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Previous comments... You are currently on page 21.
who approaches them expecting their "good side," you are more likely
to engender positive responses from them. . healthy competition
with a wink and a nod -- honor for the self-interest of everyone else --
is the best way to interact."
Expecting the best has to do with benevolence and the generally positive view of the universe held by Objectivism (ie life affirming or supporting rather than all doom and gloom). Read David Kelley's new book called Unrugged Individualism for a good discussion of the virtue of benevolence and what it implies.
As for the unknown and faith, I would venture that it is one thing to have ideas about the unknown. But different to have faith in what one classifies as the "unknowable". Rationalists tend to have faith that there is nothing that is not unknowable (at least in theory if not in practice). Religious faith requires belief in something that is, by definition, intrinsically unknowable in its being or essence.
I certainly have watched you fighting the good fight! And I'm sorry I've not jumped in as much as I should have, but there's just so many hours in a day and I've just been concentrating on what makes me happy, healthy and wise - well, OK, I'm settle for happy and healthy. :).
I've been occupying my time building 3d printers and developing a line of CNC routers and mills - that's turning into a full time job!
Again, I'm sorry I've not kept in touch as I should have. I'll try to jump in a bit more often. Also, please feel free to give me a call anytime! I love to hear from my "Battle Buddies".
May God richly bless you and your family.
Larry
In a way it reminds me of Zen Koans, those short stories conceived and written by fully matured Zen Masters before they can determine their death time (many passed within days of finishing their Koans), meant to help those coming up in their own searches for enlightenment. Boiled down to the essence, stripped of fat, excess, and decoration, and illustrative of the way in which the Master had reached his own enlightenment, yet not to be understood by those that haven't put the work and dedication into gaining their own enlightenment.
and accept others' social choices as their own. . and I'm a
heretic, back then, but an objectivist, now. -- j
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THEN the rest can be used for rational living. -- j
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the online gulch. . yet there is an alternate view. . make the jump
to a place where man's rationality is sovereign in his or her life,
and the unknowable is set aside for later, called -- as you wish --
the faith zone or confident optimism zone. -- j
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see those instructions as general ones. -- j
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p.s. did you ever have a vette? . photo?
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religious people wanting to practice their religion in a free country.
I have followed his work, and it is good! -- j
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do [the] knowing for you." . it is the process of setting the unknowable
aside for later, and looking for wisdom in the rest. . Yes, the nation
was founded on individual sovereignty. . so is my religion. . just the facts,
and the rest is in the "unknown" pile. -- j
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in contrast, many Christians think that it is a good place.
the poor are not the moral heroes of Christianity;;; they are just poor.
Jesus taught that we should consider them people.
fighting is not needed in order to embrace charity. -- j
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is a direct factual explanation. . these are both common views
and I respect both. -- j
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of us who contribute the most. . I joined immediately after finding
this virtual gulch, but many do not, and perhaps many more are just
watching. . it is an open forum;;; yes? . . Hi, NSA!!!
and I edit books. . and I interact with others. . all good interactions
can serve -- like watching someone working efficiently in a diner! -- j
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Anyone who "agrees that a woman's body is her own [or a man's his own], and a person's social choices are his or her own" has already rejected Christianity's dogmas of duty to God and is so secularized that he would have been branded a heretic in earlier times. An actual, full-fledged Christian would have no support for Atlas Shrugged beyond the most superficial misunderstandings. Most Americans are not in that religious category.
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