Sunday, February 23, 2020

Honor

3.1.20

Ali Larter

Honor
Likeness
荣誉形象
Róngyù xíngxiàng
名誉の肖像 
Meiyo no shōzō
ps35
Instar honoris

God took man and put him in the garden of Eden.
He was put there to care for his providence in freedom.

He was told that he could eat from every tree in the garden but one.
Fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil would end his run.
The consequence for the experience of evil could not be undone. 

Transgression came into the world through the sin of one man.
Death came through misdeed through the experience that contrasted the plan.

The consequence for death spread to all through the participation in error.
Immorality was in the world prior to expiation for offense through the sacrifice bearer.

Error for immorality was not counted prior to the institution of law for sovereignty.
Adam was the type for the one who was yet to come for moral constancy.

Death exercised dominion from Adam to Moses
even for those whose transgression was not like the original opus. 

If the many died through the one man's trespass
so much more would grace through Christ in another allow for advance.

The judgment following one trespass brought condemnation.
The free gift of grace by faith despite error brought justification.

If death exercised dominion because of the first man's vice
more will surely receive the gift of rightness through Jesus Christ.

Just as the one trespass led to condemnation for all with the fall
so did the sacrifice of the Son lead to justification for those who answer the call. 



What is the relationship between leap year and time?
It is the likeness between the planets in the sun's crime.

Union with the One was the goal for the ascetic. 
Communion with the Father became the object for the peripatetic.

Jesus was led by the Spirit to fast and pray in the wilderness
at the start of his ministry to avoid vigorous rigor in bitterness.



The devil showed him the kingdoms of the world as his.
Jesus said the great "I AM" has the authority that truly is.

The devil left and angels came to wait on him.
The Son felt the love of the Father and it wasn't grim.

Communion with the Father by the power of the Spirit 
for the body of Christ was opened to those who would draw near it.

The balance between power and authority is made with love
as that which radiates with warmth in the light that shines from above.

National sovereignty is defined by security and trade
for the celebration of the union that unity has made.

Please contend with those who contend against my existence.
Fight against those who work to deny me assistance.

Deliver me from my enemies.
Allow me the weapons drawn from the centuries.

Allow defense against attack
to defend against the crisis climaxed.

Let them be turned back who devise evil against my life.
Let them be confounded who seek to increase my strife.

Let them be driven like chaff before the wind
as the angel of justice seeks to drive them from sin.

Let their way be as dark and treacherous
as that which they had devised against me in their cleverness.

They hid their net for me without cause.
They set a trap for me that was against the law.

Let ruin fall on their plans and snares.
Let them fall into consequence for their error.

Then my soul will rejoice with faith
in deliverance as the promise saved.

All my bones will say in exclamation,
'Who is like the One who promised salvation?'

Malice had risen up in accusation
to demand that I accept their degradation.

They repaid evil for good
as though it were for their sainthood.

When they had been sick with illness
I prayed with my head bowed in stillness.

I asked that knowledge of good health
would be shared as a form of wealth.

I cut my cost with abstinence 
from the former consumption of accidents.

I grieved as for a brother or a friend.
I lamented like a mother to apprehend
a solution that would provide a dividend
to transcend adversity's end.

They gathered in glee
at my stumbling.

They gathered together like the friends of Job
to catalog the sins that drove the heat in the stove
that punished the will to serve as the core of the fire exposed. 

Antagonists whom I did not know
had attacked me as though
they would never cease to joke
or crow.

They mocked me more and more.
They bared their teeth at my front door.

Deny the lies that seek to ravage my soul like lions.
They tell stories like there is no tomorrow for oppositional defiance.

I will thank you in the greatness of the congregation.
The mighty throng will praise you in the consolidation 
of celebration as inspiration for the nation.

Do not let the treachery of my enemies prevail.
They are against you in the triumph over travails. 

They do not speak for peace. 
They conceive of deceit 
that won't cease
for those who seek ease
in redemption from conceit.

They said, 'Aha, aha! Our eyes have seen it'
even though they just wanted others to believe their bit.

You have seen all this from the sky, Most High,
from those heights in heaven as the truth that doesn't lie.

Activate judgment for my defense
with expressions for truth that make sense.

Vindicate me according to your righteousness
with the mindfulness of your likeness.

Let me rejoice in the recognition
of the vision for your mission
to escape the shame of perdition. 

Let those who desire vindication
shout for joy in the benediction.

Great is the wonder of the Almighty
who delights in the value of the timely.

Beloved courage stood on the hill with a dove
to proclaim the gospel of love.  

Human nature doesn't see justification on the sea of life without grace.
The design of creation speaks to the will of the Creator's case
for the human race.

I will speak about the rightness
of life in your image and likeness.

------------------------

Psalm 35
Prayer for Deliverance from Enemies
Of David.

1 Contend, O Lord, with those who contend with me;
    fight against those who fight against me!
2 Take hold of shield and buckler,
    and rise up to help me!
3 Draw the spear and javelin
    against my pursuers;
say to my soul,
    “I am your salvation.”
4 Let them be put to shame and dishonor
    who seek after my life.
Let them be turned back and confounded
    who devise evil against me.
5 Let them be like chaff before the wind,
    with the angel of the Lord driving them on.
6 Let their way be dark and slippery,
    with the angel of the Lord pursuing them.
7 For without cause they hid their net for me;
    without cause they dug a pit for my life.
8 Let ruin come on them unawares.
And let the net that they hid ensnare them;
    let them fall in it—to their ruin.
9 Then my soul shall rejoice in the Lord,
    exulting in his deliverance.
10 All my bones shall say,
    “O Lord, who is like you?
You deliver the weak
    from those too strong for them,
    the weak and needy from those who despoil them.”
11 Malicious witnesses rise up;
    they ask me about things I do not know.
12 They repay me evil for good;
    my soul is forlorn.
13 But as for me, when they were sick,
    I wore sackcloth;
    I afflicted myself with fasting.
I prayed with head bowed on my bosom,
14     as though I grieved for a friend or a brother;
I went about as one who laments for a mother,
    bowed down and in mourning.
15 But at my stumbling they gathered in glee,
    they gathered together against me;
ruffians whom I did not know
    tore at me without ceasing;
16 they impiously mocked more and more,
    gnashing at me with their teeth.
17 How long, O Lord, will you look on?
    Rescue me from their ravages,
    my life from the lions!
18 Then I will thank you in the great congregation;
    in the mighty throng I will praise you.
19 Do not let my treacherous enemies rejoice over me,
    or those who hate me without cause wink the eye.
20 For they do not speak peace,
    but they conceive deceitful words
    against those who are quiet in the land.
21 They open wide their mouths against me;
    they say, “Aha, Aha,
    our eyes have seen it.”
22 You have seen, O Lord; do not be silent!
    O Lord, do not be far from me!
23 Wake up! Bestir yourself for my defense,
    for my cause, my God and my Lord!
24 Vindicate me, O Lord, my God,
    according to your righteousness,
    and do not let them rejoice over me.
25 Do not let them say to themselves,
    “Aha, we have our heart’s desire.”
Do not let them say, “We have swallowed you up.”
26 Let all those who rejoice at my calamity
    be put to shame and confusion;
let those who exalt themselves against me
    be clothed with shame and dishonor.
27 Let those who desire my vindication
    shout for joy and be glad,
    and say evermore,
“Great is the Lord,
    who delights in the welfare of his servant.”
28 Then my tongue shall tell of your righteousness
    and of your praise all day long.

-------------------
==============
---------------------

What does leap year have to do with likeness to time?

