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Theme Changer

 Topic: It's Metaphorical!

 (Read 9400 times)
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  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #30 - May 03, 2009, 01:45 PM

    Neutrality is not wasted time on everyone, just the select few blockheads, may they be guided to rational thought, ameen. Wink

    I chose to get circumcised at 17, don't tell me I never believed.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #31 - May 03, 2009, 01:47 PM

    Neutrality is not wasted time on everyone, just the select few blockheads, may they be guided to rational though, ameen. Wink


    best'o'luck with that neutrality thing. I base my statement on my observations and you on yours. people have different paths and lead differant lives and therefore have different experiences.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #32 - May 03, 2009, 02:30 PM

    I don't know why I'm getting so many hate messages on Youtube over my latest video?

    In fact I don't understand why Muslims can't see that I'm not a hater - and always make a huge effort to be concilatory.

    Yet I still get this sort of thing:

    Muslim4ever59
    Allah has reserved a punishment for you and other hypocrites.
    22: 19 As for the unbelievers for them garments of fire shall be cut and there shall be poured over their heads boiling water whereby whatever is in their bowls and skin shall be dissolved and they will be punished with hooked iron rods


    and:

    NewUC
    discussislam; Don't you have anything to do other than showing your stupidity?

    You stupid, u r basing your arguments on your points of viewa then claims it is the Muslims point of view, you are shit liar!




    A non muslim taking a critical approach to islam=a non muslim taking a critical approach to islam. Whether you are calling for muslims to be dragged off to the dungeons or for reform you are the same person in most peoples minds, you are rejecting the truth. They cant distinguish between the former and latter and thus you are wasting your time in attempting neutrality.


    I'm not entirely sure I understand what you are saying here. I am obviously not neutral, since I speak from a non believing perspective and am criticising Islam.

    I do try to be polite and friendly.

    Are you suggesting I should be rude and unfriendly?
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #33 - May 03, 2009, 02:34 PM

    I don't know why I'm getting so many hate messages on Youtube over my latest video?

    In fact I don't understand why Muslims can't see that I'm not a hater - and always make a huge effort to be concilatory.

    Yet I still get this sort of thing:

    Muslim4ever59
    Allah has reserved a punishment for you and other hypocrites.
    22: 19 As for the unbelievers for them garments of fire shall be cut and there shall be poured over their heads boiling water whereby whatever is in their bowls and skin shall be dissolved and they will be punished with hooked iron rods


    and:

    NewUC
    discussislam; Don't you have anything to do other than showing your stupidity?

    You stupid, u r basing your arguments on your points of viewa then claims it is the Muslims point of view, you are shit liar!




    A non muslim taking a critical approach to islam=a non muslim taking a critical approach to islam. Whether you are calling for muslims to be dragged off to the dungeons or for reform you are the same person in most peoples minds, you are rejecting the truth. They cant distinguish between the former and latter and thus you are wasting your time in attempting neutrality.


    I'm not entirely sure I understand what you are saying here. I am obviously not neutral, since I speak from a non believing perspective and am criticising Islam.

    I do try to be polite and friendly.

    Are you suggesting I should be rude and unfriendly?


    Sorry my message was un-clear; I failed in that regard. What I was meaning is these people wouldn't distinguish between you and a hater like Ali Sina or a blunt critic agenda filled idiot like Michael Savage simply on the fact that you try not to be too critical/try to be objective (as you say being polite) by not using inflammatory or hateful language. I dont think you should refrain, but dont expect praise or recognition for being nice.

    you are still talking about their holy beliefs, whether you do it nicely or not. Few are going to make the distinction.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #34 - May 03, 2009, 02:44 PM

    Sorry my message was un-clear; I failed in that regard. What I was meaning is these people wouldn't distinguish between you and a hater like Ali Sina or a blunt critic agenda filled idiot like Michael Savage simply on the fact that you try not to be too critical/try to be objective (as you say being polite) by not using inflammatory or hateful language. I dont think you should refrain, but dont expect praise or recognition for being nice.

    you are still talking about their holy beliefs, whether you do it nicely or not. Few are going to make the distinction.


