Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wisdom. Show all posts

Sunday, February 9, 2020

Test

2.16.20


Elizabeth Olsen 

Test
Thought
测试思想 
Cèshì sīxiǎng
テスト思考 
Tesuto shikō
ps94
Test thought

Creator of the forces of the universe
You have organized the elements against curse
to affirm the units that concur with what's incurred
with that which is benign in design as deserved
when by the management of labor it is earned
as a value for others discerned.

Help us to live in Your image
to perceive the wonders of Your visage.

Bless us with growth in Your likeness
for the discovery of that which is righteous.

Rise to shine for judgement with reason
to grant just deserts for good decisions in due season.

The third week for the second month is here.
Help us with resolutions made for the new year.

Help to correct errors incurred in opposition
to develop the resolution for a productive position.

When their charge of corruption was turned back on them
they told a story of greater corruption as though it were a diadem.

Their tale of great destruction
was followed by the threat of more of that induction.

They said, "The God of Jacob took no notice"
when it was against his votive.

Did you form a question in response to a crisis?
Submit it to prayer to see if align an answer to this.

Does the One who shaped the ear
not listen to hear?

Does he who formed the eye
not see what is or is not a lie?

Will he who admonishes the nations
not punish those of criminal or terrorist station?

Organize your thought to form a test for truth.
A good theory of nature will make you a sleuth.

Put your question in the form of a statement.
Test for credibility among those who will rate it.

Does he who teaches with the divine word
have no knowledge of how the human in nature is cured?

Human thought is tested for theory
that will bear weight as a mode of inquiry.

Happy are those who receive instruction from the Word.
The mystery of law in nature doesn't seem to be absurd.

They can find rest in the day of crisis.
They will make decisions that are incisive
to avoid policy that reaches for the heights of the divisive.

The goodness of the descendants
is a tower for ethical amendment.

The Maker will not forsake the promise.
He will not abandon those who are honest
in making a profit.

The true of heart will stand for justice
in judgment that doesn't bust us. 

Who had the military trained for defense?
Who organized perspective for the perception of sense?

I would have dwelt in the land of silence
had I not spoken against the threat of violence.

As often as my foot had slipped
I found myself with natural balance equipped. 

When many cares fill my mind
the consolation of relaxation I seek to find.

Is greater corruption the platform for the populist position?
Haven't they used  corruption as the tomb for the vision
of their mission?

Existential facts alone won't determine worth for youth.
Thought in theory can form tests of value for truth.


Good judgment 
provides defense 
against bad sense.

Good judgment won't condemn the innocent to death.
The Holy Spirit provides the breath for rest 
in experience.

The Father is the source of my strength.
The Son is the rock for truth at length.

Wickedness 
produces sickness 
as consequence.

Truth destroys falsehood in conception.
Without malice it exposes deception.
The Christ of Jesus gives perspective in perception. 

We were like infants to Christ. 
You were taught to live as victims to the poltergeist.

You were  immature with respect for the Spirit.
You so feared the One that you refused to draw near it.

Was there not quarrelling due to jealousy among you?
Were you not divided by the causes that you knew?

One planted. Another watered for growth in the field. 
Your community was cultivated for the spiritual yield.

Murder is a capital crime.
Punishment for it is defined for the rest of time.

A capital offense is not the only concern for law.
Were that the case any other degree would not be flaw.

Avoid causing offense as much as possible
so the definition of you as the cause stands as improbable.

Anger is not wrong in itself,
but physical harm leaves a welt.

Hatred of sin is only honorable
when anger is managed for the functionally operable.

The act of expiation with a gift at the altar
needs to reform the will that causes behavior to faulter.

 A priest can only receive the gift and pray for the reception.
It is not a promise to show indulgence to honor deception.

Each worked together for our beneficial yield
to build the temple for the word that we wield.

You can keep the commandments of the law if you choose.
When you don't choose to act faithfully you choose to lose.

Fire and water have been placed before you.
Stretch out your hand to one of the two.

Life and death are set before each person.
Whichever is chosen will make better or worsen.

Wisdom from the Source is great.
He is mighty in power for the weight of the state.

His eyes are on those who fear him.
He knows the actions that will draw near his win.

He has not commanded anyone to be wicked. 
No one was given permission to thicken sin for the afflicted.

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

94 Deus ultionum
Light avenge

1 O Lord God of vengeance,
O God of vengeance, show yourself.
2 Rise up, O Judge of the world;
give the arrogant their just deserts.
3 How long shall the wicked, O Lord,
how long shall the wicked triumph?
4 They bluster in their insolence;
all evildoers are full of boasting.
5 They crush your people, O Lord,
and afflict your chosen nation.
6 They murder the widow and the stranger
and put the orphans to death.
7 Yet they say, "The Lord does not see,
the God of Jacob takes no notice."
8 Consider well, you dullards among the people;
when will you fools understand?
9 He that planted the ear, does he not hear?
he that formed the eye, does he not see?
10 He who admonishes the nations, will he not punish?
he who teaches all the world, has he no knowledge?
11 The Lord knows our human thoughts;
how like a puff of wind they are.
12 Happy are they whom you instruct, O Lord!
whom you teach out of your law;
13 To give them rest in evil days,
until a pit is dug for the wicked.
14 For the Lord will not abandon his people,
nor will he forsake his own.
15 For judgment will again be just,
and all the true of heart will follow it.
16 Who rose up for me against the wicked?
who took my part against the evildoers?
17 If the Lord had not come to my help,
I should soon have dwelt in the land of silence.
18 As often as I said, "My foot has slipped,"
your love, O Lord, upheld me.
19 When many cares fill my mind,
your consolations cheer my soul.
20 Can a corrupt tribunal have any part with you,
one which frames evil into law?
21 They conspire against the life of the just
and condemn the innocent to death.
22 But the Lord has become my stronghold,
and my God the rock of my trust.
23 He will turn their wickedness back upon them
and destroy them in their own malice;
the Lord our God will destroy them.

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================
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ps115
1 Not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to your name give glory,
    for the sake of your steadfast love and your faithfulness.
2 Why should the nations say,
    “Where is their God?”
3 Our God is in the heavens;
    he does whatever he pleases.
4 Their idols are silver and gold,
    the work of human hands.
5 They have mouths, but do not speak;
    eyes, but do not see.
6 They have ears, but do not hear;
    noses, but do not smell.
7 They have hands, but do not feel;
    feet, but do not walk;
    they make no sound in their throats.
8 Those who make them are like them;
    so are all who trust in them.
9 O Israel, trust in the Lord!
    He is their help and their shield.
10 O house of Aaron, trust in the Lord!
    He is their help and their shield.
11 You who fear the Lord, trust in the Lord!
    He is their help and their shield.
12 The Lord has been mindful of us; he will bless us;
    he will bless the house of Israel;
    he will bless the house of Aaron;
13 he will bless those who fear the Lord,
    both small and great.
14 May the Lord give you increase,
    both you and your children.
15 May you be blessed by the Lord,
    who made heaven and earth.
16 The heavens are the Lord’s heavens,
    but the earth he has given to human beings.
17 The dead do not praise the Lord,
    nor do any that go down into silence.
18 But we will bless the Lord
    from this time on and forevermore.
Praise the Lord!

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

Psalm 94

Consolation



The first verse for psalm 94 in the New Revised Standard Version says:

O Lord, you God of vengeance,
    you God of vengeance, shine forth!

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

The attribution of vengeance to deity or populism as an agency of natural selection is implied by the expression.

The first verse for the same selection in the King James Version reads:

O Lord God, to whom vengeance belongeth;
O God, to whom vengeance belongeth, shew thyself.

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

Vengeance is attributed to deity or royalty by the translation.

The complications involved in this can be summarized. King James was from the House of Stuart in Scotland. He inherited the Acts of Royal Supremacy. One included Ireland.

Scotland and England had yet to be united in Great Britain. That wouldn't happen until the reign of Queen Anne in the early 18th century. Ireland had yet to be united with England and Scotland in the United Kingdom.

John Locke would open the door to the local institution of liberal power with his argument to civil government, but his argument contained partiality for Puritans as the non-professional representation of the Whig party. The implication was that Puritans could take the law into their own hands, but Anglicans and others could not.

The European struggle for imperial power was led by the King of Spain and the Pope. Spain had risen to the task of driving the Muslims out of their European territory, but they had agreed to host the Inquisition, indulgences for Spanish Catholicism and slavery in their colonization.

The attritubtion of vengeance to deity in this context was a request to reduce vigilante justice and the threat of rebellion to institute a different monarch for the throne of national sovereignty.

Administration for justice was royal and legislatively administrative. Magistrates had to answer disputes in the context of different loyalties. While the question of whether the complaint came from a Protestant or a Catholic had sectarian overtones even the higher loyaty according the sovereignty of the state was to the security of the land.

The Latin vulgate attributes the psalm to David. The attribution makes it royal or imperial. Royalty or the leadership of the Republic were allowed to report acts of vengeance as agents of divine justice in the context of the Christianity in Europe.

The Spanish had a claim to the defense of Europe insofar as the kingdom had been invaded by Muslims from North Africa. The Pope was concerned with the defense of Vatican city in terms of the new threat that Islam presented to Italy.

The polytheists had impugned papal authority until the office organized the college of cardinals and started to bless tribal chiefs as kings. A king of kings was the imperial authority based on the biblical record.

Charlemagne was the first polytheist king to convert to Christianity with the papal blessing. He became the king of kings for Europe implicitly by virtue of being first. 

Vengeance is defined as punishment inflicted for a wrong. Retribution for damage caused by the wrong has monetary or physical dimensions in the form of reparation for correction.

The spoils of war or spoils gained by indulgences created problems with respect for liability in overcorrection. National sovereignty evolved as the adminstrative standard for justice in the system of election that was developed with respect for opposing loyalties.

The US Constitution was one of the first political expressions for constitutional law in the world. Cicero had spoken of a constitution written on the hearts of Romans. There was a polytheistic system of festivals that helped households to adjust to adversity that was adapted by Christian monotheism.

The competiton between the Protestant and Roman Catholic sects contributed to the provision for freedom of religion in the US. The first Chief Justice for the US, John Jay, proposed that Christianity was for the security of national sovereignty. It wasn't as though he was against Roman Catholics. He was for Christians that were for national security.