Chn.  闰年与时间的相似性有什么关系?
          Rùnnián yǔ shíjiān de xiāngsì xìng yǒu shé me guānxì?
Jpn.  うるう年は、時間との類似性と何の関係がありますか?
          Urūdoshi wa, jikan to no ruiji-sei to nani no kankei ga arimasu ka?
Krn.   윤년은 시간의 유사성과 어떤 관계가 있습니까?
          Yunnyeon-eun sigan-ui yusaseong-gwa eotteon gwangyega issseubnikka?
Ltn.   Quid enim est necessitudo inter anno et tempore?
Itln.   Qual è la relazione tra l'anno bisestile e il tempo?
Spn.   ¿Cuál es la relación entre año bisiesto y tiempo?
Frn.   Quelle est la relation entre l'année bissextile et le temps?
Gmn. Wie ist das Verhältnis zwischen Schaltjahr und Zeit?
Dtch.  Wat is de relatie tussen schrikkeljaar en tijd?
Czch.  Jaký je vztah mezi přestupným rokem a časem?
Hng.   Mi a kapcsolat a szökőév és az idő között?
Grk.    Ποια είναι η σχέση μεταξύ έτους και χρόνου;
            Poia eínai i schési metaxý étous kai chrónou?
Trk.    Artık yıl ve zaman arasındaki ilişki nedir?
Rsn.   Какова взаимосвязь между високосным годом и временем?
           Kakova vzaimosvyaz' mezhdu visokosnym godom i vremenem?

What is the relationship between leap year and time?
It is the likeness between the movement of planets in the sun's crime.

-------------------------

Psalm 35
Defense from Attack


Psalm 35 is attributed to David. It is a prayer that asks for deliverance from enemies. It ends with the promise to celebrate defense.

The attribution to David makes it royal, but the text indicates that the request for deliverance was made prior to his ascension to the throne.

It is likely that the prayer is placed after David had achieved success as a military leader for the king and kingdom. It makes explicit reference to weapons for conflict.

He had not yet been anointed by Samuel to replace Saul for his appeal to divination from a polytheist.The psalmist did not claim to be the anointed.

He appealed to the honor of success by virtue of his prayer and fasting in behalf of others. No reference is made to the use of scripture. No reference is made to the use of instruments to sing the praise in a temple.

The psalmist promised to attribute his victory to the power of God with faith. He would sing his praises after he was granted success.

Sons of Korah
Psalm 35
Music Video

Commentary on Ps35 Christianity.com
BlueLetterBible.org
EnduringWord.com
----------------------

Plato on defense


Apology
wiki Plato's Apology
Text
Apology

-------------------

Genesis 2
The Garden of Eden


Genesis is the first book in the Bible. It is the first of the 5 books of the Torah or the law of Moses. It is called the Pentateuch in the Septuagint.

The book documents the Judaic view of the creation of the world and the origin of the Jewish people.  Chapters 1-11 express the primeval history. The work was composed in the late 7th or the 6th century BCE. Themes from Mesopotamain mythology were adapted for the Judaic faith in one God.

The creation narrative is common to Judaism and Christianity. The narrative is made up of two stories, roughly equivalent to the first two chapters of the book.

Elohim, the God of gods for Israel, created heaven and earth in 6 days and rested on the 7th in the first. The work was blessed and sanctified. Order and complexity in the world are shown as the template for time and action with respect for relations for sanctification in goodness.

Yahweh, the unspeakable name of God, created Adam, the first man from the dust of the earth in the next chapter. He was placed in the Garden of Eden where he was given dominion over the animals. Eve was created from Adam to help with the garden and to act as his companion.

Original sin and the fall are described. The themes of redemption by the promise of salvation and justification by faith are worked into the book in later chapters.

Gen. 2:15-17

The LORD God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to till it and keep it.  The LORD God commanded the man, 'You may freely eat of every tree of the garden; but of the tree of knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat. You shall die in the day that you eat of it.'

-----------------------

God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden.
He was put there to care for his providence in freedom.

He was told that he could eat from every tree in the garden but one.
The fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil would end his run.
The consequence for the experience of evil could not be undone.

=================

Romans 5:5
Hope


The epistle to the Romans comes 6th in the order of the Christian New Testament. It follows the 4 gospels and the Acts of the Apostles. It is the first of the apostolic letters.

Paul had promised the members of the church at Corinth that he would visit them again (2 Cor. 1:15-17). It was not long after sending his last letter that the opportunity came and he was able to spend several months with them. It was probably sometime in 57 CE.

The letter to the Romans was written prior to his second trial before Nero. Nero ruled as Caesar in Rome from 54 to 68 CE.

The second letter to Timothy alludes to a first trial (2 Tim. 4:16-17) from which he was delivered from the mouth of the lion.

The letter to the Romans was the longest of all the epistles. It presented a systematic account of the gospel to the Christian community in Rome. It was also the last  of the seven New Testament letters that scholars have attributed to Paul.

The first chapter served as the introduction. Dedication to the instruction of the Gentiles in the faith was declared as an objective. Gentiles had worshipped idols and disdained faith in one God. Jews had received the promise of salvation by the faith of Abraham, but the rite of circumcision wasn't necessary to receive the promise.

A case against the guilt of human nature in the world was built. Jews and Gentiles fell short of justification earned by perfection in observation of the law.

The reason for writing the letter to the Romans was to share the gospel and to teach that righteousness comes by faith in Jesus Christ.

The second chapter was written to admonish the belief that righteousness comes by circumcision as the rite of intiation into the law. It was the circumcision of the heart for faith that welcomed sanctification by the Holy Spirit.

The third chapter completed the charge that all were guilty of sin before God. Justification was a gift of grace that comes by forgiveness with faith. Salvation is offered as a promise with respect for redemption toward justification.

The fourth chapter stated that faith has always been the means to attain justification.

Gentiles were intended to receive the promise of salvation offered to the world through Abraham as the father of nations. He chose to believe the promise despit his circumstance. His faith was credited to him as righteousness.

Redemption from sin was extended back in time to the first man, Adam, as a symbol of the desire to believe. The Christian community was reconciled with God by Christ Jesus. The Son was not spared by the Father so the sacrifice could undo what had been done by Adam in the Garden of Eden.

Romans 5:12-19

Just as sin came into the world through one man, death came through sin. Death spread to all because all had sinned.

Sin was in the world before the law, but it is not counted where there is no law. Death exercised dominion from Adam to Moses, even over those whose sin was not like the transgression of Adam, the type of the one who was yet to come.

The free gift is not like the trespass. If the many died through one man's trespass, much more surely have the grace of God and the free gift in the one man, Jesus Christ, abounded for the many.

The free gift is not like the effect of the one man's sin. The judgement following one trespass brought condemnation, but the free gift following many trespasses brings justification.

If death exercised dominion because of the one man's sin, much more surely will those who receive the abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness exercise dominion in life through the one man, Jesus Christ.

Just as one man's trespass led to condemnation for all, so one man's act of righteousness leads to justification and life for all. Just as many were made sinners by disobedience, so by the one man's obedience the many will be made righteous.

-----------------------

Transgression came into the world through the sin of one man.
Death came through misdeed through the experience that contrasted the plan.

The consequence for death spread to all through the participation in error.
Immorality was in the world prior to expiation for offense through the sacrifice bearer.

Error for immorality was not counted prior to the institution of law for sovereignty.
Adam was the type for the one who was yet to come for moral constancy.

Death exercised dominion from Adam to Moses
even for those whose transgression was not like the original opus.

If the many died through the one man's trespass
so much more would grace through another allow for advance.

The judgment following one trespass brought condemnation.
The free gift of grace by faith despite error brought justification.

If death exercised dominion because of the first man's vice
more will surely receive the gift of rightness through Jesus Christ.

Just as the one trespass led to condemnation for all with the fall
so did the sacrifice of the Son lead to justification for those who answer the call.

=================

The completion of the third missionary journey is dated to 57 CE. Paul arrived in Jerusalem for his fifth and final visit with a collection of money for the local community.

Some "Jews from Asia"  accused him of defiling the temple by bringing gentiles after he had been in Jerusalem for 7 days. He was dragged out of the temple by an angry mob.