    OK, gotcha  Afro

    Yes, I guess I really shouldn't be surprised that many Muslims can't distinguish between hate and criticism.

    Though I should add that not all Muslims react like this and I will never give up trying to be polite and conciliatory as I do have faith in human beings.. I was quite pleasantly surprised when I read a thread (started by an ex-Muslim) on a Muslim forum where most of the replies were rational and quite friendly. There some nit-wits, but hey! lol

    Here it is if anyone is interested - it's called "Musing from a Murtad". (I didn't start the thread, but I posted a couple of times on it - my nick is Mahmoud):

    http://forum.mpacuk.org/showthread.php?t=41924

    Smiley
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #35 - May 03, 2009, 02:46 PM

    Sorry my message was un-clear; I failed in that regard. What I was meaning is these people wouldn't distinguish between you and a hater like Ali Sina or a blunt critic agenda filled idiot like Michael Savage simply on the fact that you try not to be too critical/try to be objective (as you say being polite) by not using inflammatory or hateful language. I dont think you should refrain, but dont expect praise or recognition for being nice.

    you are still talking about their holy beliefs, whether you do it nicely or not. Few are going to make the distinction.


    OK, gotcha  Afro

    Yes, I guess I really shouldn't be surprised that many Muslims can't distinguish between hate and criticism.

    Though I should add that not all Muslims react like this and I will never give up trying to be polite and conciliatory as I do have faith in human beings.. I was quite pleasantly surprised when I read a thread (started by an ex-Muslim) on a Muslim forum where most of the replies were rational and quite friendly. There some nit-wits, but hey! lol

    Here it is if anyone is interested - it's called "Musing from a Murtad". (I didn't start the thread, but I posted a couple of times on it - my nick is Mahmoud):

    http://forum.mpacuk.org/showthread.php?t=41924

    Smiley


    Like I said to Awais best of luck to you, different viewpoints are based on different observations and experiences.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #36 - May 03, 2009, 03:00 PM

    I was quite pleasantly surprised when I read a thread (started by an ex-Muslim) on a Muslim forum where most of the replies were rational and quite friendly. There some nit-wits, but hey! lol

    Here it is if anyone is interested - it's called "Musing from a Murtad". (I didn't start the thread, but I posted a couple of times on it - my nick is Mahmoud):

    http://forum.mpacuk.org/showthread.php?t=41924

    Smiley

    Thanks for sharing that.  Afro I'm liking "Mukhtar_Scotland"

    Quote from: Mukhtar_Scotland
    Surely, the best and most effective form of dawah is to respectfully listen to other peoples views and display some of the most noblest aspects of Islam as a shining example of all that is good in our religion? Tolerance, compassion, fairness, the list is long.

    ....It never fails to dismay me that despite our religion, Muslims are so adept at displaying intolerance and anger towards those we fear or disagree with.

    You fear his ability to subvert others yet resort to petty insults about psychiatrists rather than continue a civilised dialogue with him. Do you find this to be an effective method of debate or does it in fact lend him more credibility to those that might be open to his message?


    JerseyLily has it in for you Hass. Grin

    I chose to get circumcised at 17, don't tell me I never believed.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #37 - May 03, 2009, 05:05 PM

    I was quite pleasantly surprised when I read a thread (started by an ex-Muslim) on a Muslim forum where most of the replies were rational and quite friendly. There some nit-wits, but hey! lol

    Here it is if anyone is interested - it's called "Musing from a Murtad". (I didn't start the thread, but I posted a couple of times on it - my nick is Mahmoud):

    http://forum.mpacuk.org/showthread.php?t=41924

    Smiley

    Thanks for sharing that.  Afro I'm liking "Mukhtar_Scotland"

    Quote from: Mukhtar_Scotland
    Surely, the best and most effective form of dawah is to respectfully listen to other peoples views and display some of the most noblest aspects of Islam as a shining example of all that is good in our religion? Tolerance, compassion, fairness, the list is long.

