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AnarchicEvolist's profile
Anarchic Evolist
Anarchic Evolist
Anarchic Evolist
@AnarchicEvolist

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Anarchic Evolist

@AnarchicEvolist

prester john fan account - unity not uniformity

Joined July 2017

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    1. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
      Replying to @AnarchicEvolist

      That’s interesting, I didn’t know there were different interpretations of this commandment.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    2. Anarchic Evolist‏ @AnarchicEvolist Oct 28
      Replying to @RightModernist

      From the catechism: "Do not slay the innocent and the righteous" "Someone who defends his life is not guilty of murder even if he is forced to deal his aggressor a lethal blow" "The teaching of the Church does not exclude recourse to the death penalty"

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    3. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
      Replying to @AnarchicEvolist

      So that’s the Catholic interpretation. Would be interesting to find out the original Hebrew & its precise meaning.

      2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
    4.  🍇 TheVineGods  🍇‏ @NocturnalSatyr Oct 28
      Replying to @RightModernist @AnarchicEvolist

      I doubt it'd be any different than the standard Catholic/Christian interpretation. The Hebrews weren't Jains.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    5.  🍇 TheVineGods  🍇‏ @NocturnalSatyr Oct 28
      Replying to @NocturnalSatyr @RightModernist @AnarchicEvolist

      This is standard human morality btw. It wasn't just the 10 commandments. In Hinduism there's a general "don't kill" rule but there's an obvious nuance to it. In the Bhagavad Gita Krishna bitch-slaps Arjuna for not wanting to kill righteously in war.

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    6. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
      Replying to @NocturnalSatyr @AnarchicEvolist

      But we’re supposedly dealing with divine morality here (though Evolist wouldn’t call it that). It makes more sense to me that a divine commandment would be very straightforward & absolute, with no ifs or buts. But maybe that’s not how the Hebrews saw it.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    7.  🍇 TheVineGods  🍇‏ @NocturnalSatyr Oct 28
      Replying to @RightModernist @AnarchicEvolist

      You're assuming a sorta modern Sola Scriptura approach to the Old Testament, that's the problem. Those laws were didactic like a lot of ancient near eastern legal systems, it was flexible and could be amended & refined under certain conditions. That's Jesus' point on the law.

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    8. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
      Replying to @NocturnalSatyr @AnarchicEvolist

      Yes,the most interesting thing about Christianity is its ‘impossibility’.How can one love all men?This strange demand, so impractical&contrary to human instinct,is what is fascinating.Only a few sects have really tried-Cathars,for instance.But even they couldn’t avoid waging war.

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    9. Anarchic Evolist‏ @AnarchicEvolist Oct 28
      Replying to @RightModernist @NocturnalSatyr

      Loving your adversary does not mean not fighting him, it might even require fighting him

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    10. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
      Replying to @AnarchicEvolist @NocturnalSatyr

      I disagree. The obstacles presented by worldly contingencies are part of that impossibility, which is what lends Christianity its otherworldly beauty. A saint would have to forgo fighting, allow himself to be killed if necessary.

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      Anarchic Evolist‏ @AnarchicEvolist Oct 28
      Replying to @RightModernist @NocturnalSatyr

      Read the Metaphysics of War by Evola, although it does not deal exclusively with Christian doctrine, he was a 'traditionalist' after all

      1:43 PM - 28 Oct 2018
      • 1 Like
      • Alt 📽 Modernist
      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        1. New conversation
        2. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
          Replying to @AnarchicEvolist @NocturnalSatyr

          Evola was a self-described ‘Catholic pagan’, so I assume he had a unique viewpoint. Maybe he was similar in a way to Meister Eckhart, in that he attempted a synthesis of Christianity & paganism.

          2 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
        3. Anarchic Evolist‏ @AnarchicEvolist Oct 28
          Replying to @RightModernist @NocturnalSatyr

          Perhaps, what would you say Dante did?

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        4. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
          Replying to @AnarchicEvolist @NocturnalSatyr

          As I recall, God appears in the final passages of The Divine Comedy as a spinning wheel of fire. So it seems he was trying to present a non-anthropomorphic vision of God, which is intriguing in the context of the times.

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        5. Anarchic Evolist‏ @AnarchicEvolist Oct 28
          Replying to @RightModernist @NocturnalSatyr

          I thought antropomorphic image of God only came after Dante with humanism, protestantism, renaissance?

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        6. Alt  📽 Modernist‏ @RightModernist Oct 28
          Replying to @AnarchicEvolist @NocturnalSatyr

          A somewhat anthropomorphic image is suggested by the words ‘Father’ & ‘Lord’ (consider that Heraclitus did not refer to God as ‘he’ or ‘father’, but rather as ‘it’ or ‘the Divine’). The wheel of fire recalls Heraclitus in fact-he said that the world is ‘an ever-living fire.’

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        7. Anarchic Evolist‏ @AnarchicEvolist Oct 28
          Replying to @RightModernist @NocturnalSatyr

          Ah yes, but remember that Scripture speaks to each man on his own level, and must therefore take on a certain manner of words, while Heraclitus certainly did not intend his writing to be for the common man. Still, you have a point

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
        8. End of conversation

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