He narrowly escaped death by surrendering to a group of Roman centurions. They arrested him to take him into custody. He was put in chains and taken to the tribune (Acts 21:27-36).

He was transported by night to Caesarea Maritima. He was held as a prisoner there for two years by Marcus Antonius Felix, until a new governor, Porcius Festus, reopened his case in 59.

Paul exercised his right as a Roman citizen to "appeal unto Caesar". Finally, Paul and his companions sailed for Rome where Paul was to stand trial for his alleged crimes.

He arrived in Rome around 60 where he spent another two years under house arrest. The narrative of Acts ends with Paul preaching in Rome for two years from his rented home while awaiting trial [Acts 28:30–31].

The account offered by the Acts of the Apostles extended to 62 CE.

The process for the transformation of the Roman empire from polytheistic to a monotheistic culture had reached its start in Rome from the humble beginning in Jerusalem. 

-------------------------

Service


If union with the One was the goal of the ascetic life, then Jesus made communion with the Father by the power of the Holy Spirit the objective for the Church as the body of Christ in the world.

He was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to fast and pray at the beginning of his ministry. He faced wild beasts both real and imagined as he fasted for 40 days and nights in the desert. Satan was one of the 'wild beasts' whom Jesus encountered in his ascetic journey.

The desert had become a place where ascetics prayed, fasted and meditated on the meaning of scripture to taste the experience of natural law outside of civilized constructs. It was a  place to test thought in the reality of need for the basics of provision.

Those who could accept the reality of order in the wilderness returned to society with a better sense regarding the importance of economy in social relations. The relation between power and authority has had particular significance in personal and social dimensions.

Matthew 4:8-11

The devil took Jesus up to a mountain and showed him the kingdoms of the world and their splendor. He said, 'All these I will give you, if you will fall down and worship me.'

Jesus said, 'Away with you, Satan! It is written,
"Worship the Lord your God
and serve him only."'

The devil left him and suddenly angels came and waited on him.

-----------------------

Union with the One was the goal for the ascetic.
Communion with the Father became the object for the peripatetic.

Jesus was led by the Spirit to fast and pray in the wilderness
at the start of his ministry to avoid vigorous rigor in bitterness.

The devil showed him the kingdoms of the world as his.
Jesus said the great "I AM" has the authority that truly is.

The devil left and angels came to wait on him.
The Son felt the love of the Father and it wasn't grim.

Communion with the Father by the power of the Spirit
for the body of Christ was opened to those who would draw near it.

The balance between power and authority is made with love
as that which shines with warmth in the light from above.

National sovereignty is defined by security and trade
for the celebration of the union that unity has made.

=================

Ps.16:11


You will show me the path of life.
There is fullness of joy in your presence.
There are pleasures forever near your essence.

Map of Wales



David of Wales
b. c. 500 Caerfai, Dyfed, Wales
d. 3.1.589  Mynyw, Dyfed

David was a Welsh bishop of Mynyw (now St Davids) during the 6th century. He was a native of Wales. He has become the patron saint for the Welsh Christians.

He was born in Caerfai (ca-er-fi) in Dyfed (du-fed) Wales. It is on the coast of the Celtic Sea between England and Ireland.

Caerfai Cliffs near St. David's


Caerfai Bay in West Wales has cliffs of purple sandstone. The color comes from the Cambrian period. The Cambrian period was the first geological period of the Paleozoic Era (more than 250 million years ago) in the Phanerozoic Eon. The Phanerozoic Eon started  when animals first developed hard shells. These shells have been preserved in the fossil record.

Plant life on land appeared in the early Phanerozoic eon. Tectonic forces caused the continents to move during this period. The plates collected into a single landmass known as Pangaea. This was the most recent supercontinent. When the land separated the plates moved into the current continental landmasses.

The majority of living organisms on the whole were small, unicellular and simple prior to the Cambrian period. It was not until this period that mineralized and currently fossilized organisms became common.

Diverse life forms prospered in the oceans, but the land is thought to have been comparatively barren. There was nothing more complex than a microbial soil crust and a few molluscs that emerged to browse on the microbial biofilm.

The Romans began their conquest of Britain in 43. They first campaigned in what is now northeast Wales in 48 against the Deceangli.

The Deceangli (de-cee-an-glee) lived in hill forts running in a chain through the Clwydian (cloy-dian) Range. The range  is a series of hills in the north east of the area.

Their tribal capital was Canovium. It was an important place to cross the  Conwy (con-yoy) River.
Celtic polytheism was druidic. The druids were literate, but their beliefs weren't documented.

Their pantheon consists of numerous recorded theonyms both from Greco-Roman ethnography and from epigraphy. Among the most prominent ones are Teutatis, Taranis and Lugus.

Toutatis was worshipped especially in Gaul and in Roman Britain. He was one of three Celtic gods mentioned by the Roman poet Lucan in the 1st century CE.

The name "Teutates" is derived from the stem teutā-, meaning "people" or "tribe". Victims sacrificed to the deity were killed by being plunged into a vat boiling with an unspecified liquid according to later commentators.

The druids were organized, but primitve tribes didn't operate with Judaic or Roman principles of jurisprudence. Having a god for the people was a step beyond the animism that feared unseen powers and told stories of animal or human spirits with superhuman power.

The reconstructed Proto-Celtic form of the name Taranis is *Torano- ("thunder"). Representations of a bearded god with a thunderbolt in one hand and a wheel in the other have been recovered from Gaul. The deity later came to be syncretised with Jupiter.

The chariot wheel with six or eight spokes was an important symbol in historical Celtic polytheism. The wheel-god came to be identified as the sky- sun- or thunder-god Taranis.

The Proto-Celtic root of the name, *lug-, is generally believed to have been derived from one of several different Proto-Indo-European roots, such as *leug- "black", *leuǵ- "to break" and *leugʰ- "to swear an oath".

The word is used in a number of place names. It may have been used by Latin authors to name locations with forests. Lucus means a sacred grove or forest in Latin.

The early Middle Ages started with the Roman departure from Wales. A number of kingdoms formed in the post-Roman period. The various British states were left to self-govern when the Roman garrison of Britain was withdrawn in 410.

An inscribed stone from Gwynedd (gwoi-ned) dated between the late 5th century and mid 6th century serves as evidence for a continuing Roman influence after the departure of the Roman legions.

The inscription commemorates a certain Cantiorix (can-tee-o-rix) who was described as a citizen of Gwynedd and a cousin of Maglos (ma-glos) the magistrate.

There was considerable Irish colonisation in Dyfed in south-west Wales. There are many stones with Ogham inscriptions in the area.

1 Thessalonians 2:1-2

You yourselves know, brothers and sisters, that our coming to you was not in vain. Though we had already suffered and been shamefully maltreated at Philippi as you know, we had courage in our God to declare to you the gospel in spite of great opposition.

---------------------

Wales had become Christian. The people spoke Welsh. The "age of the saints" (approximately 500–700) was marked by the establishment of monastic settlements throughout the country

The most powerful ruler was acknowledged as King of the Britons. The Britons were a tribal confederation that had formed with Roman influence. They spoke Britonic as a language for trade in England, Wales and southern Scotland.

Tywysog Cymru (te-we-sog cem-ray) later became the Leader or Prince of Wales. Some rulers extended their control over other Welsh territories and into western England, but none were able to unite Wales for long.

The heir apparent to the English monarch has borne the title "Prince of Wales" since the time when King Edward I of England had conquered the principality in 1282.

The pagan Anglo-Saxons invaded Britain in the fifth and sixth centuries. Many British Christians sought refuge in the hill country of Wales. They encountered a style of Christian life that was devoted to learning, asceticism and missionary fervor.

The monasteries were the centers of culture in a land where there were no cities. Most abbots also became bishops.

Mark 4:26-29

Jesus said, 'The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground. He would sleep and rise night and day. The seed would sprout and grow without his knowledge of how it was done. The earth produces of itself the stalk, the head, then the full grain in the head. When the grain is ripe, he goes in with his sickle, because the harvest has come.