    ....It never fails to dismay me that despite our religion, Muslims are so adept at displaying intolerance and anger towards those we fear or disagree with.

    You fear his ability to subvert others yet resort to petty insults about psychiatrists rather than continue a civilised dialogue with him. Do you find this to be an effective method of debate or does it in fact lend him more credibility to those that might be open to his message?


    JerseyLily has it in for you Hass. Grin


    I know! And she said I have been invited to discuss with some good Sheikhs but I have refused - that's complete rubbish. (I have been invited a couple of times and I did go each time. I was invited onto a TV show with Tareq Ramadan to debate the subject of Kufr, but that is quite different. I did decline that offer, but for other reasons.)
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #38 - May 03, 2009, 05:10 PM

    She never apologised to that other guy for accusing him of multi-nicking as you either, and then Illuminate topped it off by accusing you of removing one of your vids because of him  Huh? wacko

    Two great examples of how religion teaches people to be honest, fair minded and humble. 

    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #39 - May 03, 2009, 06:09 PM

    Hassan, I didn't know you were such a celebrity!

    I want to run an experiment on you all, on "metaphors" in Quran and hadiths. As I have mentioned several times, I don't believe the Quran is metaphoric -- but I take a broad view of metaphor as signs substituted for signs, and, consequently, all interpretation (including the literalist, the allegorical and my own!) is metaphoric. But never mind that.

    Let's do this experiment now.

    Let's assume, with straight-up standard Sunni Islam, that the Quran, Bukhari and Muslim should be taken as a unified set of texts for the religion. The latter two are only ignored if the Quran has something better to say.

    Most people here (including my mystical brother Ned) agree with the literalists that there is no Judaic "code-language" used within Islam: it is all rules, souped up with some nice poetry from time to time. (The irony is that even when Hassan agrees with the literalists, they go psycho on his ass.) Any "code" we might obtain from these texts is post-event, and was not historically present at the moment of Muhammed's revelation.

    So here are some hadiths. I use hadiths, not the book of the Quran. But, as I am hyper-salafi, I view the hadiths and the Quran as a consistent, unified body. So, for me, if there is any code present in the hadiths, there at least a legitimate "historically authentic" reason for investigating code in the Quran. (Of course, I as I try my best to be atemporal in my practice, historical authenticity absolutely doesn't bother me, but I understand this is an important question nevertheless)

    I will not attempt to give any interpretation using what I know about Judaic code-language. There is no need to mention, for example, the seven lower names of God and in the configuration of the original man, nor the significance of Water, nor the left and right hand sides of the body in the Gospels and Torah. I have done this elsewhere and it is unnecessary for our experiment.

    Instead, I want you to answer me one question: do these
    stories make
       a) a straightforward, literally interpretable demonstration of a Lawmaking,
    clearly political Islam,
       b) an unclear and obscure point, possibly using some kind of
    peculiar references which many people will obviously not get or
      c) just insane nonsense.

    If you answer a) in all cases, then we are in disagreement. If you answer b), then you must grant that there is an historically legitimate reason for attempting to decode this (even if you think that the ultimate decoding is not a particularly useful thing for me to be doing or proves that Islam as a religion for all humanity is an oxymoron). If you answer c) we are still on the same page: if the hadiths are madness, then the Quran is madness, the Prophecy is madness, and so again a non-literal understanding is necessary (if a madman tells his analyst that he is Napoleon, then
    the analyst won't get very far by assuming the madman's world to be a literal one).

    For my part of the exercise, I simply picked some hadiths at random off the internet. Perhaps you have encountered them before, and you can probably imagine a salafi's attempt to understand them. Please tell me if a Salafi has a legitimate right to take these hadiths literally rather than hyper-literally.

