Liberation Theology is in - should Yi be concerned?

Started by crazy canuck, February 25, 2014, 11:04:54 PM

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Capetan Mihali

I could go for a book recommendation on this topic, too.
"The internet's completely over. [...] The internet's like MTV. At one time MTV was hip and suddenly it became outdated. Anyway, all these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers and that can't be good for you."
-- Prince, 2010. (R.I.P.)

Beenherebefore

Quote from: Sheilbh on March 13, 2014, 04:22:25 PM
Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 04:14:31 PM
Maybe the "lesser ice age" also played a part with more calamity for what was mostly a rural uneducated (yet educated in Luther's catechism) agrarian people. People started hearing the Bible read in their own language, but by ministers at least up here sorely lacking in education. One notable exception is Peter Dass.
I'd not thought of that but you're probably right. Add in the calamities of war in Britain and Germany and it's easy to understand why you'd want someone to blame.

It does to some extent correlate with the 30 Years War. I recommend "Europe's Tragedy", a splendid little book.

But that doesn't really explain why places like New England went all witch-hunty.

Crop failure, maybe? Due to cold weather, or whatever.
Domestic animal disease.

I am fairly areligious, in that I don't have faith and don't practice, but I do find religion's part of history utterly fascinating.

The artist formerly known as Norgy

Beenherebefore

Quote from: Capetan Mihali on March 13, 2014, 04:39:03 PM
I could go for a book recommendation on this topic, too.

The number of books written on Admiral Yi and liberation theology is disappointingly low.
The artist formerly known as Norgy

Capetan Mihali

Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 04:42:42 PM
Quote from: Capetan Mihali on March 13, 2014, 04:39:03 PM
I could go for a book recommendation on this topic, too.

The number of books written on Admiral Yi and liberation theology is disappointingly low.

:blurgh:  Too late, you already made an earnest recommendation!
"The internet's completely over. [...] The internet's like MTV. At one time MTV was hip and suddenly it became outdated. Anyway, all these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers and that can't be good for you."
-- Prince, 2010. (R.I.P.)

Sheilbh

Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 04:39:42 PM
It does to some extent correlate with the 30 Years War. I recommend "Europe's Tragedy", a splendid little book.
I haven't, but I will. I've only read C. V. Wedgwood's 'Thirty Years War' which is beautifully written but probably enormously out of date.

Diarmaid MacCulloch's 'Reformation' is a very good overview of the period. It tries to cover all the regions and different types of Reformation (Protestant, Catholic and the popular), but it also has a very good section on social history which is probably the most interesting.

There's some very good microhistory from this period too. I love Carlos Ginzburg's 'The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller':
QuoteThe Cheese and the Worms is a study of the popular culture in the sixteenth century as seen through the eyes of one man, a miller brought to trial during the Inquisition. Carlo Ginzburg uses the trial records of Domenico Scandella, a miller also known as Menocchio, to show how one person responded to the confusing political and religious conditions of his time.

For a common miller, Menocchio was surprisingly literate. In his trial testimony he made references to more than a dozen books, including the Bible, Boccaccio's Decameron, Mandeville's Travels, and a "mysterious" book that may have been the Koran. And what he read he recast in terms familiar to him, as in his own version of the creation: "All was chaos, that is earth, air, water, and fire were mixed together; and of that bulk a mass formed—just as cheese is made out of milk—and worms appeared in it, and these were the angels."

Eamon Duffy's great and partisan on the Reformation in England and the transition from Medieval to modern. 'Stripping the Altars' is his big text but 'The Voices of Morebath' is also brilliant, another microhistory from one of his sources for 'Stripping the Altars':
QuoteIn this text a Reformation historian takes us inside the mind and heart of Morebath, a remote and tiny sheep-farming village where 33 families worked the difficult land on the southern edge of Exmoor. The bulk of Morebath's conventional archives have long since vanished. But from 1520 to 1574, through nearly all the drama of the English Reformation, Morebath's only priest, Sir Christopher Trychay, kept the parish accounts on behalf of the churchwardens. Opinionated, eccentric and talkative, Sir Christopher filled these vivid scripts for parish meetings with the names and doings of his parishioners. Through his eyes we catch a rare glimpse of the life and pre-reformation piety of a 16th-century English village. The work also offers a window into a rural world in crisis as the Reformation progressed. Sir Christopher Trychay's accounts provide direct evidence of the motives which drove hitherto law-abiding West-Country communities to participate in the doomed Prayer-Book Rebellion of 1549 - culminating in the siege of Exeter which ended in bloody defeat and a wave of executions. Its church bells confiscated and silenced, Morebath shared in the punishment imposed on all the towns and villages of Devon and Cornwall. Sir Christopher documents the changes in the community: reluctantly Protestant, no longer focused on the religious life of the parish church, and increasingly preoccupied with the secular demands of the Elizabethan state, the equipping of armies, and the payment of taxes. Morebath's priest, garrulous to the end of his days, describes a rural world irrevocably altered, and enables us to hear the voices of his villagers after 400 years of silence.
Let's bomb Russia!

grumbler

Quote from: Capetan Mihali on March 13, 2014, 04:49:51 PM
Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 04:42:42 PM
Quote from: Capetan Mihali on March 13, 2014, 04:39:03 PM
I could go for a book recommendation on this topic, too.