------------------

David of Wales


David is traditionally believed to be the son of Saint Non and the grandson of Ceredig ap Cunedda (ce-ray-dig ap cu-nay-da), king of Ceredigion (ce-re-di-gion).

Dewi (de-wee) was the founder, abbot and bishop of the monastery of Mynyw (me-new) in Pembrokeshire. He was responsible for much of the spread of Christianity in Wales.

His best-known miracle is said to have taken place when he was preaching in the middle of a large crowd at the Synod of Brefi.

The village of Llanddewi Brefi (lan-de-wee bray-fee) stands on the spot where the ground on which he stood is reputed to have risen up to form a small hill.  A white dove was seen to settle on his shoulder.

Hills near Llanddewi Brefi

He was said to have denounced Pelagianism during this incident. Pelagianians held the theological position that original sin did not taint human nature. Mortal will was capable of choosing between good or evil without divine intervention.

The theory was named after the British monk Pelagius (360 - 418). He taught that human will  was sufficient to live a sinless life. His doctrine was associated with the belief that human beings can earn salvation by their own efforts.

David was declared archbishop by popular acclaim after his renunciation of the error in Christian doctrine.

His monastery was sought out by many scholars from Ireland and elsewhere. He is commonly accounted the apostle of Wales

David Wales
S. 戴维·威尔士
T.  戴維·威爾士

戴 Dai   wore               戴  tai   crowned             Dei  でい   デイ           We  웨  wei       
维 wei  dimension       維  i       fiber                   bi      びっ     ビッ        il     일   work         
威 Wei  prestige           威  i       majesty             do     ど          ド           jeu   즈   zu                         
尔 er      er                    爾  ji      you                   Obu  おぶ   オブ           De   데   place     
士 shi    taxi                 士  shi   gentleman          Ue     うぇ-   ウェ-        i     이   this               
                                                                              ru      る        ル             bi    비   ratio           
                                                                              zu      ず        ズ             deu  드   de                               
-----------------------

The bishop stood on the hill with a dove
to proclaim the gospel of love.

Human nature doesn't see justification without grace.
The design of creation speaks to the will of the Creator's case
for the human race.

=================

Bentham argued that the greatest happiness for the greatest number was a moral precept for legislation that is representative of government for the people. This principle helped the UK to negotiate treaties to outlaw slavery in the world.

The US outlawed slavery and amended the Constitution. Recognition of the right to vote for people of color and women were added to representation in the system of election.

The prohibition of slavery and the right to vote significantly altered the system of election that had been used by the Roman Republic. The system was modernized.

Republic was made into a modern entity that required education for literacy for responsible participation in the system. The representation of the majority of the population for the nation was a key component for this participation.

Unhappiness


J. S. Mill argued against some of the leading principles that had been used by Benthan to institute these major changes to the system of election. He argued against the happiness principle by stating that the greatest majority worked without it.

He proposed that prohibition was warranted by asceticism in religion. His arguement that individual rights were necessary to guard against conviction of criminal charge by majority bias was probably the only principle for utility that could have been considered to be in agreement with Bentham's utilitarian advocacy.

Mill's political philosophy presented the case for the anti-majority representation.

While he argued for women's rights to vote, he did it in a populist sort of way. It was to put women over representation by the system of election. The suffrage movement for the right to vote was closely linked to the push for the prohibition of alcohol.

The concept of individuality as represented by psychology and psychiatry was an important cultural tool in his politics. This presented a lever for the appeal to popular support that suggested respect for monarchy and continental Constitutionalism. Everyone could simply be who they were provided that there was disagreement with majority representation.

The individualism held an appeal to Buddhists as well as ascetics. The life of Tetsuro Watsuji provides an example of how a leading figure in Japanese philosophy started down the road to the anti-majority view, but pulled out of it.

Watsuji Tetsuro
b. 3.1.1889 Himeji, Hyogo, Japan
d. 12.26.1960

Watsuji was born in 1889 in Himeji City in Hyogo Prefecture.. He was the second son of a physician.
He displayed a passion for literature, especially Western literature, as a student at Himeji Middle School. He even said that he wanted to become a poet like Byron.

He entered the prestigious First Higher School in Tokyo in 1906. He retained his dedication to the literary drama of Byron.

Nitobe Inazo was the headmaster for the school. He read Nitobe’s book on Bushidō, The Soul of Japan. It awakened an appreciation for eastern culture and ethics. His literay academic interest however stayed with his reading in Western Romanticism and Individualism.

He graduated in 1909. The school was later renamed Tokyo University. He entered Tokyo Imperial University later that same year. His specialization was philosophy in the Faculty of Literature.

He read the work of Natsume Soseki, a popular Japanese novelist. Soseki struggled with the human condition in the particularities of influence from the West on early modern Japan. Foreign influence presented a challenge to his cultural identity.

Sōseki was beginning to abandon his unqualified admiration of Western individualism. He had started on a critique of both individualism and the modern culture of the Western world.

Watsuji introduced the work of Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche to Japan in his early writing between 1913 and 1915. His studies of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche in 1912 and of Kierkegaard in 1915 provided ample evidence of his interest in and competence in Western philosophy.

He continued to study the Romantic poets, Byron, Shelley, Tennyson and Keats. He was torn between his literary and philosophical interests. His literary attempts were  failures, so he decided to give up literary invention. He devoted his exertion to the writing of critical essays and philosophical treatises,

He turned against this earlier position in 1918 when he began to compose a lengthy reminiscence of Soseki.

His reflections were published in 1918 (in his Gūzo saikō). They marked Watsuji’s own transformation from advocate of Western ways to critic of the West, turning toward a reconsideration of Japanese and Eastern cultural resources.

Sōseki had depicted the plight of the modern individual as one of painful loneliness and helplessness. Egoism was identified as the source of the malady. Social interconnections were presented as the remedy to the predicament of estrangement, loneliness and helplessness.

Individuality tempered with a strong social consciousness was still evident in Japanese society. This more balanced sense of self could be found in the earliest of Japanese cultural documents.

We inevitably come into the world in relationship with our language, culture, traditions and expectations as evident in our parents, caregivers and teachers. It is a myth of abstraction that we come into the world as isolated egos.

The difficulty with the elimination of the ego however is that it subjects the self to errors of socialism or communism.

Watsuji studied the roots of Japanese culture, including Japanese Buddhist art, and notably the work of the medieval Zen Buddhist Dōgen.

He  taught at Toyo, Hosei and Keio universities, and at Tsuda Eigaku-juku in the 1920's. Hermeneutics or the interpretation of the text became a major concern.

He became the professor of ethics at Kyoto University in 1925. He joined other leading Japanese philosophers,  Nishida Kitaro and Tanabe Hajime, there.

He published the first volume of Nihon seishinshi kenkyū (A Study of the History of the Japanese Spirit). The second volume was released in 1935. This study contained his investigation of Japanese Buddhism in Shamon Dōgen (The Monk Dōgen).

It can be said that it was Watsuji who single-handedly brought Dōgen’s work out of nearly total obscurity into the forefront of philosophical discussion.

He moved to the Tokyo Imperial University in 1934 and held the chair in ethics until 1949. His theories had provided support for Japanese nationalism during World War II. He expressed his regret for this influence after the war.

His three main works were his two-volume 1954 History of Japanese Ethical Thought, his three-volume Rinrigaku (Ethics), first published in 1937, 1942 and 1949, and his 1935 Fūdo.

The last of these develops his most distinctive thought. He argued for an essential relationship between environmental factors like climate and the nature of human cultures. He distinguished three types of culture: pastoral, desert, and monsoon.

He died at the age of 71.

---------------------

While Mill was never the subject for a book for Watsuji the criticism of individualism retains relevance.

Individual rights finds a major support in Constitutional consciousness with respect for due process in law. When someone can be convicted of crime in a court of law based on unsubstantiated allegations or lies, it is a threat to the success of justice in the legal system for the society.