    FIRST HADITH:
    Muslim, Book 23, Number 5120:
    Abu Huraira reported that Allah's Messenger  invited a non-Muslim. Allah's Messenger commanded that a goat be milked for him. It was milked and he drank its milk. Then the second one was milked and he drank its milk, and then the other one was milked and he drank its milk till he drank the milk of seven goats. On the next morning he embraced Islam. And Allah's Messenger  commanded that a goat should be milked for him and he drank its milk and then another was milked but he did not finish it, whereupon Allah's Messenger said: A believer drinks In one intestine whereas a non-believer drinks in seven intestines.

    SECOND HADITH:
    Volume 3, Book 45, Number 685:
    Narrated Anas:
    No doubt, the Prophet mortgaged his armor for barley grams. Once I took barley bread with some dissolved fat on it to the Prophet and I heard him saying, "The household of Muhammad did not possess except a sa (of food grain, barley, etc.) for both the morning and the evening meals although they were nine houses."

    Volume 3, Book 45, Number 686:
    Narrated 'Aisha:
    The Prophet bought some foodstuff on credit for a limited period and mortgaged his armor for it.

    Volume 3, Book 45, Number 690:
    Narrated 'Aisha:
    Allah's Apostle bought some foodstuff from a Jew and mortgaged his armor to him.


    THIRD HADITH:
    Book 23, Number 5088:
    Sa'id b. Zaid reported Allah's Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying : Mushrooms are manna which Allah, the Exalted the Majestic, sent to the people of Israil, and its juice is a medicine for the eyes.

    FOURTH HADITH:
    Volume 3, Book 40, Number 541:
    Narrated Sahl bin Sad:
    A tumbler (full of milk or water) was brought to the Prophet who drank from it, while on his right side there was sitting a boy who was the youngest of those who were present and on his left side there were old men. The Prophet asked, "O boy, will you allow me to give it (i.e. the rest of the drink) to the old men?" The boy said, "O Allah's Apostle! I will not give preference to anyone over me to drink the rest of it from which you have drunk." So, the Prophet gave it to him.

    AND FINALLY ... FROM TORAH
    Let's go further, and say the "code-language" that, for example, the Kabbalists claim lies in the Torah, is in fact a sort of mystical apology for the barbarism that was originally present in that text. This was used as an argument by a lot of Christian theologians to justify the idea
    that the New Testament is not contiguous with the Old Testament, and that the "angry" God of the Old is replaced by the "loving" God of the New. A Christian Kabbalist would have less of a problem negotiating the loving message of Jesus with the rather harsh code-language of the Torah (and certainly Jesus himself says that he comes to complete the "Law" of Moses). At any rate, give me and a) b) or c) for the following "straightforward piece of Shariah" from Exodus:

    When you buy a male Hebrew slave, he shall serve six years, but in the seventh he shall go out a free person, without debt. If he comes in single, he shall go out single; if he comes in married, then his wife shall go out with him. If his master gives him a wife and she bears him sons or daughters, the wife and her children shall be her masters' and he shall go out alone. But if the slave delcares, ?I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go out a free person,? then his master shall bring him before God. He shall be brought to the door or the doorpost; and his master shall pierce his ear with an awl; and he shall serve him for life. (Exodus 21:2-7)




    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #40 - May 03, 2009, 06:47 PM

    Hassan, I didn't know you were such a celebrity!


    LOL... I assure you I am not. Actually I only got invited on that show (and it is some obscure Satellite show) because a former pupil of mine at Islamia School now works in the production team and she asked the producer to invite me.

    FIRST HADITH:
    Muslim, Book 23, Number 5120:
    Abu Huraira reported that Allah's Messenger  invited a non-Muslim. Allah's Messenger commanded that a goat be milked for him. It was milked and he drank its milk. Then the second one was milked and he drank its milk, and then the other one was milked and he drank its milk till he drank the milk of seven goats. On the next morning he embraced Islam. And Allah's Messenger  commanded that a goat should be milked for him and he drank its milk and then another was milked but he did not finish it, whereupon Allah's Messenger said: A believer drinks In one intestine whereas a non-believer drinks in seven intestines.