The number of books written on Admiral Yi and liberation theology is disappointingly low.

:blurgh:  Too late, you already made an earnest recommendation!

Earnest Borgnine wrote a book?

Why, so he did! http://www.amazon.com/Ernie-Autobiography-Ernest-Borgnine/dp/0806529423
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Sheilbh

Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 04:39:42 PM
I am fairly areligious, in that I don't have faith and don't practice, but I do find religion's part of history utterly fascinating.
I think it's especially because so many people are offering religious advice to the Muslim world. 'We need a Muslim Reformation'...to kick off two hundred years of unprecedented sectarian bloodshed etc.
Let's bomb Russia!

Beenherebefore

Quote from: Sheilbh on March 13, 2014, 05:00:21 PM
Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 04:39:42 PM
I am fairly areligious, in that I don't have faith and don't practice, but I do find religion's part of history utterly fascinating.
I think it's especially because so many people are offering religious advice to the Muslim world. 'We need a Muslim Reformation'...to kick off two hundred years of unprecedented sectarian bloodshed etc.

I've found most of the people offering free advice to the Muslim world are either wrong in their assumption that Muslims need it or uncultured female organs of reproduction.
The artist formerly known as Norgy

Viking

Quote from: Sheilbh on March 13, 2014, 10:35:02 AM
Christ. You burn one scientist...

:P

and Neil Degrasse Tyson is gonna go Enlightenment on your ass.
First Maxim - "There are only two amounts, too few and enough."
First Corollary - "You cannot have too many soldiers, only too few supplies."
Second Maxim - "Be willing to exchange a bad idea for a good one."
Second Corollary - "You can only be wrong or agree with me."

A terrorist which starts a slaughter quoting Locke, Burke and Mill has completely missed the point.
The fact remains that the only person or group to applaud the Norway massacre are random Islamists.

Eddie Teach

Quote from: Beenherebefore on March 13, 2014, 03:18:21 PM
What about witches, beer and nurses? And Swedish-made penis-enlarger pumps?

That's not my bag, baby.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

Razgovory

Quote from: Viking on March 13, 2014, 05:16:55 PM
Quote from: Sheilbh on March 13, 2014, 10:35:02 AM
Christ. You burn one scientist...

:P

and Neil Degrasse Tyson is gonna go Enlightenment on your ass.

You mean pass off a mystic as a martyred scientist?
I've given it serious thought. I must scorn the ways of my family, and seek a Japanese woman to yield me my progeny. He shall live in the lands of the east, and be well tutored in his sacred trust to weave the best traditions of Japan and the Sacred South together, until such time as he (or, indeed his house, which will periodically require infusion of both Southern and Japanese bloodlines of note) can deliver to the South it's independence, either in this world or in space.  -Lettow April of 2011

Raz is right. -MadImmortalMan March of 2017

Capetan Mihali

I'm reading Terry Eagleton's new book, "Culture and the Death of God," which has a few relevant comments for this debate concerning the Enlightenment.  He points out that "atheism" as a pejorative preceded the emergence of real atheists by about 100 years.

"It would be curious, then, if the Enlightenment had taken the form of an aggressively secular movement, as some of its modern apologists assume.  When it came to religion, a good deal of this audacious intellectual project landed us back on a spot not far from where we were in the first place, furnished with a new, more plausible set of rationales.  The task was not so much to topple the Supreme Being as to replace a benighted version of religious faith with one that might grace coffee-house conversation in the Strand.  For the most part, it was priestcraft rather than the Almighty that the movement had in its sight."

Quoting Jonathan Israel, the turning point was that it was "by the 1740s, the apparent collapse of all efforts to forge a new general synthesis of theology, philosophy, politics, and science, which destablished religious beliefs and values, causing the wholly unprecedented crisis of faith driving the secularisation of the modern West."

Eagleton says that J. Israel is pointing out that this spiritual crisis "has its roots in a thoroughly material history -- the expansion of European commercialism and imperialism in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the rapid growth of international monopolies, the dislocating effects of diaspora, a new social fluidity and diversity, the impact of new technologies, the partial dissolution of traditional social hierarchies and their accompanying symbolic systems and the like."

Just though I'd share, since the book is open to these pages at the moment.
"The internet's completely over. [...] The internet's like MTV. At one time MTV was hip and suddenly it became outdated. Anyway, all these computers and digital gadgets are no good. They just fill your head with numbers and that can't be good for you."
-- Prince, 2010. (R.I.P.)

grumbler

Quote from: Capetan Mihali on March 13, 2014, 10:38:02 PM
I'm reading Terry Eagleton's new book, "Culture and the Death of God," which has a few relevant comments for this debate concerning the Enlightenment.  He points out that "atheism" as a pejorative preceded the emergence of real atheists by about 100 years.