The greatest happiness principle has achieved some of the most significant modification to the system of election in modern time.  It is within this sense of self that the modern world works. 

The anti-majority position is an offense against the greatest happiness principle and the success of justice in society.

SIEP Watsuji Tetsuo
wiki Watsuji Tetsuro

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Celebrate

2.23.20


Dakota Fanning

Celebrate
Reverence
庆祝崇敬
Qìngzhù chóngjìng
敬意を称える
Keii o tataeru
ps92
Celebramus reverentia

It is good for the heart to give thanks
with praise for the name above all ranks.

Your steadfast love declares the dawn.
Your faithfulness at night is drawn.

The music of the instruments supports the voice
for the beauty of the divine melody in choice. 

I find joy in the perception of Your employment
in the production of value with human enjoyment. 

Your energy works greatness!
Your thoughts are those which make us!

The sabbath is a day to celebrate rest
and to revere natural law for what is best.

Divine energy shows mercy with grace
as we work to live for goodness in time and space.


Mt. Sinai

Moses set out with Joshua to receive the revelation to which he was called.
They left the elders with Aaron and Hur to resolve disputes that appalled.



They were drawn to commune with glory in the cloud on the mountain.
The prophet was devoured by the fire of revelation in which the law was grounded
to be counted like a fountain. 

That which was wrong is left behind us
in order to find belief that binds but does not blind trust.

Though the feeling of hatred or envy has flourished,
it is doomed to failure, because It fails to nurture or nourish.


Mount Tabor

Jesus was transfigured before Peter, James and John on the height.
His face shone like the sun. His clothes became a dazzling white.

Moses and Elijah appeared before them.
They handed Jesus the prophetic diadem.

Peter said he would build three shelters, one for each.
The Father intervened to say that with his Son he was pleased.

The disciples fell to the ground overcome with fear.
Jesus told them to not be afraid. The others had disappeared.

We did not follow cleverly devised myths
to perpetuate trysts or factional conflicts.

The power of Jesus as Christ was made known by the display of his majesty.
He was the Son whom the Father had appointed to lift us out of tragedy.

We had heard his voice from heaven on the holy peak 
when the prophetic message had been confirmed as the truth we seek.

The uncreated light was shone to shine
as a lamp for dark places to be divined
before the morning star aligns
with the divine heart in your mind's eye.

No prophecy of scripture is limited to individual interpretation.
The Holy Spirit who spoke from God inspires sovereignty for each nation.   

The mystery about the divine essence
is a call to consider the real presence.

Substance has matter. Units are named.
Matter has patterns. Context for meaning is framed.

Ignorance about what is shown to perception
welcomes the search for what can be known to fight deception.

Facts alone don't determine value for existence.
Meaning is drawn by investigation with persistence.

Awe drawn from the wonder of deliverance
is a draw to consider the law of inference
for experience that makes a difference.

The enemies to the automation of thought for duty
will fail to see the wonders of natural beauty.

Hygiene is cleanliness for health.
It is the basis for the enjoyment of wealth.

You have exalted my love for Your energy.
You have anointed the sensory to escape from lethargy.

My eyes have seen the correction of my own error.
My ears have heard of failure for those who promoted terror.

Rightness is the essence for the goodness in order.
National sovereignty requires security for the border.


Sycamore Tree

The righteous flourish like a healthy tree
planted in the field of prosperity.

Fruit is still produced in old age.
Wisdom is the experience of the sage.

The design of nature is benign.
Faith allows for the operation of the mind.

-------------------

A Psalm.
A Song for the Sabbath Day.

1 It is good to give thanks to the Lord,
    to sing praises to your name, O Most High;
2 to declare your steadfast love in the morning,
    and your faithfulness by night,
3 to the music of the lute and the harp,
    to the melody of the lyre.
4 For you, O Lord, have made me glad by your work;
    at the works of your hands I sing for joy.
5 How great are your works, O Lord!
    Your thoughts are very deep!
6 The dullard cannot know,
    the stupid cannot understand this:
7 though the wicked sprout like grass
    and all evildoers flourish,
they are doomed to destruction forever,
8     but you, O Lord, are on high forever.
9 For your enemies, O Lord,
    for your enemies shall perish;
    all evildoers shall be scattered.
10 But you have exalted my horn like that of the wild ox;
    you have poured over me fresh oil.
11 My eyes have seen the downfall of my enemies;
    my ears have heard the doom of my evil assailants.
12 The righteous flourish like the palm tree,
    and grow like a cedar in Lebanon.
13 They are planted in the house of the Lord;
    they flourish in the courts of our God.
14 In old age they still produce fruit;
    they are always green and full of sap,
15 showing that the Lord is upright;
    he is my rock, and there is no unrighteousness in him.

---------------------
================
--------------------

Hygiene is good for health.

Chn.  卫生有益于健康。
          Wèishēng yǒuyì yú jiànkāng.
Jpn.    衛生は健康に良いです。
           Eisei wa kenkō ni yoidesu.
Krn.   위생은 건강에 좋습니다.
            Wisaeng-eun geongang-e johseubnida.
Ltn.    Sanitatis in bonum salutem.
Itln.    L'igiene fa bene alla salute.
Spn.    La higiene es buena para la salud.
Frn.     L'hygiène est bonne pour la santé.
Gmn.  Hygiene ist gut für die Gesundheit.
Dtch.  Hygiëne is goed voor de gezondheid.
Czch.  Hygiena je dobrá pro zdraví.
Hgn.   A higiénia egészségre jó.
Grk.    Η υγιεινή είναι καλή για την υγεία.
             I ygieiní eínai kalí gia tin ygeía.
Trk.     Hijyen sağlık için iyidir.
Rsn.    Гигиена полезна для здоровья.
             Gigiyena polezna dlya zdorov'ya.

Hygiene is good for health.
It is the basis for the enjoyment of wealth.

----------------------

Psalm 92


Psalm 92 is dedicated to the Shabbat or Rest. It is recited at least twice on the day of rest.

It is included in the introduction (Pesukei Dezimra) to the Jewish morning service (Shacharit). The community offers praise as a single supplicant prior to hearing the Shema or the declaration that God is one.

A selection from the Torah is read. Requests for divine assistance are made in last part of the service (the Amidah).

Psalm 92 is the psalm for the day on Shabbat.

The psalm was first spoken by Adam according to the Midrash or the textual interpretation of the Judaic scripture.

Man was created on Friday. He sang his praise at the onset of the Shabbat.

It is not a psalm that speaks about Rest. It was said on the day to celebrate rest from work during the week. This was the first day of existence. Marvel was expressed at the work of the Creator.

The sabbath is a day for reflection on the revelation of the divine will.

Psalm 92 was set to music by Franz Schubert for Salomon Sulzer (D 953).

The Requiem Ebraico (Hebrew Requiem) was composed in 1945 by the Austrian-American composer Eric Zeisl. The psalm was set to music in dedication to the memory of his father.

wiki Psalm 92
wiki Shabbat

-------------------

The sabbath is a day to celebrate rest
and to revere natural law for what is best.

Divine energy shows mercy with grace
as we work to live for goodness in time and space.

==============
------------------

Approach Glory


Exodus is the second book of the Torah. It described the birth of the Jewish people, their enslavement in Egypt, their miraculous exodus, the climatic event at Mount Sinai and the construction of the sanctuary for the wilderness.

It is known as Sefer Shemot (Book of Names) in Hebrew. It opens with the verse, "These are the names of the children of Israel..."

It opened with the names of the sons of Israel who settled in Egypt under the protection of their brother Joseph.

The book consists of two genres mainly. There are the narrative history and laws. It was written about the time period starting from 1450-1410 BCE.

The story began more than four hundred years after Joseph, his brothers and the Pharaoh he once served had died. The new leadership in Egypt felt threatened by Jacob’s descendants. They had increased in size.

