MightiMidget wrote:I have a birdhouse in my soul, how much more in my life can they be?
Nate (post: 1405552) wrote:But the symbol itself doesn't have any power, or otherwise opening Wikipedia would turn your computer into like...some sort of Satan computer. So just using it in an anime or in a book or movie, means nothing. It's just a symbol, it has no power, same as a cross hanging on a necklace has no power.
Alcuinus (post: 1405376) wrote:I understand they are different... but by definition and your own admission, they are the same to a degree. They are different in degree but no one says "that's not magic"... if they did they admit it has appearance of such. For instance: If I went up to the theater and saw a Cats and Dogs poster and said "hm... that's a funny looking camel" pointing to the cat, you would think I'm nuts... because it's a cat. Therefore I see no reason to call it anything else.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Now, of course, we take this to the next level, and realize that written and spoken language is also symbols, thus are also innately meaningless.
Nate (post: 1405599) wrote:"Powerless" and "meaningless" are not synonyms.
Nate wrote:I do agree about words being innately meaningless but that's a discussion for another thread!
Nate (post: 1405509) wrote:XTC vs. Adam Ant
blkmage (post: 1405620) wrote:Suddenly, I feel like I should have taken my semiotics class earlier.
Atria35 wrote:I get the idea that's how most of us feel when they start going into stuff like this.
Htom Sirveaux (post: 1405676) wrote:That's philosophy for you. A form of overactive thought process which makes the simplest things seem bafflingly (and needlessly) complicated.
Kidding, Ryan. Please don't compose a ten thousand-word essay on how and why I'm wrong.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1405680) wrote:I was just going to blame it on one of them using the confundus charm. XD
Htom Sirveaux (post: 1405676) wrote:That's philosophy for you. A form of overactive thought process which makes the simplest things seem bafflingly (and needlessly) complicated.
Kidding, Ryan. Please don't compose a ten thousand-word essay on how and why I'm wrong.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:It's foolish to assume something is needlessly complicated just because you don't understand it.
blkmage (post: 1405851) wrote:Also, it is hilarious to me to imagine Margaret Thatcher getting briefed on Voldemort.
blkmage (post: 1405851) wrote:What I meant was, I wish I had the prerequisite knowledge to get in on this lovely discussion. I am actually going to take a class on semiotics (and lingusitics!) later on. After all, one of the first things we learn in computer science is that data (literally numbers) is meaningless without context. I'm actually fascinated by stuff like languages, whether human, programming, or formal, although most of my background is more grounded in the mathematical aspect.
rocklobster (post: 1408181) wrote:One thing that really bothers me about the Moral Guardians is that they quote Voldemort's philosophy that there is "no good or evil" (I forget the whole line and don't want to go through all my copies of the books hunting for it. Can someone who has a better memory give the exact quote?) as "proof" of the books being evil. All that proves is they're not bothering to do the research. I know from analyzing the Bible that context is always key when you're quoting. If you don't take the context surrounding the quote into account, you've lost the meaning. Traditionally, the villain is meant to be the antithesis of the writer's views. In other words, Voldemort is actually showing the reader what Rowling doesn't believe!
But then, some years ago, the same moral guardians thought C.S. Lewis was evil and trying to subvert Christianity. And he's actually well-known as a Christian. So sometimes, you can't win no matter what you do.
Yamamaya (post: 1408257) wrote:To be honest I feel like Christians are just wasting their time when they go after HP, D&D, LOTR, anime, etc. After all the Bible encourages us to spread the Gospel and to feed/clothe the poor. How are we doing either of these things by concentrating on fighting Harry Potter?
Radical Dreamer (post: 1408259) wrote:Agreed, and I really think the petty "you shouldn't read this because I think it's evil" argument entirely misses the point of Christianity. If "the greatest of these is love," then condemning one another over petty, disputable matters probably shouldn't even be in the equation.
rocklobster (post: 1408181) wrote:One thing that really bothers me about the Moral Guardians is that they quote Voldemort's philosophy that there is "no good or evil" (I forget the whole line and don't want to go through all my copies of the books hunting for it. Can someone who has a better memory give the exact quote?) as "proof" of the books being evil. All that proves is they're not bothering to do the research. I know from analyzing the Bible that context is always key when you're quoting. If you don't take the context surrounding the quote into account, you've lost the meaning. Traditionally, the villain is meant to be the antithesis of the writer's views. In other words, Voldemort is actually showing the reader what Rowling doesn't believe!
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