The fledgling nation turned to alliance with Great Britain to help with the issue of establishing a navy to protect trade routes and an army for land based operations. Explicit legislation for the standing military has yet to be enacted. 

The Smith–Mundt Act of 1948 is the basic legislative authorization for propaganda activities conducted by the U.S. Department of State. This was implicitly for the maintenance of armed forces in the world after the second world war. There is difficulty with this implication.

Illegal immigration had been one problem that was left poorly defined. The war on terror however offered an opportunity to defend a professionally trained fighting force as a deterrant to terrorism foreign or domestic.

While illegal immigration stands as a criminal threat to the domestic population, it hasn't been defined as terrorist problem by the US State Department as yet.   

The official title for Smith-Mundt was the US Information and Educational Exchange Act. The long title declared that the purpose for the act was to promote the better understanding of the United States among the peoples of the world and to strengthen cooperative international relations.

The Act was modernized in 2012 with  the Foreign Relations Authorization Act of 1987 in the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2013. A leading implication of this legislation is that a professionally trained fighting force is a deterrent to terrorism.

This was the legislature's effort to legitimize propaganda or the 'official story' as told by the US State Department.

Interpretation becomes an act in avoiding national level deception. There is the one distinct sense that the War Power article for Congress in the Constitution and the role of the President as the Commander in Chief have the task to justify the standing military as a representative force for national security. 

The NDAA has become the legislative tool that has ascribed authority for telling a story to justify military action as the basis for having a military force.

Psalm 94 is not used in the regular Christian liturgy. This was taken from the reading for Charles Todd Quintard, a doctor who converted to the chaplaincy for the South during the Civil War.

The concept of vengeance as an agency for correction has to be qualifed with respect for physical damage to the health of the body in the medical profession. An 'eye for an eye' was a metaphorical allusion to restitution at best.

Damage to someone's private property is another element of the same issue, but claims to restitution are worked through the civil court system.

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

Choice


The Wisdom of Sirach is also known as the Book of Ecclesiasticus or Ben Sira.
It  is a work of ethical teachings from approximately 200 to 175 BCE. It was written by the Jewish scribe Ben Sira of Jerusalem with inspiration from his father, Joshua.

The author was a Hellenistic Jewish scribe, sage and allegorist from Seleucid-controlled Jerusalem of the Second Temple period. The work was written in Hebrew.

The Seleucid Empire was established following the division of the Macedonian Empire that had been vastly expanded by Alexander the Great (d.323).

Seleucus I Nicator received Babylonia (321 BC) and from there expanded his dominions to include much of Alexander's near-eastern territories. The Empire included central Anatolia, Persia, the Levant, Mesopotamia and what is now Kuwait and Afghanistan with parts of Pakistan and Turkmenistan at the height of its power.

The Seleucid Empire became a major center of Hellenistic culture. It maintained the preeminence of Hellenist customs where a Greek political elite dominated, mostly in the urban areas. The Greek population of the cities who formed the dominant elite were reinforced by immigration from Greece.

The Macedonians most likely operated differently from the Athenians or Spartans. They were probably 'federal' in the sense that the leadership was allowed to chose something in between the democratically artistic culture of Athens and the militarily economic order of Sparta. Both cultures entertained the instruction of youth in gymnasiums.

Antiochus III  ruled over the region of Syria and large parts of the rest of western Asia towards the end of the 3rd century BCE. He rose to the throne at the age of eighteen in 222 BCE. His early campaigns against the Ptolemaic Kingdom were unsuccessful, but in the following years Antiochus gained several military victories and substantially expanded the empire's territory.

The Selucid king wrested Palestine away from Ptolemaic control in 198 BCE.

Antiochus declared himself the champion of Greek freedom against Roman domination. He waged a four-year war against the Roman Republic beginning in mainland Greece in the autumn of 192 BCE.

His force was decisively defeated at the Battle of Magnesia on the plains of Lydia in Asia Minor. He died 3 years later on a campaign in the east.

The Second Temple was originally a rather modest structure constructed by a number of Jewish exile groups returning to the Levant from Babylon under the Achaemenid-appointed governor Zerubbabel.

The structure was the religious identification of Jerusalem as the capital for Judea as a province in the Persian empire.

Language was the most prominent difference between the eastern and western forms of empire as different gods were often renamed to tell the story about their place in the calendar in the host language. Astrology told the story of the gods with respect for the implication of the science of astronomy as it related to the expression of time in the calendar. 

The clash between eastern and western polytheistic cultures was summarized as the 'fear of God' in the wisdom of Sirach. The author was looking to move Judaic culture forward in a transcendent view of polytheistic structures. The first two chapters share reflections on wisdom and the fear of God to provide the theological framework for the integration of 10 different themes.

He wrote about Simon the High Priest (reigned 219-196 BCE) in the past tense. He didn't mention anything about the insurrection of the high priesthood orchestrated by Jason, the youngest son of Simon.

This was a time of prosperity in Jerusalem. The world was changing. There were Jews who supported more Hellenization by the adoption of the Greek way of life insofar as it would bring more opportunities for trade and political interaction.

Simon was succeeded by his son, Onias, who reigned from 196-175 BCE. Onias was renowned for being observant of the Torah. Obedience to it was the priority of Jewish life.

When Antiochus IV took the throne in 175 BCE, he immediately replaced Onias with his brother, Jason. He had promised to promote more Hellenization. Jason had obtained his position by offering Antiochus a high price for the priesthood.

This was different from the normal course of succession. The difference was significant in that it increased the fissure among those Jews who believed in the sanctity of succession and those who wanted a more Hellenized city.

Ben Sira wrote his book of wisdom to encouage the Jewish youth to retain the study of the Torah in the face of the pressure to adopt Greek customs.

He was concerned with guiding the youth in how to make their way in the world with a happy and honorable life both domestically and professionally. He maintained that this could only happen if one adhered to the covenant with the God of Israel.

The stories of the gods in polytheism were characterized by violence in conflict and the destruction of opposition to control the government for the land. The threat of death was used as a tool to threaten compliance from the general population.

Sirach 14:20-15:10 expressed concern with the pursuit of wisdom and the blessings that accrue to those do so. The end of this section emphasized that wisdom is withheld from sinners (15:7-9). 

The search for wisdom or the concession to sin involve free will, so Sirach began to focus on this in part 2 (Sir 15:11-20). This section began by rejecting the idea that sin was caused by the Creator. It emphasized the power to choose good rather than evil.

The commandments in the Torah were presented as the way to life by contrast to the threat of death. 

Sirach 15:15-20

You can keep the commandments if you choose
to act faithfully as a matter of your own choice.

He has placed before you fire and water.
Stretch out your hand for whichever.

Life and death are before each person.
Whichever is chosen will be given.

The wisdom of the Lord is great.
He is mighty in power and sees everything.

His eyes are on those who fear him.
He knows every human action.

He has not commanded anyone to be wicked.
He has not given anyone permission to sin.

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

You can keep the commandments of the law if you choose.
When you don't choose to act faithfully you choose to lose.

Fire and water have been placed before you.
Stretch out your hand to one of the two.

Life and death are set before each person.
Whichever is chosen will make better or worsen.

Wisdom from the Source is great.
He is mighty in power for the weight of the state.

His eyes are on those who fear him.
He knows the actions that will draw near his win.

He has not commanded anyone to be wicked.
No one was given permission to thicken sin for the afflicted.

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

The book of Sirach is part of what is considered the Apocrypha/Deuterocanonical scripture and appears in the Old Testament of Catholic Bible.

Sirach and other books of the Apocrypha do not appear in Protestant Bibles except in Anglican, Episcopalian and Lutheran bibles. Apocrypha means “hidden” and deuterocanonical means “second-listed.”

Books of the Apocrypha were generally written in the intertestimental period. This period was roughly 400 years between the composition of the books in the Old and New Testaments.

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

Cultivating the Field of God


Paul addressed the challenge to his apostleship in the salutation to the letter. He had received his authority by a revelation from Christ.

His agreement with the apostolic community was qualified by his call to evangelize for the gospel by the message of the cross to the Gentiles.

The emphasis of this letter differs from that offered to the expostion against circumcison as a requirement in Galatians. He speaks against the excess of indulgence to the impulse to sin as presented in the stories about the gods in polytheistic culture. 

He offered a thanksgiving after the salutation that was typical of Hellenistic letters, but he thanked the one God for good health, a safe journey and deliverance from danger in his petition for good fortune.

Charismata (personal giftedness) and gnosis (knowledge) were introduced as topics for development later in the letter.

The second chapter explains division based on agreement with the sinfulness of human nature as the cause for error.

The third chapter started with a discription of the causes of divisions and includes the theological remedy for the division.

The temple to Aprhodite on the Acrocorinth was characterized by temple prostitution. Temple prostitution was defined as a form for fornication as a means to promote division from communion with the one God.

The initial argument against the causes for division was offered to suggest that unity was to be found in the community as the temple for the Spirit of God. The author compares the community of faith to a field, then a structure to prepare them for identification as the temple.

1 Corinthians 3:1-9

I could not speak to you as spiritual people brothers and sisters, but rather as people of the flesh who are infants in Christ. I fed you with milk, not solid food. You were not ready for anything solid. Even now you are still not ready. You are still of the flesh. Are you not immature as long as there is jealousy and quarrelling among you?

Are you not behaving with human inclinations? When one says, "I belong to Paul" and another, "I belong to Apollos" are you not merely human?

What is Apollos? What is Paul? We are servants through whom you came to believe as the Lord assigned to each. I planted. Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. Neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is as important as the God who gives the growth.

The one who plants and the one who waters have a common purpose. Each will receive wages according to the labor of each. We are God's servants working together. You are God's field, God's building.

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

We were like infants to Christ.
You were taught to live as victims to the poltergeist.

You were  immature with respect for the Spirit.
You so feared the One that you refused to draw near it.

Was there not quarrelling due to jealousy among you?
Were you not divided by the causes that you knew?

One planted. Another watered for growth in the field.
Your community was cultivated for the spiritual yield.

Each worked together for our beneficial yield
to build the temple for the word that we wield.

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

Gehenna

Jesus spoke to his disciples on the mountain about the commandments according to the gospel of Matthew. Much of the material is unique to Matthew. Rhetoric is used to warn against overconfidence in agreement.