The new Pharaoh embarked on a campaign to subdue the Israelites. He forced them into slavery and eventually decreed that all Hebrew boys must be killed at birth in the Nile River.

Hebrew women resisted the decree. One woman opted to save her newborn son by setting him afloat on the river in a papyrus basket. Pharaoh’s daughter discovered the abandoned child and raised him after he had been nursed. She named him Moses. He had been 'drawn from' the reeds in the water of the river.

Chapters 1-7 introduced Moses and the Israelites in bondage in Egypt. Moses killed an Egyptian whom he had seen abusing a slave. He fled to the wilderness. God called him with a revelation through a burning bush to release His people from slavery in Egypt.

Moses obeyed and with his brother Aaron, confronted Pharaoh to let the Israelites go free, but Pharaoh ignored the warning.

Moses released 10 plagues of different sorts on the land of Egypt though the power of God in chapters 7-13. Water was turned to blood. Plagues of insects, boils and hail were released to harm the food supply and health for the people of the land.

The last plague resulted in the death of every first born son. This included the Pharaoh's son who would have inherited the kingdom of Egypt otherwise. The Israelites obeyed God, followed the ordinance of the Passover and were spared.

Chapters 14-18 described the Exodus or “Exit” from Egypt. Pharaoh allowed the Israelites to leave. Moses and his people escaped. They made it to the Red Sea. Pharaoh changed his mind and pursued them. His army was destroyed by the sea.

The Laws were presented through Moses to all the people at Mt. Sinai in chapters 19-24. The following selection describes the ascent of Moses to the glory of the Lord in the cloud on the mountain to receive the law.

Exodus 24:12-17

The LORD said to Moses, 'Come up to me on the mountain and wait there. I will give you the tablets of stone with the law and the commandment which I have written for their instruction.'

Moses set out with his assistant Joshua and went up into the mountain of God. He had said to the elders, 'Wait here for us until we come to you again. Aaron and Hur are with you. Whoever has a dispute may go to them.'

Moses went up and the cloud covered the mountain. The glory of the LORD settled on Mount Sinai. The cloud covered it for 6 days. He called to Moses out of the cloud on the 7th day.

The appearance of the glory of the LORD was like a devouring fire on the top of the mountain in the sight of the people of Israel.

---------------------

Moses set out with Joshua to receive the revelation to which he was called.
They left the elders with Aaron and Hur to resolve disputes that appalled.

They were drawn to commune with glory in the cloud on the mountain.
The prophet was devoured by the fire of revelation in which the law was grounded
to be counted.

================

Divine Power



The shorthand for the second epistle of the Apostle Peter is usually written as 2 Peter. The salutation to the letter identifies the author as Simon Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ (2 Peter 1:1).

2 Peter 3:1 alludes to itself as the second letter to the Christian community. The various Churches in Asia Minor are the audience for the epistle according to the introduction of the first letter. (1 Peter 1:1).

It was written prior to 68 CE when Nero had Peter executed.

The text criticized "false teachers" who distorted the authentic, apostolic tradition. Judgment was predicted for them.

The author explained that the Second Coming of Christ had not yet been brought. The Christians were called to pray and study scripture to help them to wait patiently for the parousia in order that more people will have the chance to reject evil and find salvation (3:3–9).

The first chapter of the letter stated that Christians were called by power to become participants in the divine nature. Faith was to be selected by election for goodness, knowledge, self-control, endurance, godliness and mutual affection for love.

2 Peter 1:16-21

We did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we had been eyewitnesses of his majesty.

He received honor and glory from God the Father when that voice was conveyed to him by the majestic glory that said, 'This is my Son, my beloved with whom I am well pleased.' We ourselves heard this voice come from heaven while we were with him on the holy mountain.

We have the prophetic message more fully confirmed. You will do well to be attentive to this as to a lamp shining in a dark place until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts.

First of all you must understand this. No prophecy of scripture is a matter of one's' own interpretation. No prophecy came by human will. Men or women were moved by the Holy Spirit who spoke from God.

---------------------

We did not follow cleverly devised myths
to perpetuate trysts or factional conflicts.

The power of Jesus as Christ was made known by eyewitnesses to his majesty.
He was the Son whom the Father had appointed to lift us out of tragedy.

We had heard his voice from heaven on the holy peak
when the prophetic message had been confirmed as the truth we seek.

The uncreated light was shone to shine
as a lamp for dark places to be divined
before the morning star aligns
with the divine heart in your mind's eye.

No prophecy of scripture is limited to individual interpretation.
The Holy Spirit who spoke from God inspires sovereignty for each nation. 

================

Faith


The lectionary reading for Sunday February 23d skipped from the sermon on the mount in chapters 5-7 to the transfiguration in chapter 17. Much had happened in the interim.

Jesus had worked miracles in chapters 8-9. He healed a leper, a paralytic, a hemorrhaging woman, a centurion’s servant and Peter’s mother-in-law. He calmed a storm, exorcized demons, gave eyesight to the blind and brought a dead girl back to life.

He had sent out his disciples to proclaim that gospel to the Gentiles in chapter 10.

His instruction was confronted in chapters 11-12 until he withdrew. He told parables about the kingdom in chapter 13.

He was rejected in his hometown of Nazareth. His friends and neighbors derided him. He continued to perform miracles, but the people become increasingly resistant with skepticism.

Jesus multiplied loaves and fish to feed thousands on very little food. He healed the sick and continued to preach the message of spiritual righteousness. He repeatedly found that his disciples lacked faith in him. When he walked across the water to them, they assumed he must have been a ghost.

Peter expressed faith when he testified that Jesus was the Christ, the son of the living God.

Jesus renamed Simon “Peter.” The Greek form was identical to the Greek word for “rock.” Jesus announced, “You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church” (16:18). He then laid out the rules for communal relations among Christians. He emphasized forgiveness, humility and obedience to his teachings.

The synoptic gospels (Matthew 17:1–8, Mark 9:2–8, Luke 9:28–36) described the transfiguration and the Second Epistle of Peter also referred to it (2 Peter 1:16–18).

Thomas Aquinas considered the transfiguration "the greatest miracle" in that it complemented baptism and showed the perfection of life in heaven. The transfiguration was one of the five major milestones in the gospel narrative about the life of Jesus. The others were the baptism, crucifixion, resurrection and ascension.

Matthew 17:1-9

Jesus took with him Peter, James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain by themselves 6 days later. He was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun. His clothes became dazzling white. There appeared to them Moses and Elijah talking with him.

Peter said to Jesus, 'Lord, it is good for us to be here. I will make 3 dwellings if you wish: one for you; one for Moses; and one for Elijah.'

A bright light overshadowed them while he was still speaking. A voice said from the cloud, 'This is my Son, the Beloved. I am well pleases with him. Listen to him!'

The disciples fell to the ground when they heard this. They were overcome with fear. Jesus came to them and said, 'Get up and do not be afraid.' They saw no one except Jesus alone when they looked up.

---------------------

Jesus was transfigured before Peter, James and John on the height.
His face shone like the sun. His clothes became a dazzling white.

Moses and Elijah appeared before them.
They handed Jesus the prophetic diadem.

Peter said he would build three shelters, one for each.
The Father intervened to say that with his Son he was pleased.

The disciples fell to the ground overcome with fear.
Jesus told them to be not afraid. The others had disappeared.

================

Philosophy



Karl Jaspers
b. 2.23.1883 Oldenburg, German Empire
d. 2.26.1969 Basel, Switzerland

Karl Theodor Jaspers was a German-Swiss psychiatrist who had a strong influence on modern theology, psychiatry and philosophy.

He had been trained in psychiatry. He turned to philosophical inquiry after  he had started his practice as a psychiatrist. He came to exercise considerable influence on epistemology, the philosophy of religion and political theory.

He reconstructed Kantian transcendentalism with his reliance on the subjective-experiential transformation. He advocated for a doctrine of particular experience and spontaneous freedom that emphasized the constitutive importance of lived existence for authentic knowledge.

