bananabrain
awkward squadnik
yeah, that's what i thought he said. i don't see why the second necessarily follows from the first, though, especially if the dream tools aren't all that good. freud's ones certainly leave a lot to be desired given his virtually complete ignorance of judaism (at least the bits of it outside vienna).He said "Dreams are private myths. Myths are public dreams." And in that he meant they could both be understood using similar tools.
i suppose that's really my point, that it's not really an acceptable approach. mind you, even the h-as were obliged to marry and to give onah to their wives.I was thinking of the hasidei ashkenaz. It's certainly not an acceptable approach but it has existed.
what i keep saying to people is if they're not involved in the traditional perspective they can't hope to affect it. all this fecking nonsense over denominations is totally injurious to klal yisrael and that's why we need to get on with each other better. incidentally, if you live near boston, you may be able to get down to new york for the limmud conference, which i cannot recommend enough. see ( http://www.limmudny.org/ ) i have been going to the UK conferences for 12 years and their philosophy is one of the most positive contributions to modern judaism from the grass-roots up. we need to own this stuff for ourselves!And yes, I know, according to the traditional perspective I have no authority to tweak.
according to someone i consider very knowledgeable on the subject, the use of the male gender in biblical hebrew is common for non-gender items. basically, i feel quite strongly that this is our hang-up about gender (and the implications of gendered language) and that it is for us to get over it and not discriminate, rather than blaming it on G!D's drafting. i just think there are more important issues we should be dealing with.But E-l Sh-a-Dai is still masculine.
personally, i'd consider that kabbalistically problematic.read of someone calling G!D Noga when trying to avoid concepts of gender.
to be honest, dauer, i'm not absolutely positive and certainly couldn't cite my sources; that's just my understanding and what i learned - i just can't remember where.It seems like they were written with each statement as a heading for the explanation. Were they published separately first?
well, essentially evil is mostly a matter of context, or misapplied intent - there is no such thing as intrinsic evil in and of itself in real terms, only in applied.Can you explain? I think you were speaking to what I said about evil being an integral part of the divine plan that is beneficial for our growth and is good along with the rest of creation.
well, surely the greater source of evil is the acts of the people that follow him and, in the case of nathan of gaza, he's the chief offender in this respect. i think we can all agree that evil can arise from a desperate desire to do good under many circumstances.You said that what happens because of mental illness should not be considered "evil." But if a person who is mentally ill shouts the unspoken name of God, marries a prostitute, and maybe a fish, and a torah, and proclaims themself the messiah, encouraging people to this day to follow their path, surely this is evil.
look, by definition everything is from G!D, so this actually becomes a question of our approach to theodicy. mystically speaking there may be many different reasons why something happens; the important thing being that at some point a tiqqun may be necessary, or a tiqqun may go wrong. this should really be a separate thread, i think.If it is because of a genetic condition, or even due to experiences in early childhood, it is still from G!D, either biologically or part of a divine plan
b'shalom
bananabrain