The commandments warn against breaking the law. The author of the gospel is interested in deterring offense prior to the law being broken. The intent of the argument is justifiable in this sense. There are details in the expression however that are prone to error in the overstatement.

The argument is too concessionary to those who take offense at anything in order to coerce compliance from those who desire to keep the peace.

There is something to be said for apology when you have offended someone in a significant way. When you know in your heart that you did something that would have offended you had it been done to you by another in similar circumstances, there is cause to petition for reconciliation.

The rhetoric in Matthew's argument conveys the impression that you have to seek reconciliation with those who would have you apologize for your existence or if you felt angered by an offense that was done to you.

The larger sense of the truth for the gospel speaks against the will to cause harm or to do damage to another in an emotional state that precedes an offense that may qualify as a crime. 

Were you angry enough with someone for a petty misdeed to falsely accuse him of a capital crime? That kind of anger would require redirection with respect for the law.

It seems that the expression in the passage needs to have some qualification added. If you find yourself to be angry without due cause, then let go of your anger before you cause offense. The association of anger with sin however is not the basis for the conviction of crime.

When you insult someone to defend an offensive action, it compounds the error.

When an insult is expressed in defense against a barrage of insults, it isn't something that requires apology.

If the standards of this passage were applied to the Senate for not calling more witnesses, apology would be expressed for not conducting a fair trial when the trial itself was not fair in the first place.

There wasn't probable cause for investigation. There wasn't an impeachable offense.
Impeachment was won in the House based on partisan prejudice for the unfettered expression of unlettered power.

The majority in the house wanted to win the next election or obtain convictions in court based on opposition to the theoretical abuse of power by the president, his party or the majority of the general public.

If the traditional appeal to the authority figure to apologize for a theoretical offense were to have resulted in an apology, then the authority for the office would have been undermined for the sake of partiality to the partisan majority in the House of Representatives. 

Matthew 5:21-26

Jesus said, "You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, 'You shall not murder' and 'Whoever murders will be liable for judgment.' I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister you will be liable to judgment. If you insult a brother or a sister you will be liable to the council.

If you remember that you have offended a brother or a sister when you are offering a gift at the altar, seek reconciliation first. Then offer your gift.

Come to terms with your accuser before you get to court when you are at fault. If you are wrong your accuser may hand you over to the judge, the judge to the guard and you will be thrown in jail. You will never get out of debt until you have paid the last penny.

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

Murder is a capital crime.
Punishment is defined for the rest of time.

A capital offense is not the only concern for law.
Were that the case any other degree would not be flaw.

Avoid causing offense as much as possible
so the definition of you as the cause stands as improbable.

Anger is not wrong in itself,
but physical harm leaves a welt.

Hatred of sin is only honorable
when anger is managed for the functionally operable.

The act of expiation with a gift at the altar
needs to reform the will that causes behavior to faulter.

 A priest can only receive the gift and pray for the reception.
It is not a promise to show indulgence to honor deception.

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

Oxford Movement

Make a Difference

Charles Todd Quintard
b. 12.22.1824 Stamford, CT.
d. 2.15.1898  Darien, GA

Charles Todd Quintard was an American physician and clergyman.

He became the second bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Tennessee even though he wasn't born as an Episcopalian. He was  first Vice-Chancellor of the University of the South at Sewanee.

He was a religious leader who used his influence to build community in his area and the broader region with relations for alliance with the Church in the United Kingdom and France.

Charles was born to a family descended from the Huguenots in Stamford, Connecticut.

He was probably tutored in his youth. The Quintard line was wealthy and extended back in history to before the birth of the nation. Isaac was a soldier in the Revolutionary War. He was the son of a wealthy and respected citizen in Stamford (also named Isaac).

Congregationalism was the predominant religious trend in Connecticut.

The war veteran was the father to 3 sons, George William, Charles Todd and Edward Augustus. He often traveled abroad. His sons were home-schooled by tutors to avoid the conflicts in a public education.

Charles Todd attended school in New York City to become a physician.  His medical studies were conducted at University Medical College, New York University and Bellevue Hospital. He graduated in 1847.

He moved south to Athens, Georgia to take up a medical practice in 1848. He relocated to Memphis in 1851 to teach physiology and pathological anatomy at Memphis Medical College.

Dr. Quintard's 1854 report on Memphis mortality statistics was covered in The New York Times. It included his assessment of the city as being the first considerable place to be outside the range of yellow fever.

The condition of the city had changed by the 1870's when Memphis experienced several yellow fever epidemics.

Medical training allowed for the observation of the number of incidents of a particular disease. It didn't direct observation to the conditions that allowed for pathogens to reproduce.

Historical study suggests that the incidence for the fever is increased with poor sanitation. Even now there the evidence is epidemeological. Does the place where the epidemic occurs have sufficient sanitation treatment to eliminate the reproduction of the viral agent?

The incidence of the diseases has been eliminated in locations where human waste is treated in order to convert the waste to fertilizer for soil.

Quintard became friends with James Hervey Otey when he was in Memphis. Otey was the first bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Tennessee.

He gave up  the medical profession for the priesthood. He studied for holy orders in 1854, was ordained in 1856 and subsequently served as the rector of Calvary Church in Memphis and at the Church of the Advent in Nashville.

Quintard described himself as a "high churchman" and a "ritualist". This made him an adherent of the Oxford Movement (1833-1845). He was one of those Anglicans who were reviving ritual practices associated with Roman Catholicism in popular perception.

The ritualists were theoretical at the time. The Tractarians were engaged in an effort to revive practices that were reported as having existed in England prior to the Calvinist reformation.

Some liturgical practices associated with the Roman rite had been identified as based in superstition regarding the priesthood as a holy order.  A procession with a cross with clerics dressed in liturgical garments was regarded as Roman.

The consumption of the bread with wine in the Eucharist each Sunday wasn't Roman, but it was something that had been advocated by John Huss in terms of his agreement with John Wycliffe. This suggested that the celebration of the Eucharist was regular in England by the time of Wycliffe.

The Roman rite had reduced the consumption of the wine to the priest. The people were allowed to consume wafers of bread as the body of Christ.

The translation of the Bible into the venacular language was the major proposal in this effort to give the religion a meaning that people could understand. Prayer, bible study and fasting were encouraged to promote the personal dimension of religious convention.

Anglican practice after the Calvinist reform had stopped the celebration of the Eucharist for each Sunday. Some places celebrated on Christmas and Easter. Others were each month. It had also reduced the time spent on sermons about the readings from the Bible.

The reform had reduced symbolic expressions to contemporary conventions with respect for clothing, art and song. 

Priests were renamed ministers, but they were directed by convention to act as though they were not ministers to the community in the celebration of the liturgy.

The political reform of the Church of England was accomplished by rebellion against the king as the corrupt representative of absolute authority, but the investment of historical investigation was limited by Locke's agreement with Aristotle.

Monarchy was ruled out from the rule of the state as a corruption. The rule of the state was subordinated to the dictate determined by consensus in the House of Commons in the British Parliament or the House of Representatives in the US Congress. 

Sermons came to be characterized by the personal experience of biblical precepts as seen in family, but not extended to community participation in national politics.

The seperation of Church and State as a principle of freedom of religion was used to exclude the Christian religion, Protestants included, from explicit participation in national, state or local level debate.

Quintard joined the Southern branch of the old High Church. These were the Hobartian group of Episcopalians that were like Bishop Otey for the Tractarian view.

The leaders of the Oxford Movement were also called "Tractarians." They had published ninety Tracts for the Times. They rediscovered the Church of the Creed as more than an institution or an arm of civil power.

Quintard and his generation were deeply moved by the writings of faithful and brilliant Christian intellectuals. John Keble (d. 1866), Edward Pusey (d. 1882) and John Henry Newman (d. 1890) guided many Anglicans into a deeper appreciation of the Church as a God-made phenomenon. The Church was the Body mystical of Christ in this world.

Quintard's religion was "Catholic and Reformed" for the most solid of Anglicans. He assumed  a manner which did not transcend his culture, but the Church of England and her offspring were in fact the historic Catholic Church for English-speaking peoples.

He joined the Rock City Guards militia for Nashville as the chaplain after the outbreak of the American Civil War.

He was subsequently nominated by soldiers in the Confederate 1st Tennessee Infantry Regiment to serve as their chaplain. He accepted this invitation despite his initial pro-Union stance. He  also served as a regimental surgeon.

He came to be known as the Chaplain for the Confederacy informally. He was the compiler of the Confederate Soldiers' Pocket Manual of Devotions (Charleston, 1863).

Bishop Otey died in 1863, but the Diocese of Tennessee was unable to elect a new leader until after the war. Quintard was selected as the second bishop on September 7, 1865. The bishops and lay leaders of the national Episcopal Church confirmed his election the next month at the General Convention in Philadelphia.

The subsequent consecration of the South's first post-war bishop was viewed as a sign of healing within the church. The service of consecration marked the first step toward that reunion in the Church that was consequent upon the rapid march of events.

It was hoped that the occasion would strengthen that harmony which prevailed in the convention for the production of beneficial results.

He received honorary doctorates from Columbia College (Doctor of Divinity, 1866) and Cambridge (Doctor of Laws, 1867). 

He launched rebuilding efforts in his diocese. The area had suffered physical and emotional distress during the war. He also led the efforts to ensure the post-war survival of the fledgling University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee.

The university is commonly known as Sewanee. It is  a private Episcopal liberal arts college that is owned by 28 southern dioceses of the Episcopal Church. The School of Theology is an official seminary of the church.

Delegates from ten dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States were led up Monteagle Mountain by Bishop Leonidas Polk for the founding of their denominational college for the region on July 4, 1857. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas sent the delegates for the event.

Quintard's friend, Bishop James Otey of Tennessee, was one of the founders. He had stated that the new university would materially aid the South to resist and repel the "fanatical domination" that sought to rule over the region.

The university's first convocation was held on September 18, 1868, with nine students and four faculty members present. The Rt. Rev. Charles Todd Quintard, Vice Chancellor (chief academic officer) of the University, presided.

Quintard sponsored the establishment of a training school for clergy there in 1866. He laid the cornerstone for St. Augustine's Chapel in 1867. He traveled to northern U.S. dioceses to raise funds for the university. 