He was often viewed as a major exponent of existentialism in Germany, though he did not accept the label. He emerged as a powerful spokesperson for moral-democratic education and reorientation in the Federal Republic of Germany after the collapse of the National Socialist regime.

While his socialism wasn't as aggressive or militaristic as that of the Nazi party, he helped to institute what has come to be called democratic socialism.

The difficulty with any form of socialism is that it is anti-capitalist. Capitalism is still blamed for the problems in society even when the government control of private enterprise is the deterrent to the production of a service for the public.

The explicit emphasis on a socialist economy has been shifted to populist media expression for the sake of government control of the economy. National government in the US was charged with the self-limitation of political control in order to allow trade with the development of productive organization in the private sector of society.

When politicians campaign for election in a way that anticipates their role in winning to make the government a larger employer or the answer to the problems created by capitalism, they mean that they want the public to believe that they are working for national security when they are working to increase their wealth and prestige as officials.

Knowledge of what Jaspers had to say as a philosopher gives the reader some perspective on how and why disagreement with his position is beneficial.

It is also good to know something about where he was born and what the social situation was like in order to understand how he came to advocate for that which he did. The political climate informs the biographical genesis of the individual.

Oldenburg, German Empire (1833)

The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation was a multi-ethnic complex of territories in Western and Central Europe that developed during the Early Middle Ages and continued until its dissolution in 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars.

A prospective Emperor had first to be elected King of the Romans. German kings had been elected since the 9th century.

They were chosen by the leaders of the five most important tribes at that point. The Salian Franks of Lorraine, Ripuarian Franks of Franconia, Saxons, Bavarians and Swabians were the tribes involved in the election.

The main dukes and bishops of the kingdom elected the King of the Romans in the Holy Roman Empire. It was a development of the Patrician system.

Lutheranism was officially recognized in the Peace of Augsburg of 1555. Calvinism attained recognition in the Peace of Westphalia of 1648. Those two constituted the only officially recognized Protestant denominations.

Various other Protestant confessions such as Anabaptism, Arminianism, etc. coexisted illegally within the Empire. Anabaptism was organized in a variety of denominations. Mennonites, Schwarzenau Brethren, Hutterites, the Amish and multiple other groups were included.

The official religion of a territory was determined by the principle cujus regio, ejus religio following the Peace of Augsburg. The ruler's religion determined that of his subjects.

The Peace of Westphalia abrogated that principle by stipulating that the official religion of a territory was to be what it had been on 1 January 1624. This was considered to have been a "normal year". The conversion of a ruler to another faith did not legally require the conversion of his subjects.

The concept of Germany as a distinct region in central Europe can be traced to the Roman commander Julius Caesar. He had referred to the unconquered area east of the Rhine as Germania.

This distinguished it from Gaul (France) which he had conquered.

The victory of the Germanic tribes in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (9 CE) prevented annexation by the Roman Empire. The Roman provinces of Germania Superior and Germania Inferior were established along the Rhine.

The Franks had conquered the other West Germanic tribes following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire. When the Frankish Empire was divided among Charles the Great's heirs in 843, the eastern part became East Francia. Otto I became the first Holy Roman Emperor in 962.

Feudalism became a thing of the past after the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars that lasted from 1803-1815. Liberalism and nationalism clashed within the reaction.

The Industrial Revolution modernized the German economy. This led to the rapid growth of cities and the emergence of the socialist movement in Germany. Prussia grew in power with its capital in Berlin.

Danish kings were also counts of Oldenburg in the 17th century. The town was struck by a disastrous plague epidemic and, shortly after, a fire destroyed the buildings in 1667.

The Danes had little interest in the condition of the town and it lost most of its former importance. Danish rule ended in 1773. Only then were the destroyed buildings in the city rebuilt in a neoclassicist style.

The city is situated at the Rivers Hunte and Haaren in the northwestern region between the cities of Bremen in the east and Groningen (Netherlands) in the west. It was also known as Le Vieux-Bourg during the French annexation (1811-1813) in the wake of the Napoleonic Wars. 

The city is the place of origin of the House of Oldenburg. The House of Oldenburg is a European dynasty of North German origin. It is one of Europe's most influential royal houses, with branches that rule or have ruled in Denmark, Iceland, Greece, Norway, Russia, Sweden, Schleswig, Holstein and Oldenburg.

The current Queen of Denmark, King of Norway, the former King of Greece, the consort of the monarch of the United Kingdom, as well as the first fourteen persons in the line of succession to the British throne are all patrilineal members of the Glücksburg branch of this house.

The Prussians were engaged in a significant competition with the Austrians for the control of Germany during the 19th century.

Karl Jaspers

Karl Theodor Jaspers was born on 23 February 1883 in the North German town of Oldenburg near the North Sea. His ancestors had lived there for generations.

He was the son of a banker and a representative of the parliament, Carl Wilhelm Jaspers (1850–1940) and Henriette Tantzen (1862–1941), who also came from a family that was involved in local parliament.

Jaspers’s family was strongly influenced by the political culture of North German liberalism. He often referred to the climate of early liberal democratic thought as a formative aspect for his education.

His thought was also formed by the spirit of North German Protestantism although he claimed not to have been influenced by any specifically ecclesiastical faith. His philosophical outlook can in many respects be placed in the religiously inflected tradition of Kant and Kierkegaard.

He was a pupil at the Altes Gymnasium in Oldenburg. He suffered from chronic bronchiectasis from his early childhood.

The condition impaired his physical capabilities. Awareness of his physical disabilities shaped his routine throughout his adult life and formed his sensitivity to psychological issues including human suffering.

He attributed his ability to conduct a normative routine and to devote his life to his creative work to his strict discipline regarding his health.

He married Gertrud Mayer (1879–1974) in 1910. She came from a pious German-Jewish merchant family.

She was the sister of his close friends Gustav Mayer and the philosopher Ernest Mayer. She had been working as an assistant in the sanatorium of the neurologist and psychiatrist Oskar Kohnstamms (1871–1917) at the time of their marriage.

She was able to stay in Germany during the Nazi period due to her marriage.

Jaspers earned his medical doctorate from University of Heidelberg medical school in 1908 and began work at a psychiatric hospital in Heidelberg under Franz Nissl.

Jaspers became dissatisfied with the way the medical community of the time approached the study of mental illness. He gave himself the task of improving the psychiatric approach.

His dissatisfaction with the popular understanding of mental illness led him to question both the diagnostic criteria and the methods of clinical psychiatry.

He published a paper in 1910 in which he addressed the problem of whether paranoia was an aspect of personality or the result of biological changes.

His article introduced a rather unusual method of study at least according to the norms then prevalent, but it did not broach new ideas.

Jaspers studied patients in detail. He gave biographical information about the patients as well as notes on how the patients themselves felt about their symptoms like Freud. This has become known as the biographical method. It is a standard in psychiatric and psychotherapeutic practice.

The difficulty was that the method used disagreement with democratic socialism as the diagnostic criteria for mental illness.

He habilitated at the philosophical faculty of the Heidelberg University in 1913 and gained a post as a psychology teacher there in 1914.

The post later became a permanent philosophical one. He never returned to clinical practice. He was a close friend of the Weber family during this time. Max Weber had also held a professorship at Heidelberg.

Jaspers turned from psychology to philosophy at the age of 38 in 1921. He expanded on themes he had developed in his psychiatric works. He became a leading philosopher in Germany and Europe.

Commentators associate Jaspers with the philosophy of existentialism. He draws largely upon the existentialist roots of Nietzsche and Kierkegaard. The theme of individual freedom permeates his work as well.

He gave his view of the history of philosophy in Philosophy (3 vols, 1932). He argued that as we question reality, we confront borders that an empirical (or scientific) method simply cannot transcend with modern science or empiricism.

The individual faces a choice at this point. He or she can take a leap of faith toward what Jaspers calls Transcendence. Individuals confront limitless freedom which Jaspers calls Existenz.