    Well I'm not going to attempt to say what I think each of those hadith mean (because I don't know what most of them mean), but I think you have selected some particularly weird ones.

    Though of course I am well aware there is some really peculiar stuff in the Hadith literature - I remember a long time ago reading one that said something like the world was a drop of sweat on a black stallions neck blah blah blah... really weird shit!

    But I think there could be several reasons for this.

    1. Yes it may well be that Muhammad was being mystical - but not necessarily because he was talking in some sort of code that we can unlock - but more likely because ancient prophets, soothsayers, seers, gnostics, hermits, Kahins etc... all talked in this sort of babble. It made them look good and sound as if they knew some higher knowledge and created an aura around them. (as a school teacher who has worked with kids for 20 years I know how that using words like "secret!", "Magic!" etc... really get those kids attention lol)

    2. Some may well seem weird but had a pretty straightfoward meaning that is no longer immediately apparent or because the context is lost we are unaware of. (I remember a hadith that Muhammad once ordered those who have eaten camels meat to make wudu again - but he said that because someone had farted and didn't want to single him out).
     
    3. People wrote down everything Muhammad did and said - even completely random stuff. (we all do random stuff)

    4. A great many hadith - including some of the most weird ones - are more than likely later creations. In the case of the weird ones, they are probably creations of gnostic/sufi inclined Muslims after Muhammad had died and Islam had spread to lands where they already had gnostic traditions.

  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #41 - May 03, 2009, 07:50 PM

    Hassan,

    So I take it your answer is a) for these particular hadiths?

    Or should I take it that you are undecided, but insist that there was no code present at the origin of Islam, and offer possibilities 1-4 as the preferable alternative?

    Remember, you are talking to a True Salafi here, so obviously 4) is right out Smiley Although the implication would be that the stories were made up after Muhammed's death, but before Bukhari and Muslim collected the stories OR that Bukhari himself made them up and had Sufi tendencies (which would explain why he was constantly being driven out from the cities that he preached at, for blasphemy): try putting that on your next youtube clip!

    3) is fine: but for me, as a religious person, there is always a Reason behind the Random. And, for me, another name for Reason is Code ...

    2) I am unsure how convincing this is. Presumably Bukhari didn't collect half-written stories. What would be the point? But I could imagine a Salafi using such an argument as a defense: "Oh, there is a literal interpretation there somewhere, but only half the story is written down, so only Allah knows the meaning." It's a cop out, though, I think you will agree.

    1) This is very much an a) response, as it hinges on Muhammed (and Moses too, assuming your criticism also holds over that bit of the Torah at the end of my post) being sneaky enough to use cryptic sounding poetic conceits in order to get the mass's attention. Well, if this is the case, bravo Muhammed and Moses!
     This means there is no value in such a code, it is simply a random vocabulary used to convince people by sounding confusing. But the arguments before were that the attraction of Islam was that it presents a universal, straightforward message to all humankind, devoid of confusion. Telling us clearly what is right (zakaat, brushing with miswaak, growing your beard) from what is wrong (having more than 4 wives, ursury). This is apparently the attraction of Islam: clarity.
     To imply 1) is to say that a "fake" or "insincere" code was present in Muhammed's time. Just used to convert people through confusion.
     Once you admit the presence of any kind of code (fake or otherwise) within the time of the prophet, then all arguments for and against a 100% literalist Islam get infected by the possibility of code. (Tailor's syndrome is the medical condition.)
     But if you admit this, then you have to admit it is an historically authentic activity to investigate this "fake" code to check its consistency with respect to the codes of the Torah and Gospels (fake or otherwise).
     What do I mean by "consistency"? I mean, is this "faking" a knowledgeable one or an ignorant cut-and-paste? I have had debates with Christians and Jews who argue that Muhammed cut-and-paste language and terminology from their books, with maybe a limited understanding of the "true" code they had present. E.g., there is an argument that many sayings from the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas (one of those "secret" esoteric books that the Catholic and Orthodox Churches banned) appear in the Quran. Maybe he read these books, understood bits of the code and added it to his text to gain political power.
     In my investigation, I have found the code of Muhammed to be perfectly consistent with the codes of the earlier books. The modes of speech are identical, in my view.