He attended the first Lambeth Conference in England in 1868. He went to England three times to request funds. He received financial support from clergy and laity of the Church of England to rebuild the school. He returned with a large sum of money to purchase many books for the school's library. Quintard came to be known as the "Re-Founder" for the University of the South.

The bishop  was presented with the first Episcopal cathedral in the South at the beginning of 1871. The parish of St. Mary in Memphis symbolically presented him with keys to the Church.

He continued to live in Sewanee with his family while he retained his ecclesiastical seat in Memphis. 

He ceded the "Bishop's House" on the close of the cathedral to the sisters of the Community of St. Mary for their educational and humanitarian missions.

Quintard believed that his mission was to make the Episcopal Church in Tennessee a refuge for all. The lame, halt and blind were offered social help in the hope to win converts.  He opposed parish pew rents and fostered a ministry on behalf of the disadvantaged.

He established a refuge for the poor in Memphis in 1869 to help with the industrialization of workers. He advocated for a plan to assist people lacking food, housing and education in 1873.

He started missions for the laborers at foundries in South Pittsburg (1876) and in Chattanooga (1880).

He opposed plans to segregate the black congregations of the denomination and assisted in the founding of Hoffman Hall, a seminary for African Americans adjacent to Fisk University in Nashville to expand evangelistic work among African Americans.

He got involved in the Gallican movement in France. This started with an 1875 trip. The trip was a gift of his friend Sam Noble to enroll his son George at a private school in Paris. The bishop was also commissioned to lead Sam's children Ned and Addie around England, France, Switzerland and Germany.

The Gallican Church had been the eccesiastical authority from the time of the Declaration of the Clergy of France in 1682 to that of the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (1790) during the French Revolution.

It held the belief that national sovereignty was more important than Roman Catholic regulation. National customs were given preference in ecclesiastical authority. The doctrine spread to the Low Countries, especially the Netherlands, in the 18th century.

Gallicanism favored the authority of the monarch, the bishops and the people's representatives in the state over the Pope's claim to supremacy. The application to republic favored the authority of the chief elected official and the others.

The French influence on the Irish is evident in the republic's independence from legislative dictates from the cardinals in the country. 

That Bishop Quintard had gotten involved in the movement in the 19th century meant that there was still a French form even after the Revolution.

Quintard had died in February 1898 in Meridian, Georgia. He had traveled to stay there in an effort to improve his health.

He had done what he could to develop the Episcopalian community as a paricipant in the Anglican communion. He developed social supports for the poor in the industiraliztion of labor for the benefit of his state, the region and the country.

Charles Quintard
S. 查尔斯·昆塔德
T. 查爾斯·昆塔德

查  Cha    check                  查  No Kanji                        Cha  ちゃ-    チャ-     Chal   찰   the       
尔  er        you                     爾  ji          you                     ru     る           ル        seu    스   s             
斯  si         this                     斯  shi       this                     zu     ず          ズ         Kwin 퀸  queen     
昆  Kun     Quinn                昆  kon      descendants       Kin    きん     キン      ta       타   ta         
塔  ta         tower                 塔  to         tower                  ta      た-       タ-         deu   드    de           
德  de        goodness           德  toku      ethics                do     ど           ド                                       

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

The goodness of the descendants
was a tower for ethical amendment.

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

wiki Charle Todd Quintard bio
Episcopal Church of America: CTQ bio
Text: Balm for the Wounded and Weary, Chaplain Quintard
Anglican History: Charles Todd Quintard
Anglican History: Memphis, TN

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

Why does the US have a Constitution? Why is there a national government?

Federalist Paper #6 argued that dissension between the states would be dangerous to the security that could be formed by their union.

Dangers of Dissension


Alexander Hamilton suggested that the foremost danger of the dissension between the states was the division that would inhibit the security inherent in national unity in Federalist Paper # 6.

He supported a general criticism of utopian views with historical examples of cause for dissension. Duty compels disagreement with that which is wrong with dissent, but the security of the union insists on functional agreement.

Hamilton defined the Utopian speculation as that which believed that the states should either be wholly disunited or only united in partial confederacies.

Whether it was better that the subdivisions should have  frequent and violent contests with each other or a continuation of the 'rapacious' harmony between a number of independent, unconnected sovereignties in the same neighborhood was left as a matter for speculation.

The causes of hostility among nations were used to advocate for the unified effort to look for the mutual benefit through alliance for trade and security.

Hamilton's reference to Plutarch's Pericles was the most problematic of his examples. It admit that the declaration of Independence had identified the corruption of authority by the crown was the basis for declaing independence from Great Britain.

The taxation that was not sufficiently beneficial for the alliance of the American colonists in the British colonies had come from parliament. It was a case wherein the stories about the corruption of Pericles' duty as the king were used to institute the system of election in republic without a monarch.

The argument reduced to the claim that the greater corruption was better than the incumbent. The authors of the Federalist Papers judiciously sidestepped the argument in the declaration in order to favor trade and national security as the basis for re-establishing the alliance with the British government. 

The implication of Thomas More's Utopia lent itself to disagreement with Cardinal Wosley's effort to claim what Hamilton called the Triple Crown, authority over the monarchy, the Church and the legislature for England.

Belief in the principle of freedom of religion had been advocated by Roger Williams in Rhode Island. This principle was intended to deny any religious claim to authority over national sovereignty.

It wasn't just a question of the Roman Catholic claim to papal supremacy and the Anglican counter of royal supremacy over the Church of England, there was the issue of bigotry as an even greater corruption. 

Hamilton added the question of debt as a means to subordinate the petition for benefit by disagreement with error for the functional agreement for trade and security. 

He said that Shays would not have had reason to rebel had he not been put in the position of a desperate debtor by the government in Massachusetts. Hamilton argued for the means to remedy debt as the basis for reasonable financial policy in a different text.

He didn't rule out the use of debt to discourage pride for the expansion of power by the claims to supremacy.

He asked if it was not well known that determinations were often governed by a few individuals in whom confidence was placed. Wasn't the claim to power liable to be tinctured by the passions and views of those individuals? He expressed his disagreement with giving all the power to either a few people or to the many.

Had commerce done anything more than change the objects of war in commercial republics? Was the love of wealth the domineering and enterprising passion for power or glory?

Had there not been many wars founded upon commercial motives since that had become the prevailing system for nations? Were there more than when war was occasioned by the cupidity of territory or dominion over the land?

The Jeffersonian Republic view established a line of dissent as the basis for forming 'American' policy. It was an antecedent to socialist economics as the basis for populist political policy.

The dangers of dissension between the states particularly in the US House of Representatives is found in the division inhibits agreement for the security inherent in national unity.

The Utopian view, the cardinal claim to authority over national sovereignty, the claim that the greater corruption would be better and no mutual benefit represented disagreement with functional unity for security.

Disagreement with what is wrong is necessary, but dissent is not the purpose for government. There has to be agreement with commerical trade for mutual benefit but there also has to be a default to the need for professional military and law enforcement agency to represent the force against criminal or terrorist infraction.

He questioned the motives for the republics known to history with respect for the cause of war. Was it commerical enterprise or opposition to the expansion of power by virtue of the competition for imperial alliance?

The ambition of Venice was defeated by a league organized by Pope Julius II. The provinces of Holland had taken a leading role in the wars of Europe until they were overwhelmed with debts and taxes.

The representatives of the people composed one branch of the national legislature in the government of Britain. Commerce was the chief goal for the nation, but this didn't stop the country from participation in many wars. The wars in which that kingdom had engaged had in numerous instances proceeded from the government that claimed to represent the people.

The rival houses of Austria and Bourbon had long kept Europe in flame with royal wars that laid claim to the cries of the nation and the importunities of their representatives.

The antipathies of the English, the French and the Germans had in great measure grown out of commercial considerations that countered the desire of supplanting against the fear of being supplanted either in particular branches of traffic or in the general advantages of trade and navigation.

Did the Utopian view of confederacies not present inducement to greater dangers of dissension among the smaller states with the conflicts of larger nations, than the proposal for union with a Constitution?  Revolt had already transpired in North Carolina and Massachusetts. Menacing disturbances had occurred in Pennsylvania.

Neighboring nations were naturally enemies to each other unless the recognition of common weakness induced a league in a confederate Republic. The constitution of the union would prevent the differences that neighborhood occasioned and extinguish that secret jealousy which disposed all states to aggrandize themselves at the expense of their neighbors.

Unity against the threat of evil provided the recommendation for remedy.

The Utopian view, the cardinal claim to authority over national sovereignty, the claim that the greater story about corruption is better than the incumbent authority and opposition to mutual benefit represented dangers that would disagree with functional unity for security.

Disagreement with what is wrong is necessary, but dissent is not the purpose for government. There has to be agreement with commerical trade for mutual benefit but there also has to be a default to the need for professional military and law enforcement agency to represent the force against criminal or terrorist infraction.

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

Value


William James
The Varieties of Religious Experience 5
Text: Varieties

When James looked at religious experience he asked two key questions. 'What are the propensities of religion?' and 'What is the significance for the variability for the propensities?'

There is a logical distinction between the two questions that warrants recognition. The logic for his time had arrived at the primary principles for the inquiry into anything. The first principle asks, 'What is the nature of the thing?' The second inquires, 'What is the meaning of the nature in terms of significance?'

The answer to the first question results in an existential judgment regarding the object being evaluated. A chief characteristic of the thing is drawn regarding its existence.

The answer to the other is a propostion of value. James called it a spiritual judgment, but the mental component of spirit is the cognitive element that is concerned with communication.

It is cognition that sells or persuades the audience that the value of the object is worthy of consideration, if not agreement. The word existential can be contrasted with mental. The judgment is less suspect for being thrown of court.

Neither judgment is immediately deduced from the other. The mental operations used in the formulation are different. The mind combines them only by making them first separately, then by adding them together.

The religion being considered is defined by contrast or comparison with other religions. Distinction is easily formed in the two orders of question in the matter of religions.

Christianity is the most prominent religion derived from the Roman tradition. Judaism was used by the Romans as a template of the first monotheistic form in order to convert the culture from polytheism to monotheism. 

A chief characteristic of this shift was to stop the use of animal sacrifice for expiation in the temple at the capital city. Scripture was instituted for the consideration of religious experience in a parish community associated with the Church as documented in the Judaic then the Christian traditions.

The Tanakh was the main collection of written works for Judaism. The Bible became the Book of books for Christianity. The Synagogue was the name for the community temple for Jewish people. The church became the constructed symbol for the body of Christ in any community.