The term "Dasein" meant existence in its most minimal sense for him. The realm of objectivity and science existed in contrast to authentic existence according to Jaspers. Heidegger had a closer relation to the Nazi ideology.

Jaspers was considered to have a "Jewish taint" (jüdische Versippung) due to his Jewish wife after the Nazi seizure of power in 1933. He was forced to retire from teaching in 1937. He fell under a publication ban as well in 1938.

Many of his long-time friends stood by him. This enabled him to continue his studies and research without being totally isolated. He and his wife were under constant threat of removal to a concentration camp until 30 March 1945 when Heidelberg was liberated by American troops.
Jaspers moved to the University of Basel in Switzerland in 1948.

He held Kierkegaard and Nietzsche to be two of the most important figures in post-Kantian philosophy. He wrote a compilation called The Great Philosophers (Die großen Philosophen). It was published in 1955.

He felt that the presentation of Kierkegaard had to be approached with some trepidation. He was the most important philosopher prior to Nietzsche in the post-Kantian age. An epoch had reached its conclusion with Goethe and Hegel.

The prevalence of the positivistic, natural-scientific way of thought had reached a conclusion. It could not really be considered to be a philosophy. This was a dismissal for the empirical view as well.

Jaspers identified with the liberal political philosophy of Max Weber, but he rejected the nationalism of the liberal view. He valued humanism and cosmopolitanism.

This philosophy was influenced by Immanuel Kant in the advocacy for an international federation of states with shared constitutions, laws and international courts.

While he strongly expressed opposition to totalitarian despotism, his liberal view was open to continual expansion by confederated agreement. This with socialist economic theory actually made the position totalitarian.

He warned about the increasing tendency towards technocracy or a regime that regards humans as mere instruments of science or of ideological goals, but this was inconsistent with socialism as well.

He was skeptical of majoritarian democracy with J.S. Mill. He supported a form of governance that guaranteed individual freedom and limited government in terms of the face for their proposal. The anti-majority position however ruled out whatever was right about the majority representation for fear of what was wrong.

He shared Weber's belief that democracy needed to be guided by an intellectual elite. This only allowed for the revival of populism under the aegis of 'democracy.'

He was awarded the honorary citizenship of the city of Oldenburg in recognition of his outstanding scientific achievements and services to the occidental culture in 1963.

He remained prominent in the philosophical community and became a naturalized citizen of Switzerland. He lived in Basel until his death on his wife's 90th birthday in 1969.

Jaspers had presented a position that was comparable to that of Spanish and French liberals.

Capitalism was defined as the cause of social inequality and injustice. Socialism did not recognize the value of competition or opposition.

The government was the major alternative to the great rebellion by the proletariat. Government control was established as the authority that had to punish the successful in order to correct errors incurred in political support for private sector organization.

Socialism has criticized capitalism as outdated, but Marx missed the main implication of the economic theory proposed by Adam Smith. The chief principle for the organization of nations was wealth, but this was with respect for national sovereignty in political organization.

Alliance for mutual benefit in trade and defense was acceptable in international relations according to the theory, Community organization for charity was an implicit part of the British political system.

This charitable organization was often coopted by Calvinist communities as a form of appeasement for the anti-monarchical political position. This has become the standard mode of community organization for charity in the US as well.

The greatest error of the socialist theory is that socialist control over 'capitalist' business organization has blamed their error on capitalism.

This has become the giant strawman argument that has allowed socialism to grow in influence in political election. The liberal media has been used to increase the resultant influence on social relations.

Socialism is dependent on the rejection of the right for capitalism or the political represenation for the same to exist. Existentialism as a philosophy was a major crutch in an economic theory that essentially has made populist demand the organizational principle for government with the system of election.

This populism is that which threatens to turn international alliance or cooperation into a totalitarian operation. Capitalism stands as the better economic mode for organization since the arguments presented by socialist theorists have proven to be weak or false. 

Karl Jaspers
S. 卡尔·贾斯珀斯
T. 卡爾·賈斯珀斯

卡 Ka   card                                卡  ka       card                 Ka  か-    カ-           Kal  칼  knife       
尔  er   er                                     爾  ji         you                 ru   る       ル           Jae   재  ashes     
贾  Jia  ja                                     賈  ko       buy                Ja    じゃ   ジャ       seu   스  s           
斯  si    this                                  斯  shi      this                 su   す       ス           peo   퍼  fur         
珀  po  amber                              珀  haku   amber             pa   ぱ-   パ-                                             
斯  si    this                                  斯  shi      this                                                           
 
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Facts alone don't determine value for existence.
Meaning is drawn by investigation with persistence.

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The Choice of Valentines
Thomas Nashe
Text

Dedication to the Earl of Southampton
Henry Wriothesley

Pardon me the sweet flower of matchless poetry
for the darkest hue the red rose could lay bare.
Although my Muse divorced me from deeper care
she presents you with this licentious poesy.

Don't blame the verse for terse unchastity
in the painting of the things that are hidden.
Others act in what I in speech have bidden
only induced with varied reach to apogee.

Complaints and praises every one can fight
to passion out their Pangu in stately rhyme
but of love's pleasure none did ever write
that have succeeded in these latter times.

Accept, Dear Lord, this gentle tune
and better lines before long will honor you.

-----------------

Pangu - the Creator in Chinese myth

It was the merry month of February
when young men in their happy revery
rose early in the morning before the break of day
to seek their valentines so trim and gay.

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I the poor pilgrim went to my lady's shrine
to see if she would be my valentine.
To my woe, alass, she was not to be found
for she was shifted to an upper ground.

Good Justice Dagger-handle with the crab-tree face
with bills and statutes had scared her from the place.
Now she was compelled for sanctuary
to fly to a house of vhen-ree for venery.

There went I to make bold to inquire
if they had hackneys there to hire
and what they craved by order of their trade
to let one ride a journey on a jade.

Out stepped a three chinned dame
that used to take young wenches to tame
and asked me if I meant as I professed
or only asked a question but in jest.

(Nash was bawdy.)

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Populism is not democracy.



When the problem is defined as 'all the power' to the few or the many, other deviant variants are left intact.

Dictate by the party that is dedicated to taking over by the imposition of punitive measures for disagreement is a current national issue.

Populism is not political rule by one, the few or the many. The leader is designated to state the dictate for the party.


Stories of atrocity were released to the public to deter the threat of crime, terror, rebellion, revolution or war. The system of election was supposed to alleviate these threats, but the competition to win the election was influenced by the stories of the gods in polytheistic culture, then the stories of God's punishment in monotheism.

The spoils system in victory was used to punish the opposition. The judicial system was adversely influenced by voting groups.

The right of the accused "individual" to due process in law is overridden so individual rights could be used by the party for a witchhunt against opposition in the general public. Anarchy was used as a supportive subtext to justify the party line for 'taking over.'

Demagogues lead this form of populism.
Video: Athenian Populism

Demagogic populists have an anti-professional trend. They don't want to entertain professional disagreement so they offer political positions to those who agree with the 'movement.

Locke was particularly dangerous as a populist insofar as he had worked as a doctor. He used the presumption of normality to promote the consensus of the Puritan dictate in the Whig party over the government of England. 

The Whigs used selective agreement with the constitutional form of monarchy that Hobbes had used in his argument against the "Leviathan" of populist democracy.

Mill disagreed with the major tenets of the utilitarian philosophy that had been developed by Bentham in order to make individual rights the hedge against unity of agreement in the majority of the population.

His argument was essentially against anything from the majority. He wanted people to believe that human nature was so subject to corruption that there was virtually nothing that government could use to represent the majority that wouldn't offend some individual.

Bentham's argument had helped to outlaw slavery. It also gained recognition for the right to vote for women and people of color.

The anti-majority position has been used to promote the witchhunts against successful Americans for the benefit of those who support populism instead of democracy.