Texas wants to rewrite the US History books

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firstdown
03-17-2010, 03:48 PM
Seriously.

Fox News really works I guess.

Don't realy watch Fox News at most maybe 15 min a week.

joethiesmanfan
03-17-2010, 03:48 PM
If my memory serves me well, the Vikings themselves invaded England to raid the monastaries.

The Battle of Hastings, the Normans are descendants of Vikings. Who cares when the Saxons became Christians. Fact is the Irish did not save civilization with one freaking book. You are reaching.

That my friend is called the reason why we don't need those guys in Texas rewriting our history books.

fundamentalism = over simplification with a few fabrications thrown in there to force logical square pegs into round holes.

JoeRedskin
03-17-2010, 03:49 PM
This my friend is how Europe escaped the Dark Ages. This answers the question why do we use the Arabic Number system instead fo the monastery number system (which includes zero), and also the reason all known stars of antiquity have Arabic names.


In his book titled, "Spain In The Modern World," James Cleuge explains the significance of Cordova in Medieval Europe:

"For there was nothing like it, at that epoch, in the rest of Europe. The best minds in that continent looked to Spain for everything which most clearly differentiates a human being from a tiger." (Cleugh, 1953, p. 70)

During the end of the first millennium, Cordova was the intellectual well from which European humanity came to drink. Students from France and England traveled there to sit at the feet of Muslim, Christian and Jewish scholars, to learn philosophy, science and medicine (Digest, 1973, p. 622). In the great library of Cordova alone, there were some 600,000 manuscripts (Burke, 1978, p. 122).

Hahahahahaha! monks had one book.


This rich and sophisticated society took a tolerant view towards other faiths. Tolerance was unheard of in the rest of Europe. But in Moorish Spain, "thousands of Jews and Christians lived in peace and harmony with their Muslim overlords." (Burke, 1985, p. 38) The society had a literary rather than religious base. Economically their prosperity was unparalleled for centuries. The aristocracy promoted private land ownership and encouraged Jews in banking. There was little or no Muslim prostelyting. Instead, non-believers simply paid an extra tax!

"Their society had become too sophisticated to be fanatical. Christians and Moslems, with Jews as their intermediaries and interpreters, lived side by side and fought, not each other, but other mixed communities." (Cleugh, 1953, p. 71)

Spain, as an example of religious tolerance is an excellent example and I agree that the muslim world was the primary savior of ancient knowledge. Again, it was through adhering to the tenents of Islam that this knowledge was preserved as, at the time, knowledge was valued as a path to Allah. I am all good with that. Where Islam did not reach, Christianity, through monastaries, often served as points of learning.

JoeRedskin
03-17-2010, 03:52 PM
Both false and unfair. Monasteries were the great libraries of Europe outside of Moorish Spain. For just one example, if you have ever heard of Aesop's fables, those tales were preserved from multiple sources over centuries by Christian monasteries.

And that, good sir, was my initial premise. Thank you.

firstdown
03-17-2010, 03:53 PM
I think I have had my history lesson for today.

JoeRedskin
03-17-2010, 03:57 PM
The Battle of Hastings, the Normans are descendants of Vikings. Who cares when the Saxons became Christians. Fact is the Irish did not save civilization with one freaking book. You are reaching.

That my friend is called the reason why we don't need those guys in Texas rewriting our history books.

fundamentalism = over simplification with a few fabrications thrown in there to force logical square pegs into round holes.

I reach for nothing, my initial premise was simply that christianity played a significant role in preserving ancient knowledge and promoting scholarship. has organized religion also (both muslim and christianity) been used in the destruction of the same? Yup.

It was your stupid, ignorant, dumb, mindless, uneducated assertion that I was wrong in this premise b/c Christianity didn't come to the British Isles until 1066 that, IMO, epitomized the smug criticism of christianity of some on this board.

joethiesmanfan
03-17-2010, 03:57 PM
I think I have had my history lesson for today.

That my friend is the dag gone truth.

BleedBurgundy
03-17-2010, 04:02 PM
Ok, now let's debate the validity of:

All of humanity being descended from two people, one of which was made from the other's rib. These two people lived in a wonderful garden, but were tricked into eating mystical fruit by a tricky reptile.

Magic sea creatures that swallow people without digesting them and then spit them out on the beach.

"Angels" committing genocide by murdering the first born sons of a given ethnic group.

The surface tension of water and the associated application to mideastern carpenters.

Ghosts. No really, f'ing ghosts.

Demons, Devils and the like...

Religion is not for the rational mind.

SmootSmack
03-17-2010, 04:06 PM
Let's try to keep things civil here and refrain from personal attacks. Threads the last few days have gotten pretty heated and personal.

saden1
03-17-2010, 04:06 PM
Give it up for scholars from Al-Andalus (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Andalus)...no one did it bigger and better in saving the west from the dark ages. Cordoba, Granada, Seville, Toledo oh my.

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