The assembled body has been dedicated to finding the definition of goodness in relations.
The higher criticism of the Bible is the study of the scripture from an existential point of view. The literary parts which aren't exactly optimal in terms of narrative flow are identified according to probable sources.

The two names for the One deity made for two different sources. Elohim, the God of gods, was most likely first in terms of general application with cultural acceptance. Yahweh, of the Great I am whose true name can never be spoken, was a distinctively monotheistic entity. 

This name suggested the next stage in organizational development for the official religion of the culture. 

The consideration of the influence of worship in the course of political events was documented by the Deuteronomic historian. Deuteronomy stands for the second law or the next stage in the movement to monotheistic organization in the society for the culture.

The Priestly source was concerned with the customs and practices of worship in the temple. The first two sources are abbreviated as E for Elohim and J for Jehovah or Yahweh. These names pointed to God as the object for worship. The other two sources are abbreviated as D for Deuteronomic and P for Priestly.

The 4 sources represent perspectives that documented the experience of existence with faith in the historical frame for the documentation. These sources are used in literary analysis to draw out the meaning of the text with respect for repetition with variance. 

Biblical criticism is usually reserved for seminary instruction to prepare students for ministry in the priesthood, but it can be applied to bible study for personal edification.

The analysis of the text asks the question regarding the biographic conditions for the writers of the written works. The biographic conditions were defined in terms of political, social and personal roles as elements in human nature.

How was the faith of the writer shaped by the purpose for documentation with respect for the different social perspective?

While the E source was drawing out the importance of the One as drawn from the relative significance of the others, the J source made statements that indicated that the other gods were false.

The combined value of the two was to recommend a conversion of the calendar value for each god into some aspect of time and practice related to the worship of the One.

The consideration of the value for the worship of the Word was illustrated with reference to historical fact rather than the mythologically astrological reflections of astronomy in the formation of the calendar.

Detachment from human relations to determine scientific objectivity was modified to include the significance of human relations with faith in the context of reality.

What use should such a volume with its manner of coming into existence defined in historical fact be to us as a guide to revelation with respect for life? There must be some sort of a general theory as to what the peculiarities in a thing should be which give it value for the purpose of revelation.

This theory itself would be what was called a judgment. Combining it with our existential evaluation, we might indeed deduce another judgment as to the Bible's worth.

If the theory of revelation-value were to affirm that any book must have been composed automatically without the will of the writer in such a way that it must exhibit no scientific or historic error with regard for local or personal passion, the Bible would probably fare ill.

If our theory should allow that a book may well be a revelation despite the error and passion characteristic of deliberate human composition insofar as it is the record of the inner experience of the struggle with the crises of the call to destiny, then the verdict will be more favorable.
James wrote,

Those adept with higher criticism accordingly don't confound the existential with the mental problem.

Some take one view and some another of the Bible's value as a revelation according to their judgment as to the foundation of values differs. There is allowance for varity in non-essential considerations particularly with regard to certain customs.

The official religion for a state should allow variance for different faith traditions. It is conceivable that the Church of England allows official recognition for Judaism, Islam or other religions as legal.

Even though the Islam of Iran is younger with respect for the state as a republic, it can develop standards for the official recognition of Christianity, Judaism or other religions. 

Republics that have freedom of religion listed as a civil right have to have legislation that rules out crime, riot, terrorism, rebellion, revolution or war for religious as well as political causes.

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

Existential facts alone don't determine worth.
Thought in theory can form tests of value for truth.

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

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Organize

10.13.19
Kelly Preston

Organize
for
Freedom
为自由而组织
Wei ziyou er zuzhi
自由に整理
Jiyū ni seiri
ps111
Libertatem paresque

Hooray for Yah!
You rock the heat of Rah!

Love is a process of heart
in the search for your soul to find 
your self in the weather of the mind 
from the start.

Love lives in the unmarried too.
The single seek communion with the community queue.

If you need a hand
I will deliver mine as though planned.
I will do that which I can.

The light of the evening star shines bright
at the end of evening's entry into night.

Rebellion has strengthened many in their error.
Those unprepared to govern have been known to resort to terror.

The function of rebellion to overthrow incumbency was such 

that the people didn't prosper at all much less much.

The special interest of each radical faction
is a weed to the work of personal action.

The wet damp cloud in the sea is lost to sight
in the brightness of the morning light.

Every horse inside the range of the cultivated belt
ran at the strange sight of the agitated Celt.

The wren sought treasure through the eye of the needle.
She eluded evil with the power of the creedal.

The uniqueness of the lightning bolt makes thunder
that rolls from the height of sky to the ground down under.

Sap Buckets

Congratulations increased 
when the maple tree caprice
pleased the bucket with ease
in the sap for syrup release. 


I will give thanks for freedom
from the hate that killed Deacon Stephen.

I will raise my praise 
in the congregation that prays.

The works of providence are great for people!
These are the acts that overcome evil.

They are studied by all who delight in them.
Imagination is guided by the sight of the gems in the diadem.

Assembly has to be democratic, republican and majestic
for fairness to endure as justice in a society for testament.

The greatness of the organization will be remembered
for the grace that makes justice temperate. 

Money for food is given out of respect for needs.
This covenant remembers that ability heeds
the functional capacity for deeds.

Asceticism is adverse to pleasure for happiness.
It promotes austerity as a product of legislative craftiness.

People have been shown the power of work
for those who build structures that don't hurt.

Organization for the management of resources bound
defines government anywhere in the world that it is found.

Faithfulness with freedom and justice 
are the products of moral law that builds trust for us
in a society where science is the thrust for trust.

The commandment against murder
is the foundation for morality for the learner.

Truth is built with equity in sound
for those who dwell on this ground.

Redemption was granted to those who saw
that this was the observation for the rule of law.

Hygiene is when the body has been washed until clean.
Strategy to preserve the state as great needed to be seen.

It was not just a matter of victory with weapons.
It was the practice of hygiene along with lessons
in the language for security with defense for pleasant 
presence in the present relevance.

The will to be cleansed led the lepers to listen
to the Savior as high priest that gratitude might glisten. 

I endure everything for the sake of the elect
to obtain salvation as our divine intersect
with Christ Jesus as the body resurrect
in the eternal glory we accept.

This administration leads to bravery in time.
Reason loves enlightenment that transcends sight 
and underlies what's right in the sublime climb
to the conceptually tight.

Courage enters the car armed with respect for life.
The full moon doesn't stop action for what is right.

Reason without definition is not knowledge of anything.
It lacks the corroboration the key items of calculation bring. 

Respect for knowledge is the beginning of wisdom.
Those who act with love understand the thrum of the kid's drum.

The guiding principle of inference
is for logic in natural currents.

The mind removes 'weeds' from thought like a gardener 
to will to work for bodily wellness as naturally sought armature.

The house of praise is built with gratitude
for the sun’s rays as the source for a strong attitude.

Raise praise for Yah!
You made the heat for the hot rock that the people saw.

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

Split Rock and Mount Horeb
Horeb- Hot Rock

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

111 Confitebor tibi
They wandered

1 Hallelujah!
I will give thanks to the Lord with my whole heart,
in the assembly of the upright, in the congregation.

2 Great are the deeds of the Lord!
they are studied by all who delight in them.

3 His work is full of majesty and splendor,
and his righteousness endures forever.

4 He makes his marvelous works to be remembered;
the Lord is gracious and full of compassion.

5 He gives food to those who fear him;
he is ever mindful of his covenant.

6 He has shown his people the power of his works
in giving them the lands of the nations.

7 The works of his hands are faithfulness and justice;
all his commandments are sure.

8 They stand fast for ever and ever,
because they are done in truth and equity.

9 He sent redemption to his people;
he commanded his covenant forever;
holy and awesome is his Name.
10 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom;
those who act accordingly have a good understanding;
his praise endures forever.

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

2 Kings 5:13-14

Naaman's servants approached him and said, 'Father, if the prophet had commanded you to do something difficult, would you not have done it? How much more, when all he said to you was, "Wash and be clean"?  So he went down and immersed himself seven times in the Jordan according to the word of the man of God. His flesh was restored like the flesh of a young boy and he was clean.

Naaman-pleasant

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

Hygiene is when the body has been washed until clean.
Strategy to preserve the state as great needed to be seen.

It was not just a matter of victory with weapons.
It was the practice of hygiene along with lessons
in the language for security with defense for pleasant
presence in the present relevance.

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

2 Timothy 2:10

I endure everything for the sake of the elect so they may also obtain the salvation that is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory.

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

I endure everything for the sake of the elect
to obtain salvation as our divine intersect
with Christ Jesus as the body resurrect
in the eternal glory we accept.

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

Luke 17: 11-14

Jesus was going through the region between Samaria and Galilee on the way to Jerusalem. Ten lepers approached him as he entered a village. They called out keeping their distance, 'Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!' When he saw them, he said to them, 'Go and show yourselves to the priests.' They were made clean as they went.

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

The will to be cleansed led the lepers to listen
to the Savior as high priest that gratitude might glisten.

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

Rebellion


James VI of Scotland wrote The True Law of Free Monarchies. It was published in 1589. He did not argue that monarchy is the absolute power. He did not assert that it is free from responsibility.
National security is grounded in the right knowledge of "alleagence." The key feature of this allegiance was the agreement to not rebel against the true law of a free monarchy.

He presented his argument in agreement with the biblical view that held that monarchy is the best form of government. He wrote this prior to being crowned the King of England in 1603. He was named James I for England and Ireland when he was crowned.

The Renaissance and the Reformation had reintroduced the contractarian view that Republic was better. Written law holds an advantage in terms of letting an educated public know what the law is prior to any charge of infraction.

The public was not as educated at the time. Christianity was the largest social force that promoted education, but the texts used for instruction had largely been written in Latin. They were classical. They had come from the Roman adoption and reconstruction of Greek culture.

The bible was in Latin also. Knowledge of the contents of the classical or biblical texts was restricted to those who were granted instruction in the language.

A number of "flourishing Common-wealths" had already been overthrown in Italy and other locations. Other commonwealths were threatened with destruction.

The educated aristocracy knew that there was a great struggle between the different forms of government. It was the "seduced opinion" of the uneducated that could result in the defeat of the kingdom for the people of a land.

