point to believing in a non-immanent God?
Stuff like deism, pantheism, agnosticism and that kinda shit just seems like pussy-hole atheism.
Well?
Agnosticism IS Atheism but without all the self-assured asshattery
>>420254
Naturalistic pantheism basically is atheism but I can see the point in it from a philosophical point of view because the idea we are all connected and the entire universe is connected has some clear strengths from a moral reasoning point of view.
>>420264
So pussy-hole atheism then.
'spook' is synonymous with 'social constructs'
muh 'morality' muh 'social constructs
I'm pretty sure social constructs is a spook too.
>>419990
As the same as saying that spooks are a spook.
>>419993
What is not a spook?
I want to learn Latin
is latin one of those languages where you absolutely need a teacher to teach you or it's easily learned on your own?
(spoiler: the reason why i wanna learn latin, as well as german, is because i want to read philosophical treatises in their original language for the most comprehension possible).
I learned Latin in high school, it's not that hard. Find a high school starter book and live the dream. Remember to do a lot of translations.
>>419472
Its's really easy
>>419472
It depends OP. How much experience do you have learning languages?
I'm studying Classics at university with a major in Classical Greek, and I'd imagine it would be pretty hard without a teacher.
What were the various sackings of Rome like? (Gauls, Vandals, Visigoths, Ostrogoths)
What was it like for the civilians living in the city? Was there ever a time when barbarians killed off all the civilians? What was the rest of the empire's reactions?
Anyone here?
bamp
What will it take to get a reply? Or is this board just really slow?
Fellow Catholics, who did you pick as your confirmation Saint and why?
I was thinking of picking St. James the Greater
Judas Thaddaeus
>>418737
St Augustine of Hippo advocated converting heretics and Donatists by coercion. He denied that God would be so evil as to predestine people to eternal damnation and yet he inconsistently claimed that God predestines some not all to everlasting life which amounts to saying the same thing. This dollop of hypocrisy and hatred and blasphemy was at the root of his theology and his spiritual life which shows that if he is a saint Karl Marx has more right to be one. Augustine believed that the doctrine he believed as a Manichaean that evil was a real thing which proved there had to be a bad God and a good one was wrong for evil was just the absence of good and not a power. The man was saying then that God was not doing wrong by making poisonous snakes for evil is just a falling short of good! He was a major promoter of the lie that you love the sin and hate the sin as if to say that an act is hateful is not the same thing as to say the person that freely creates the act is not though it clearly is. The person would be hateful in so far as they are sinful. All the saints, miracles and apparitions of the Catholic support his lie for it is a bedrock of the Church and to support the Church is to support it.
>>418737
St. Augustine because confessions essentially converted me.
Daily reminder. It was the MIDDLE guard that broke during their advance at Waterloo, not the Old Guard.
Ney a shit.
>>420578
Great bump 13 hours later.
>>420578
Ney was probably the bravest general in that era
Dude took part in bayonet charges and shit
That'll teach'em to just stand there in a dense group while we fire from concealed cover
>>416986
>what is the difference between muskets and rifles
But standing in dense lines and shooting at the enemy is how the Revolutionary War was won.
>>416986
the painting is Stand Your Ground by Don Troiani
it depicts the battle of Lexington, Massachusetts, April 19, 1775
a battle in which the Americans did not take cover, and a battle the British had won without losing a single man
gg op
How did what originally was a minor state in the Holy Roman Empire, in an incredibly swampy and to my knowledge, not very wealthy, region of Germany manage to become the dominant force and eventually the unifying force of all of Germany?
Bismarck & military tradition
>>416732
Brandenburg already was a Electorate.
So fairly relevant.
The Saxons, who had lead the Protestant movement into the empire, ruined their position as leaders of the Protestantism when decided to converto to Catholicism when trying to get the Polish Crown, paving the road for the new Protestant champion.
>>416732
two words
lucky opportunists
How strong was a man avarge/soldier/knight or the pre historic man compared to an avarge man/strongman today?
Could we do the physical work what they did and could thry go through a workout plan?
>>416727
>>416727
>Average man in prehistory
Paleolithic diets give us a good idea what Prehistotic men looked like. They weren't exacty strong, but were built for running and had great endurance. Very little body fat.
>Average Soldier
Shorter, but in decent shape at the very least. They have more bodyfat on them thanks to agriculture providing food surplus' but still not as much as most men today.