"It would be curious, then, if the Enlightenment had taken the form of an aggressively secular movement, as some of its modern apologists assume.  When it came to religion, a good deal of this audacious intellectual project landed us back on a spot not far from where we were in the first place, furnished with a new, more plausible set of rationales.  The task was not so much to topple the Supreme Being as to replace a benighted version of religious faith with one that might grace coffee-house conversation in the Strand.  For the most part, it was priestcraft rather than the Almighty that the movement had in its sight."

Quoting Jonathan Israel, the turning point was that it was "by the 1740s, the apparent collapse of all efforts to forge a new general synthesis of theology, philosophy, politics, and science, which destablished religious beliefs and values, causing the wholly unprecedented crisis of faith driving the secularisation of the modern West."

Eagleton says that J. Israel is pointing out that this spiritual crisis "has its roots in a thoroughly material history -- the expansion of European commercialism and imperialism in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the rapid growth of international monopolies, the dislocating effects of diaspora, a new social fluidity and diversity, the impact of new technologies, the partial dissolution of traditional social hierarchies and their accompanying symbolic systems and the like."

Just though I'd share, since the book is open to these pages at the moment.

I am finding it hard to reconcile the 1740s and "the dislocating effects of diaspora, a new social fluidity and diversity, the impact of new technologies."  What diaspora was taking place?  The Enclosure Movement wasn't a diaspora, and the numbers moving to the New World were not, either.  Ditto for the technology and social fluidity.  I can understand the argument about the failure to reach a new general synthesis causing the spiritual crisis of the time, but not the bit in the last quote.  Agree that "for the most part, it was priestcraft rather than the Almighty that the movement had in its sight."

The last quote seems to refer to another spiritual crisis later in European history.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Viking

Quote from: Razgovory on March 13, 2014, 08:39:29 PM
Quote from: Viking on March 13, 2014, 05:16:55 PM
Quote from: Sheilbh on March 13, 2014, 10:35:02 AM
Christ. You burn one scientist...

:P

and Neil Degrasse Tyson is gonna go Enlightenment on your ass.

You mean pass off a mystic as a martyred scientist?

No, by bitch slapping you for murdering a man just for his beliefs while cautiously qualifying that Bruno was guessing and happened to guess good.
First Maxim - "There are only two amounts, too few and enough."
First Corollary - "You cannot have too many soldiers, only too few supplies."
Second Maxim - "Be willing to exchange a bad idea for a good one."
Second Corollary - "You can only be wrong or agree with me."

A terrorist which starts a slaughter quoting Locke, Burke and Mill has completely missed the point.
The fact remains that the only person or group to applaud the Norway massacre are random Islamists.

Viking

Quote from: Capetan Mihali on March 13, 2014, 10:38:02 PM
I'm reading Terry Eagleton's new book, "Culture and the Death of God," which has a few relevant comments for this debate concerning the Enlightenment.  He points out that "atheism" as a pejorative preceded the emergence of real atheists by about 100 years.

"It would be curious, then, if the Enlightenment had taken the form of an aggressively secular movement, as some of its modern apologists assume.  When it came to religion, a good deal of this audacious intellectual project landed us back on a spot not far from where we were in the first place, furnished with a new, more plausible set of rationales.  The task was not so much to topple the Supreme Being as to replace a benighted version of religious faith with one that might grace coffee-house conversation in the Strand.  For the most part, it was priestcraft rather than the Almighty that the movement had in its sight."

Quoting Jonathan Israel, the turning point was that it was "by the 1740s, the apparent collapse of all efforts to forge a new general synthesis of theology, philosophy, politics, and science, which destablished religious beliefs and values, causing the wholly unprecedented crisis of faith driving the secularisation of the modern West."

Eagleton says that J. Israel is pointing out that this spiritual crisis "has its roots in a thoroughly material history -- the expansion of European commercialism and imperialism in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the rapid growth of international monopolies, the dislocating effects of diaspora, a new social fluidity and diversity, the impact of new technologies, the partial dissolution of traditional social hierarchies and their accompanying symbolic systems and the like."

Just though I'd share, since the book is open to these pages at the moment.

I agree with that. Atheists were few and far between in the enlightenment. To be honest, before 1859 knowledge of each branch of science supported theism (you needed to be a polymath to see the inconsistencies, which few people were). It was the philosophical argument against god that caused people to disbelieve. Though, even there the philosophical arguments for the most part demolished religion rather than god. This caused people to abandon their religion and become Deists and Unitarians rather than Atheists. What Darwin did is that he removed the need for God to get life, at that point everything seemed to be explained.
First Maxim - "There are only two amounts, too few and enough."
First Corollary - "You cannot have too many soldiers, only too few supplies."
Second Maxim - "Be willing to exchange a bad idea for a good one."
Second Corollary - "You can only be wrong or agree with me."

A terrorist which starts a slaughter quoting Locke, Burke and Mill has completely missed the point.
The fact remains that the only person or group to applaud the Norway massacre are random Islamists.