Monarchy has always been a model for conservative reform. The line of succession inherits responsibility for property. Most of the property is for the public. There has to be enough that is for the privacy of the royal family to warrant their service to the country.

The conservation of that which is preserved by inheritance is the primary area for concern. Conservation for national security is the major responsibility. Reform is necessary for progress in competition between nations.

Education in responsibility requires knowledge of the language. This is the medium by which the knowledge of allegiance is acquired. It has been the will of the people to purchase published materials for instruction and to pay for the instruction that has granted access to this knowledge of allegiance as true law of free monarchy or republic.

It was rebellion, revolution or war that inhibited progress in the attainment of rights for the citizens and legal residents of the nation.

James I (1566-1625)
The True Law of Free Monarchies (1598)
Text

"And the smiling successe, that vnlawfull rebellions haue oftentimes had against Princes in aages past (such hath bene the misery, and iniquitie of the time) hath by way of practise strengthned many in their errour: albeit there cannot be a more deceiueable argument; then to iudge ay the iustnesse of the cause by the euent thereof; as hereafter shall be proued more at length."

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

"The smiling success that unlawful rebellions have oftentimes had against Princes in ages past (such has been the misery and the iniquity of the time) has by way of practice strengthened many in their error. There cannot be a more deceptive argument than to judge the justness of the cause by the event thereof as hereafter shall be proved more at length."

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

Rebellion had strengthened many in their error.
Those unprepared to govern have been known to resort to terror.

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

Leviathan (1651) was written during the English Civil War (1642-1651). The civil war was fought between the Parliamentarians and the Royalists. The Parliamentarians supported republican government. The Royalists were for the preservation of the monarchy.

King Charles I was the son and heir to James I. The outcome of the war resulted in the trial and execution of Charles I, the exile of his son, Charles II, and the replacement of English monarchy with a republic.

There was the Commonwealth of England from 1649–1653. Then there was the Protectorate under the personal rule of Oliver Cromwell (1653–1658). The Protectorate lasted for a year under his son Richard (1658–1659).

The Commonwealth ended in 1653 after the dissolution of the Rump then the Barebone's Parliament. Oliver Cromwell was appointed Lord Protector of the Commonwealth under the terms of the Instrument of Government. The Instrument was the first sovereign codified and written constitution in England.


Leviathan stands as a successful persuasion for the reinstatement of monarchy during a republican rule. Leviathan argues for a social contract and rule by a sovereign. The sovereign is a symbol for the organization of the parliament and society.

The organization of society with written law by parliament is supposed to be met with skepticism until it represents national security for citizens and legal residents as the "subjects" of the monarch.
Reform is necessary to reject laws that have been poorly formulated, to write laws that have been in need of documentation and to adjust to world standards regarding justice.

Hobbes argued that reason can't reduce the consideration of addition or subtraction to the sum alone. Judgment has to consider the means by which a sum was derived in order to correct error.

The monarch has to have reliable officials and accountants to assess the sum for certainty in the fair use of reason. The monarch is like the head of a household in this regard.

Parliament has to organize an observable system of reports for the administration of action. These reports have to use words that have designated definitions for the organization of the report.

Law has to account for defense as well as for the providence of opportunity. The written law has to state those things that are regarded as necessary for observance while less essential things are left for local judgment. The right to defense extends from the sovereignty of the land to each household.

Whoever draws conclusions based on trust in reports alone however works with belief, not knowledge. The first items of any reckoning are the signification of names settled by definition.

Judges were appointed for a system of appeals when judgment in administration caused conflict.
His exposition was a reasonable extension of the Elizabethan settlement that had been made prior to civil war. Parliament had to govern its own behavior to represent citizens and legal residents.

Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
Leviathan (1651)
The Use of Reason
Text

"...there can be no certainty of the last Conclusion, without a certainty of all those Affirmations and Negations, on which it was grounded, and inferred. As when a master of a family, in taking an account, casteth up the summs of all the bills of expence, into one sum; and not regarding how each bill is summed up, by those that give them in account; nor what it is he payes for; he advantages himselfe no more, than if he allowed the account in grosse, trusting to every of the accountants skill and honesty; so also in Reasoning of all other things, he that takes up conclusions on the trust of Authors, and doth not fetch them from the first Items in every Reckoning, (which are the significations of names settled by definitions), loses his labour; and does not know any thing; but onely beleeveth."

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

"There can be no certainty of the last conclusion without a certainty of all the affirmations and negations on which it is grounded by inference. When the master of a family takes into account the sums of the bills of expense into one sum not regarding how each bill is summed by those that give them in account for what he paid, he advantages himself no more than if he allowed the account in gross with trust for every accountant's skill and honesty. He that takes up conclusions on the trust of authors loses his labor. The first items in every calculation have to include the signification of names settled by definition. He that reasons without definitions does not know anything, but only believes."

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

Reason without definition is not knowledge of anything.
It lacks the corroboration the key items of calculation bring.

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

Charles I was the heir to James I.

Charles II was the eldest surviving child of Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland and Henrietta Maria of France. The Parliament of Scotland proclaimed Charles II king on 5 February 1649 after Charles I's execution at Whitehall on 30 January.

England entered the period known as the Interregnum or the Commonwealth. The country was a de facto republic led by Oliver Cromwell. Cromwell defeated Charles II at the Battle of Worcester on 3 September 1651. He fled to mainland Europe. Cromwell became virtual dictator of England, Scotland and Ireland.

Charles spent the next 9 years in exile in France, the Dutch Republic and the Spanish Netherlands. The political crisis that followed the death of Cromwell in 1658 resulted in the restoration of the monarchy.

Charles was invited to return to Britain. He was received in London on his 30th birthday on 29 May 1660. Legal documents after 1660 were dated as if he had succeeded his father as king in 1649.

James II inherited the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland from his elder brother Charles II with support in all three countries. He was the last Roman Catholic monarch of England, Scotland and Ireland.

Two events turned the dissent against his toleration for Catholicism into a crisis. The birth of James's son and heir James Francis Edward, threatened to create a Catholic dynasty. His Protestant daughter Mary and her husband William of Orange feared that they would be excluded.

The prosecution of the Seven Bishops for seditious libel was viewed as an assault on the Church of England. James II dismissed the English Parliament for refusing to pass measures removing legal restrictions on Catholics and Protestant Nonconformists in November 1685.

The Scottish Parliament suffered the same fate in August 1686. Neither body met again until 1689.  A  Declaration of Indulgence was issued in both countries in April 1687. Few clergy in the Church of England or Church of Scotland actively promoted it. Some Nonconformists also opposed it. They were more anti-Catholic than their colleagues in the national churches.

The Declaration was reissued in April 1688. James ordered the bishops to have it read in every church in England. Seven bishops 'petitioned' to be excused. They argued that it relied on an interpretation of Royal authority declared illegal by Parliament.

The bishops were charged with seditious libel and held in the Tower of London. They were tried and found not guilty on 30 June. The trial had resulted in anti-Catholic riots throughout England and Scotland. The birth of James Francis on 10 June raised the prospect of a Catholic dynasty. James II was deposed in the Glorious Rebellion in November 1688.

The right to petition that had been used by the bishops was drawn from the 1215 Magna Carta. It was re-confirmed in the 1689 Bill of Rights. It would be included in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution (1791).

Representatives of the English political elite invited William to assume the English throne.  He landed in Brixham on 5 November 1688. James's army deserted. He went into exile in France on 23 December.

Parliament held he had 'vacated' the English throne in February 1689. William and Mary were installed as joint monarchs. The Parliament proposed that sovereignty derived from Parliament. The act struck a blow to the claim of the divine right of kings. Inheritance by birth was the operational principle for the claim.


Locke claimed in the "Preface" to the Two Treatises that its purpose is to justify William III's ascension to the throne. Locke may have actually written the treatises during the  Exclusion Crisis which attempted to prevent James II from ever taking the throne in the first place.

Parliament was seeking to establish parliamentarian election as the way to select a monarch. They wanted to limit the selection to Protestants.  Lord Melville, Lord Leven and Lord Shaftesbury, leader of the opposition to Charles's rule.  Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury, was Locke's mentor, patron and friend. He had introduced the bill, but it was unsuccessful.

The "Rye House plotters" were an extremist Whig group. Rye House was a fortified mediaeval mansion surrounded by a moat. It was leased by a republican and Civil War veteran.

The plan was to conceal a force of men in the grounds of the house and ambush the King and the Duke as they passed by on their way back to London from the horse races at Newmarket. The location had a tactical advantage. The plan could be carried out with a relatively small force operating with guns from good cover.

The royal party were expected to make the journey on 1 April 1683, but there was a major fire in Newmarket on 22 March. The fire destroyed half of the town. The races were cancelled.  The King and the Duke returned to London early. The planned attack never took place as a result.

Conspirators of this period were numerous. Some sort of armed resistance was debated from the early 1680's on what was becoming the Whig side of the factional division of British politics.

The assassination plot centered on a group that was convened in 1682–1683 by Robert West.  John Locke had arranged accommodation for West in Oxford at that time. He had other associations in the group of revolutionary activists.

Locke, Shaftesbury and others were forced into exile after the plot was discovered. Some were executed for treason. Locke knew his work was dangerous. He never acknowledged his authorship within his lifetime. Two Treatises was first published, anonymously, in December 1689.

Locke defined power as something that was held over another. A magistrate had power over a subject. A master had power over his servant. A husband had power over his wife.

John Locke (1632-1704)
Two Treatises on Civil Government (1689)
Text
Ch.1, S.3

"Political power, then, I take to be a right of making laws with penalties of death, and consequently all less penalties, for the regulating and preserving of property, and of employing the force of the community, in the execution of such laws, and in the defence of the common-wealth from foreign injury; and all this only for the public good."

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

The function of rebellion to overthrow incumbency was such
that the people didn't prosper at all much less much.

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

If you thought that the Whig argument against absolute power was against the death penalty, you would be mistaken. The death penalty was the key component in this definition. It also needs to be noted that while the English Bill of Rights provided for the ownership of private property, Locke's definition of private property included the ownership of slaves.

His proposal of the right to destroy those who would destroy him was extended into the threat of genocide for colonization. That people were living in primitive or tribal states of existence was used as a claim to the desire to destroy civilized men.

