Vajradhara
One of Many
Namaste Juan,
thank you for the post.
my next door neighbor is 53 years old and she cannot read, shes worked the same job, in a retirement home laundry for 35 years now and simply knows how to do the job at hand. grocery shopping is basically symbol recognition which is becoming more and more common in alphabetic based societies. i only offered to help her one time and she was too embarrassed to accept and i demurred to her feelings. shes' married and has children that are close and care for her for what its worth.
i'm sure that it was common to be illiterate it just doesn't jibe with me to also be successful in business given that written contracts and such were in use during this period in history and the geographical region under discussion. it's just an oddity for me more than anything else and i've no reason to dispute the official account.
i've personally never understood the argument that oral traditions are inherently less trustworthy than written traditions. generally speaking i think the issue is one of consistency in the retelling of the story which is being impugned but this seems to ignore the central, public nature of oral tradition and community story telling.
i would agree, of course, that being logically consistent in ones application of critical examination is the only intellectually honest approach that one can take. i'm aware that this may lead one to some unpleasant conclusions regarding their own paradigm and that the avoidance of this can cause people to refrain from turning their attention towards their own tradition.
i understand why this is so and i'm pretty sure that i do it myself when i'm not paying attention when i become aware of it i try to make it known to myself as well as my friends who may have been on the other end of my attention
it's no worries.. folks are busy and this conversation will be here for awhile
to be honest with you i don't even know what that means. i hear it quite often used in a dismissive manner regarding another beings particular beliefs. often the "ism" is being applied by the same people that then denigrate that which they have labeled... quite unusual behavior to be sure. my religion, for instance, is called Buddhism in the West which is not the name that our religion is actually called, it is called Buddha Dharma, but i digress.
when a being is possessed of the Truth and feel the compelling urge to convince others of it whilst other beings are, simultaneously, possessed of the Truth and feeling the urge to convince others there is hardly any chance for any other outcome. by and large it comes down to the all to familiar expression of ego and greed.
metta,
~v
thank you for the post.
juantoo3 said:I've known a few people in my time who could read very little. They had remarkable ways of dealing with day to day issues. Be that as it may, the era of Mohammed was a very different time and place, it was probably quite common to not be able to read or write.
my next door neighbor is 53 years old and she cannot read, shes worked the same job, in a retirement home laundry for 35 years now and simply knows how to do the job at hand. grocery shopping is basically symbol recognition which is becoming more and more common in alphabetic based societies. i only offered to help her one time and she was too embarrassed to accept and i demurred to her feelings. shes' married and has children that are close and care for her for what its worth.
i'm sure that it was common to be illiterate it just doesn't jibe with me to also be successful in business given that written contracts and such were in use during this period in history and the geographical region under discussion. it's just an oddity for me more than anything else and i've no reason to dispute the official account.
Now, an oral tradition doesn't concern me so much, with what little I understand of Jewish and Native American traditions, both having long histories of oral tradition.
But if oral tradition should serve as a disqualifier, then I think it should be only logical to fairly apply the same standard to all similar traditions.
i've personally never understood the argument that oral traditions are inherently less trustworthy than written traditions. generally speaking i think the issue is one of consistency in the retelling of the story which is being impugned but this seems to ignore the central, public nature of oral tradition and community story telling.
i would agree, of course, that being logically consistent in ones application of critical examination is the only intellectually honest approach that one can take. i'm aware that this may lead one to some unpleasant conclusions regarding their own paradigm and that the avoidance of this can cause people to refrain from turning their attention towards their own tradition.
i understand why this is so and i'm pretty sure that i do it myself when i'm not paying attention when i become aware of it i try to make it known to myself as well as my friends who may have been on the other end of my attention
I haven't seen islamis4u around to answer this rebuttal...
it's no worries.. folks are busy and this conversation will be here for awhile
I was thinking more in terms of fundamentalism, but that *is* still an "ism."
to be honest with you i don't even know what that means. i hear it quite often used in a dismissive manner regarding another beings particular beliefs. often the "ism" is being applied by the same people that then denigrate that which they have labeled... quite unusual behavior to be sure. my religion, for instance, is called Buddhism in the West which is not the name that our religion is actually called, it is called Buddha Dharma, but i digress.
The real fun though is in watching the internal fireworks when contentious issues are raised. But that's just how it is...Christians would rather bicker between themselves than unite against an outside assault, and Muslims would rather unite to assault others than bicker among themselves. Not that this is exclusionary, of course. There are more than enough Christians willing to assault others, just as there are more than enough Muslims willing to bicker among themselves. I just find all of it quite amusing.
Curiouser and curiouser...
when a being is possessed of the Truth and feel the compelling urge to convince others of it whilst other beings are, simultaneously, possessed of the Truth and feeling the urge to convince others there is hardly any chance for any other outcome. by and large it comes down to the all to familiar expression of ego and greed.
metta,
~v