>Knight
Shorter, but stronger than the average person, and well trained in swordplay.
>Compared to the modern day men/strongmen
Strongmen nowadays are stronger than they ever have been. They have a lot of bodyfat which compliments a lot of muscle that they need for powerlifting. Thank Creatine for breaking barriers.
>Could we do the physical work what they did and could thry go through a workout plan?
The average white collar worker? No. They would be poorly suited for field work.
The average blue collar worker? Maybe. It depends on their skill set
>Could they go through a workout plan
They would probably get sick if they tried protein powder or ate the kind of diet Strongmen do. But there's no reason to assume they couldn't do it.
>>416782
Bump
>>416727
Depends on social status. Footmen were weaker, since they lacked proper diet and rarely ate meat. Knights were stronger then regular people now, since they had to carry chainmail or even platemail, which weighted up to 15 kg.
Archers also had to be strong to use longbows.
Can a monarchy be formed in a fully atheist society?
>>415252
Yeah. Look up Stalin.
No because the monarch always derives his right to rule from a God.
The Egyption pharoes could trace their lineage to the Gods. The Persian Kings also had divine blood. The Roman Emperors were also divine. The Protestant kings were chosen to rule by God. The Catholics kings received their authority from the Pope who was himself God on earth.
However you can have dictatorship, which does not need divine justification. Dicatorships are basically secular monarchy. Heil Hitler.
>>415257
not all despotism is monarchy.
ITT: We non-religiously compare the literature of the King James Bible and the original Arabic Quran.
I've never read either, kek
I only prefer the Quran as far as wordplay goes.
It was written by practitioners of traditional Arab poetry and it shows.
>>413097
And not a committee.
I'm really interested in European medieval history, and would like to study it on my own time. I'm interested in any aspect of the history (military strategy and tactics, intrigue, politics, dynasties, etc.)
"War Cruel and Sharp: English Strategy under Edward III" by Clifford Rogers is a personal favorite of mine.
R. C. Smail's "Crusading Warfare" and "The Art of War in Western Europe in the Middle Ages" by J. F. Verbruggen are also important reads.
If you're interested in Henry V and Agincourt and want to get into primary sources, try Anne Curry's "Agincourt: Sources and Interpretations".
>>412916
Thanks. I'm currently reading The Hollow Crown by Dan Jones, hence the OP picture.
Norman Cantor
The Civilization of the Middle Ages
Chris Wickham
The Inheritance of Rome
Why are there so many flood myths worldwide that pretty much all go the same way
>god angry
>flood Earth
>only a few chosen survive
Flood stories are common across a wide range of cultures, extending back into prehistory the globe over.
certainly this isn't just coincidence, right? Might there have been a global flood at some point in the past couple thousand years?
I suspect that it's more than one flood.
Floods aren't uncommon natural disasters, and without writing to nail down the dates, oral tradition is the way that'd survive in a culture.
Meltwater pulse 1A occurred in a period of rising sea level and rapid climate change, known as Termination I, when the retreat of continental ice sheets was going on during the end of the last ice age. Several researchers have narrowed the period of the pulse to between 13,500 and 14,700 calendar years ago with its peak at about 13,800 calendar years ago
during which global sea level rose between 16 meters (52 ft) and 25 meters (82 ft) in about >400–500 years
this is interesting, but it still doesn't tell you if a lot happened all at once during that time frame.
Also interesting to look into are the Missoula Floods
these cataclysmic floods that swept periodically across eastern Washington and down the Columbia River Gorge at the end of the last ice age.
You are a pilgrim. Where do you go?
Post places of religious significance, preferably aesthetically pleasing.
Where else?
>>411952
Some pilgrims go crazy over there, you know?
How come nothing of relevance ever happened here?
It seems like it has been "that backwater shithole" since the ancient greeks. Was it just being unlucky and always standing in the shadow of something better? I don't 'get' it or it's irrelevance.
Well Thrace was something, if that counts.
Also the only thing I know that happened was that the Bulgarians revolted against the Byzantine Empire for some time and then tried later on again but failed.
>>409279
>literally triggered a world war
>How come nothing of relevance ever happened here?
>>409286
It's a tradition for the balkans to start wars.
>Balkan wars
>World War I
>Byzanto-Bulgarian wars
>Russo-Turkish war