This shifted the practice of enslavement from the consequence for resistance to imperial expansion to resistance to colonial expansion by parliament. It suggests that even the emperor's drive to conquer was driven by the Patrician class and their desire to draw wealth from success in expansion.

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William and Mary ruled together until Mary died in 1694. William governed the throne until 1702.

Mary had a younger sister named Anne. Both were daughters of James II. She was born during the reign of Charles II. Anne and Mary were raised as Anglicans. Anne married Prince George of Denmark in 1683.

William and Mary had no children. Anne succeeded to the throne after William died.

The kingdoms of England and Scotland were united into a sovereign state known as Great Britain by the Acts of Union in 1707. The divisions of the island were united for the first time with a single parliament.

She died without having generated children. She was the last monarch from the House of Stuart. She was succeeded by her second cousin George I of the House of Hanover.

Hanover was the capital and largest city in Lower Saxony in Germany. The house ruled Hanover, Great Britain and Ireland at various times during the 17th through 20th centuries.

George I and George II were not born in Great Britain. Great Britain and Ireland were joined in the United Kingdom in 1800 during the reign of George III. He was born in London.


Jeremy Bentham was born in London in 1747 during the rule of George II. He lived during the time of George II (1727-1760), George III (1760-1820), George IV (1820-1830) and William IV (1830-1837). George III was the king during the American revolution.

He was a utilitarian. The utilitarians were a modern variant of the Epicurean philosophy from Ancient Greece. Epicurus taught that pleasure and pain were operations that guided judgment toward happiness as a sustainable condition.

The Romans had associated the teaching with Hedonism, irresponsible behavior and rebellion against the republic. They rejected the philosophical view.

Bentham saw happiness in social as well as individual terms. It held a utility for the state of political affairs with morals and legislation. He restated the utilitarian maxim as that which sought the greatest happiness for the greatest number.

It was a parliamentarian reconfiguration with respect for legislation that considered benefit for the people, not just the state officials. It held promise for the law against slavery insofar as slavery was the cause of misery to the slaves and the owners alike.

Slavery renounced the role of reason in the will in making decisions for happiness. The social role of ownership determined outcomes. Cruelty in punishment was a standard device in the trade and ownership of slaves.

While Bentham was a known associate of revolutionary leaders, it was a time that was wrought with the consequence of revolution. The American and French revolutions had established republic with slavery as the primary forms of government.

He defined asceticism as a voluntary form of self-affliction. While this was granted as a choice for an individual, it wasn't a valid means for enacting legislation. Bentham was not an advocate for something like the prohibition of alcohol.

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

Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
Principles of Morals and Legislation (1823)
Text

"The principle of asceticism, however, with whatever warmth it may have been embraced by its partizans as a rule of private conduct, seems not to have been carried to any considerable length, when applied to the business of government. In a few instances it has been carried a little way by the philosophical party: witness the Spartan regimen. Though then, perhaps, it maybe considered as having been a measure of security: and an application, though a precipitate and perverse application, of the principle of utility. Scarcely in any instances, to any considerable length, by the religious: for the various monastic orders, and the societies of the Quakers, Dumplers, Moravians, and other religionists, have been free societies, whose regimen no man has been astricted to without the intervention of his own consent."

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

Asceticism is adverse to pleasure for happiness.
It promotes austerity as a product of legislative craftiness.

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

Utilitarianism holds promise as a means to outlaw war. An international treaty that advocates for legislation against invasion, rebellion, revolution and terrorism will reduce the incidence of violent aggression among nations and open the door to trade with instruction in foreign languages.

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

Pragmatism began in the early 1870's in the US with discussion between Charles Sanders Peirce, William James and others in the Metaphysical Club. James regarded the  articles "The Fixation of Belief" and "How to Make our Ideas Clear" by Peirce as the foundation for pragmatism.
James would define pragmatism as radical empiricism.

Peirce differed from James and Dewey in their tangential enthusiasm. He held that truth was immutable and infinity is real. Statistical inferences were measured as principles for reason in the logic of science.

The aim of inquiry is the fixation of belief. The scientific method is most effective way to fix a belief as a functional principle.

The Romans and the medieval scholars took knowledge to rest on the authority of reason. Roger Bacon proposed the knowledge was derived from subjective experience in the 13th century. Francis Bacon argued in the Novum Organum (1620) that experience must be understood as open to verification.

Lavoisier shifted from the reconstruction of words to substances in his chemistry in the latter part of the 18th century. Darwin employed the basis for a statistical approach to explain the movements of molecules in biological variation in the 19th century.

Humans are not perfectly logical animals. We seem to find happiness in the absence of facts. The effect of this approach to experience continually contracts hope with aspiration. When hope is unchecked by experience optimism tends towards extravagance.

Logic in a practical sense is the blend of the wise union of security with fruitfulness. Natural selection finds practical expression in pragmatism. The practical is complemented by the fanciful, but the unpractical application of fantasy results in fallacious tendency in thought. 

------------------ 

C.S. Peirce (1839-1914)
The Fixation of Belief (1877)
wiki Text

"The particular habit of mind which governs this or that inference may be formulated in a proposition whose truth depends on the validity of the inferences which the habit determines; and such a formula is called a guiding principle of inference. Suppose, for example, that we observe that a rotating disk of copper quickly comes to rest when placed between the poles of a magnet, and we infer that this will happen with every disk of copper. The guiding principle is, that what is true of one piece of copper is true of another. Such a guiding principle with regard to copper would be much safer than with regard to many other substances -- brass, for example."

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

The guiding principle of inference
is for logical reason in natural currents.

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


Gilbert Ryle
b. 8.19.1900  Brighton, England
d. 10.6.1976  Whitby, England

Gilbert Ryle was a representative of the generation of British ordinary language philosophers who share Ludwig Wittgenstein's approach to philosophy. He is principally known for his critique of Cartesian dualism. The dualistic separation of mind and body created that which he called the "ghost in the machine."

The Concept of Mind (1949) remains his best known work. He recommended that analytical behaviorism replace Cartesian dualism.

He was born in Brighton, England in the first year of the 20th century.

Brighton

A large number of churches were built in Brighton in the latter half of the 19th century. This was due to the efforts of Reverend Arthur Douglas Wagner, a prominent figure in the Anglo-Catholic movement of the time.

He is thought to have spent his entire fortune on building a number of churches. This included St. Bartholomew's, an imposing red brick building, built to the size and proportions of the biblical ark.

Another notable Victorian church that was built is the Parish Church of St. Michael and All Angels. The building has stained glass windows by the pre-Raphaelites, William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, Ford Madox Brown and Philip Webb.

Otto Pfenninger developed a method of color photography in Brighton in the early 20th century.

Gilbert Ryle

Ryle was born in Brighton, England in 1900. He grew up in an environment of learning. His father was a doctor, a generalist who had interests in philosophy and astronomy. He passed an impressive library on to his children.

Gilbert was educated at Brighton College. He went up to Queen's College at Oxford to study Classics in 1919 but was quickly drawn to Philosophy.

He graduated with a "triple first." He was awarded first-class honors in classical honor moderations (1921), literae humaniores (1923) and politics, philosophy and economics (1924). He was appointed as lecturer in philosophy at Christ Church, Oxford in 1925. A year later, he became a Student (Fellow) and tutor at Christ Church, where he remained until 1940.

He was commissioned in the Welsh Guards in World War II. He was a capable linguist who was recruited into intelligence work. He had been promoted to the rank of Major by the end of the war. He returned to Oxford and was elected Waynflete Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy and Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford.

He published his principal work, The Concept of Mind in 1949. He was President of the Aristotelian Society from 1945 to 1946 and editor of the philosophical journal Mind from 1947 to 1971.

He was a representative of the generation of British ordinary language philosophers who shared Wittgenstein's approach to philosophical problems. He is principally known for his critique of Cartesian dualism for which he coined the phrase "the ghost in the machine." Some of his ideas in the philosophy of mind have been referred to as "behaviourist."

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

Gilbert Ryle
The Concept of Mind (1949)
Text

The mind in Cartesian dualism was viewed as something abstract and distinct from the body. The body exists in space. It is subject to mechanical or physical restriction in operation. The mind is not in space. It is not subject to natural law.

Ryle made his argument after WWII. Continental philosophy was viewed as the cause of Nazi socialism. The morality was seen as something that was abstracted from application to the leadership for the nation.

He argued that the mind and body are interrelated.

"What the mind wills, the legs, arms and the tongue execute; what affects the ear and the eye has something to do with what the mind perceives; grimaces and smiles betray the mind's moods and bodily castigations lead, it is hoped, to moral improvement."

Gilbert Ryle
吉尔伯特莱尔

吉  Ji   lucky        kichi       good fortune           Gi  ぎ   ギ          Gil   길   way
尔  er   you          no kanji                                  ru  る   ル           beo  버   bur
伯  bo   senior      haku       elder                        ba- ば- バ-         teu   트   the
特  te   special      toku        particular                to   と    ト           La    라   la
莱  lai  weed         rai           weed                       Ra  ら    ラ           il      일   work
尔  er   Seoul        no kanji                                  i     い   イ
                                                                            ru   る   ル
---------------------

The mind removes 'weeds' from thought
to will to work for bodily wellness as naturally sought.

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


Hubert Dreyfus
b. 10.15.1929  Terre Haute, Indiana
d. 4.22.2017 Berkeley, California

Hubert Dreyfus was an American professor of philosophy. He was considered a leading interpreter of the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Martin Heidegger.

His phenomenological existentialism placed him in proximity to the neo-pragmatism of Richard Rorty. Rorty was on the left side of the political spectrum. He criticized communism and the left, but maintained an association with socialism.

His main interests included phenomenology, existentialism and the philosophy of both psychology and literature. His 1972 book “What Computers Can’t Do” made him a scourge and eventually an inspiration to researchers in artificial intelligence.

He argued that the dream of artificial intelligence rested on several flawed assumptions. Chief among them was the idea that the brain is analogous to computer hardware and the mind to computer software.

The implication was that all human tasks could be replaced with computer programs. The consequences could be devastating to labor and management.

The connection to natural selection would be damaged by the dependency upon electronic machinery. What is to be done when the machinery fails to function? Will the dependent user be able to function without the automated device?

There is no objective set of facts outside the human mind. Human beings experience education as a partly physical interaction with their surroundings. The interpretation of the world is in a process of continual revision through a socially determined filter.

