Am I?gmattson wrote:
I believe you are the one putting straw-men arguments into this thread and Ian should be congratulated for remaining calm and quite logical in his attempt to address the original topic.
Let's start by getting full disclosure from Ian. He is anti-Christan for personal reasons. It's not like I don't understand his point of view. There are intolerant Christians out there - just like there are intolerant Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and even atheists. But not noting his anti-Christian beliefs at the get-go is like NBC not acknowledging it is owned by GE when reporting a story on GE. (They have now been sold to Comcast.)
Both Ian and Justin - practicing atheists I presume - have been trying to attack my TOLERANCE in and DEFENSE of religious people and their beliefs. This isn't an isolated thread. Note how long this one has gone on. They have been trying REPEATEDLY to get me to defend the existence of God, angels, and other deities. In defending RELIGION and in explaining MY OWN beliefs, I have not once mentioned a belief in God. I've also not mentioned a disbelief in God. Why? Because nobody in this discussion - myself included - can prove or disprove his existence. I keep saying that again and again and again. But nooooo.... We keep getting back to me discounting chi and therefore I have to take on God.
That's bullsheet, George. I call it like I see it.
Please go back to what *I* posted.
Bill Glasheen wrote:
Most religions of the world can be summed up with three basic components:Chi as it is described in the west is a badly-translated word that describes many things in Chinese culture and meridian-based Chinese medicine. It has nothing to do with ethics, (im)mortality, or the origin of the universe.
- The Golden Rule
- Dealing with our earthly mortality.
- Concerns about the origin of the Universe
If you want to worry about the presence or absence of a supernatural being, well knock yourself out. I don't lose any sleep over it. I can live with it, and I can live without it.
Bill Glasheen wrote:
I'm abivalent about the idea of God. I can live with one; I can live without one. But I'm very positive on the Judeochristian values instilled in me by my parochial school experience - arthritic hands notwithstanding. (jk)
Bill Glasheen wrote:
The essence of Judeochristian teachings isn't in the institutions or even the dogma; it is in the way you conduct your life. The essence of TJ's Statute is that YOU don't get to tell me how.
The thread started with chi. Whenever someone wants to bring chi into a martial arts discussion, they'd better be prepared to define what they mean and demonstrate what it does. Otherwise they're going to get challenged by me. Why? Because chi is thrown around in explaining things in martial arts in ways that are not helpful. I'll go as far as to say it is harmful, because it contributes to a type of mysticism that has no place in martial arts. And why?Bill Glasheen wrote:
The most important thing I learned with my Judeochristian training is what I do and not who I associate with.
I'd rather look around me -- compose a better song
`cos that's the honest measure of my worth.
In your pomp and all your glory you're a poorer man than me,
as you lick the boots of death born out of fear.
I don't believe you:
you had the whole damn thing all wrong --
He's not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays.
Jethro and I get it just fine.
- Energy from a punch is real; chi is not.
- Injury and death are real; chi is not.
- PTSD is real; chi is not.
- Sequential Summation of Motion (a.k.a. body whip, jing, etc.) is real; chi is not.
- The Survival Stress Reflex (a.k.a. condition red, condition black, "the dump") is real; chi is not.
- Getting thrown in jail for assault is real; chi is not.
- Religion (a.k.a. religiosity, spirituality) and its contribution to medicine and RBSD are real; chi is not.
- Randi's offer of a million bucks ($1,000,000) for proof of the existence of chi is real; chi is not.
As for God, well... that's His cross to bear.
Unlike ANY of my esteemed colleagues here (including you, George), I have cited numerous (4) articles in the peer-reviewed literature, a Statute that is the foundation for part of our Constitution, a published article by a RBSD expert, my own published article, and a book by a bilingual authority in internal martial arts. And what do I get in return? Arguing.
Ian did cite a well-known study on praying. I concurred with the findings, and noted that I could have predicted the results before the experiment was run. That should have clued Ian in on my beliefs...
Put up, boys. I'm articulating my position clearly and consistently. I'm saying what I do NOT claim as my argument when Ian tries to misrepresent what I say (hence the valid strawman accusation). I'm backing up my discussion with references. If you can't do the same, then you aren't holding up your end of the discussion - no matter how long it goes on.
- Bill