Artificial intelligence runs up against something called the common-knowledge problem. Ordinary people possess a vast repository of facts and information as though by inheritance. They can draw on the repository to make inferences and navigate their way through the world in a way that computers cannot.

Dreyfus believed that to teach is to learn.  He refused to teach any text that he felt he already understood sufficiently well. Much of his time in the classroom involved not only getting the students to the edge of his understanding but, crucially, soliciting from them and discussing with them their suggestions for ways forward.

Terre Haute

Terre Haute is a city in Vigo county Indiana. It is located along the Wabash River near the states western border with Illinois.

The name "Terre Haute" is a French phrase meaning “highland." The name was coined by French explorers of the mid 18th century. They found a plateau-like area that adjoined the Wabash River.

These highlands were considered the border between Canada and Louisiana at the time the area was claimed by the French and British.

Early Terre Haute was a center of farming, milling and pork processing. The business and industrial expansion of the city prior to 1860 developed largely thanks to transportation. The Wabash River, the building of the National Road (now US 40) and the Wabash and Erie Canal linked Terre Haute to the world.

The city's range of influence was broad. Pork processing was previously a major industry of Terre Haute. It greatly declined following the Civil War.

Iron furnaces, foundries and rolling mills started up in and around the town with the discovery of coal in neighboring Clay County in 1867. These iron works were set up to meet the rising demands of the railroad companies.

Vigo County became the third largest coal producer and the fifth largest iron manufacturer in the state by 1870.

The economy was based on iron and steel mills, hominy plants and, late in the 19th century, distilleries, breweries and bottle makers.

Railroads supported the coal mines and coal operating companies, yet agriculture remained predominant, largely due to the role of corn in making alcoholic beverages and food items. The city was called the "Crossroads of America" due to the extensive rail and road network.

The increased labor population brought about by the factories introduced a tradition of strong union activity. The union activity caused many strikes, lockouts and bad relations between workers and employers.

Eugene V. Debs ran many times for president as the candidate of the Socialist Party. He was born in Terre Haute in 1871. He returned in 1921 and spent the last years of his life in that city.

The largest Ku Klux Klan rally ever held in Indiana took place in Forest Park on Saturday June 16, 1923 and through to the following dawn, five miles (8 km) north of Terre Haute. It was reported that Klansmen came from throughout Indiana and surrounding states.

Five thousand robed Klansmen paraded through the city at 9:00 pm. Tall crosses were burned on their return to the park six 30-foot (9.1 m). Fifteen hundred candidates were initiated into the Klan and 500 women joined the auxiliary.

Coca-Cola introduced its iconic green bottle in 1915. It was designed and manufactured locally at Root Glass Company. Authorities seized the largest moonshine still ever discovered in Vigo County on July 15, 1929 giving credit to the town's “Sin City” moniker.

Biography

Hubert Dreyfus was born on Oct. 15, 1929, in Terre Haute, Indiana. His father was Stanley Dreyfus, a businessman in the poultry industry. His mother was Irene Lederer Dreyfus, a homemaker. He was the older of two sons. His nickname was Bert.

Bert attended Wiley High School in Terre Haute. His success on the debate team paved his way to Harvard University. He majored in physics before switching to philosophy after hearing a lecture by American philosopher C.I. Lewis.

He earned three degrees at Harvard University. There was a BA summa cum laude in 1951, an MA in 1952 and a PhD in 1964. He is considered a leading interpreter of the work of Edmund Husserl, Michel Foucault, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Martin Heidegger.

He was an American philosopher and professor of philosophy at MIT and the University of California, Berkeley. He is known for his work on the philosophical implications of artificial intelligence.

Dreyfus published "Alchemy and Artificial Intelligence" while teaching at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1965. It was an attack on the work of Allen Newell and Herbert A. Simon, two of the leading researchers in AI.

Dreyfus not only questioned the results they had so far obtained, but he also criticized their basic presupposition that intelligence consists of the manipulation of physical symbols according to formal rules.

He spent time at the Rand Corporation while work on artificial intelligence was in progress in 1965. The first edition of What Computers Can’t Do would follow in 1972.

This critique of AI has been translated into at least ten languages. It would establish Dreyfus’s public reputation. It maintained the study and interpretation of “continental” philosophers as first in the order of his philosophical interests and influences.

He left MIT and became an associate professor of philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley in 1968.

All Things Shining was published in 2011. It was one year before he would be awarded full professorship. The book posited that human excellence is the best way to live life. It begins with those happy polytheists, the Greeks, who were less reflective than we are.

They were also less convinced that they were in control of the world. This left them open to experience things shine as works of art, to feel gratitude not only for the bounties of nature but for human excellence in all its forms, itself regarded as a gift.

It sought to revivify an experience of the sacred that is fitting for our “secular age.” The basic premise criticizes the modern view that the individual agent’s free choice alone determines what matters.

The polytheism of Homer and Melville is used to anchor the project. The observation that polytheism multiplies entities is a warning against letting the socialists and leftists run with the multiplication.

The story runs through Augustine and Dante to one of the multiple meanings entertained by the Greeks. The Incarnation unifies organization for benefit as a key feature of salvation.

Descartes moved the unified theme toward nihilism by making the will the basic aspect of human existence. The statement, "I think, therefore I am" indicated that thought was the operation of the will in the world. Kant amplified the error by making us the source of order.

That our autonomy was the highest good was criticized by Milton. The autonomy of will made the step from Kant to the misguided monotheism of Captain Ahab short.

Dreyfus retired from his chair in 1994, but continued as professor of philosophy in the Graduate School. He continued to teach philosophy at UC Berkeley until his last class in December 2016.

He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2001 and is a recipient of the Harbison Prize for Outstanding Teaching at UC Berkeley.

He died on April 22, 2017.

Phenomenology and existentialism are flawed. Phenomenlogy may appreciate the role that experiment has played in the formulations in social science, but it is similar to empiricism in that it reduces thought to a sub-conscious level of operation.

Experiments were something that were done in the past. The investment in learning from conducting an experiment as an investigation was reduced to learning by dogmatic science.

Existentialism applauds existence with a survivalist mentality. To survive is to be alive. To be alive is to have avoided deadly consequence of the random variety.

Argument is directed at the government to take money from the successful in the private sector as having been too successful. Business is a form of workaholism or exploitation.

Government officials are celebrated for their bureaucratic organization in the repression of achievement. Socialism is indicated as the economic order.

Dreyfus was critically reflective of the past in a way that suggested that culture can move forward in the appreciation of excellence.

His revival of the theme of greatness helped to move his use of the respective philosophies into something classically relevant and valuable.

Were it not for his personal integration for the broadest reach in expression, greatness according to phenomenlogy and existentialism would reduce to the condition of being alive.

His criticism of Artificial Intelligence was not expressed to destroy the computer industry. It was presented to keep human being directed toward the production of practical applications for the market.

He used philosophies that have been associated with socialism, leftism and nihilism in a way that didn't endorse them. He talked about them as social trends that indicate a general concern for society.

The trouble with socialism is grounded in the prejudice against success in the competition for power.
Leftists argue that the corruption of capitalism gives an unfair advantage to those with wealth, while they play for advantage by making their appeal to the body that makes demands without having taken the risk to organize capital for the means of production.

Hubert Dreyfus
S. 休伯特·德雷福斯
T. 休伯特·德雷福斯

休  Xiu   don't           休  kyu      rest           Hu  ひゅ-    ヒュ-        Heo 허  huh                                      伯  bo     senior         伯  haku    chief         ba   ば-     バ-                beo 버  burr         
特  te      unique        特  toku    special      to   と        ト                 teu  트  T             
德  De     goodness   德  toku    ethics        Do  ど        ド                Deu 드  de                   
雷  lei     terrific        雷  rai       thunder     rei  れい     レイ            le    레  re                         
福  fu     happiness    福  fuku    blessing    fa   ふぁ     ファ           pwi  퓌  P                                 
斯  si      this              斯  shi       this           su  す         ス                seu  스  S       
-----------------------

The specialness of the lightning bolt makes thunder
that rolls from the height of sky to the ground down under.

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

wiki Hubert Dreyfus
UC Berkeley H Dreyfus
NY Times Obit: Dreyfus and AI
Daily Nous: Dreyfus
Artificial Intelligence and Alchemy Text
wiki Artificial Intelligence and Alchemy

Artificial_Intelligence
What Computers Can't Do


The implication made by Dreyfus when he said that a god is a mood of power is that human being depends upon automated behavior even without computer technology. Success in the world relies on automated reactions with minimal thought. Difficulty arises when there isn't enough automated reason in the thought.

Even automated reactions require thought in order to make sense. The current campaign to investigate the president for impeachment has been based on prior success in forcing Nixon's resignation for his reduction of the troops in Vietnam and Clinton's increased involvement in Yugoslavia.

The Democrats didn't so much as take the time to think about how important probable cause is to conduct an investigation of any citizen, much less the leading citizen for the country.

They had established a pattern of accusation followed by defamation that depended on the charge that Nixon had ordered the break in to DNC HQ.

This charge was followed by the assertion that his destruction of the tape recordings made in his office was proof that he had ordered the break-in. It was never proved that he ordered a break-in at all. It was a strong indication that one of his advisers was acting as a mole.

The implication that he was a crook that had stolen the election with the theft of DNC information was used to defame his character in order to press him into resignation. This was done to insure a Democrat victory in the next election.

The Democrats in the House found it all too easy to make impeachment the news that the people had to consider with respect for the authority of the presidential office. They want to make the chief executive subordinate to their demands to increase expenditure for their benefit.

This isn't an issue of what the problem with capitalism is. It is the bureaucracy of socialism that is trying to control decisions for government on the hill. The Democrat effort to force election results for their majority wants to reduce government action to their on-going benefit.

This policy for prejudice was established by the Whigs for the Puritans after the English Civil War. They didn't represent the broadest interests of the people in the country. They represented the particular interests of the Puritans as though it were necessary for Protestants.

The Democrats don't represent democracy for the people. They use factionalist media expression to make it look like a faction's interest is more important than representation for the whole body.

They tell themselves that people will believe that their interests are being represented if they attack the chief executive and the largest social group with the charge of racism.

The process is too automated. It doesn't respect national security. It tests the public for belief in the Democrat investment in prejudice against conservative success in executive leadership.