     Of course, following 1) to its conclusion, the skeptic would say the entire Judao-Christian-Islamic religions are full of mysterious passages to con people. And then we are obviously in disagreement.

     But still, following 1) means that you have diverged from those Salafis on your youtube clip, who will fight (to the death, in some cases) the possibility of ANY code being present in the works. Which is to say, you have left their dialectic and must move into a new debate against Islam, based on the idea of a Muhammed who works with code, but to manipulate and bewilder. And at this point, you do get closer to my view, because manipulation and bewilderment are certainly the name of the religious game for me: but obviously I take these as positive, personal things rather than negative, political objectives (and so we diverge again).

    Anyone else?

    BTW I think it's too bad you turned down Tariq Ramadan -- that would have been an interesting one! Although it might have ended up a sort of replay of this, which I guess most of you have been following:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtO5Zo9grz4
    (I prefer Ayaan over Ramadan in terms of authenticity.)



    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #42 - May 03, 2009, 08:58 PM

    So I take it your answer is a) for these particular hadiths?

    Or should I take it that you are undecided, but insist that there was no code present at the origin of Islam, and offer possibilities 1-4 as the preferable alternative?


    I don't believe there is any code there - at least no coherent code that is part of some divine message. (Of course I'm aware Muhammad believed he was carrying on the Judaic traditions.)

    Remember, you are talking to a True Salafi here, so obviously 4) is right out Smiley


    You can believe what you want. But I don't regard them as all authentically the words of Muhammad.

    if you admit this, then you have to admit it is an historically authentic activity to investigate this "fake" code to check its consistency with respect to the codes of the Torah and Gospels (fake or otherwise)


    No.  I'm saying that these sorts of things are just meaningless babble - and are not worth investigating.

    But still, following 1) means that you have diverged from those Salafis on your youtube clip, who will fight (to the death, in some cases) the possibility of ANY code being present in the works. Which is to say, you have left their dialectic and must move into a new debate against Islam, based on the idea of a Muhammed who works with code, but to manipulate and bewilder.


    I have always been very well aware that Muhammad used mysterious language to grab the attention of his audience. That doesn't change the fact that I believe he meant most of what he said quite literally. Hell, killing polytheists, Hitting wives, lashing/stoning adulterers, cutting hands of thieves, owning slaves, inferiority of women, reduced status of non-Muslims, killing homosexuals and apostates etc...
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #43 - May 03, 2009, 09:50 PM

    NewUC
    you are shit liar!


    As in you're not very good at the whole lying malarkey!? Cheesy

    "At 8:47 I do a grenade jump off a ladder."
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #44 - May 03, 2009, 09:54 PM

    Thanks Hassan, all clear: so you feel that these passages are basically a kind of incoherent babble, possibly utilizing symbolic or archetypical terminology to attract people, but not in a systematic or coded fashion. Certainly not in any valuable or Divine fashion. And you believe that any possible additional meaning or coherent symbolism present in these hadiths was invented by people after Muhammed who knew better (presumably Bukhari, unless his books were altered after him).

    Would you say the same thing (regarding the use of the term "slave") in that passage of Torah I gave as well?

    Repeated below:

    When you buy a male Hebrew slave, he shall serve six years, but in the seventh he shall go out a free person, without debt. If he comes in single, he shall go out single; if he comes in married, then his wife shall go out with him. If his master gives him a wife and she bears him sons or daughters, the wife and her children shall be her masters' and he shall go out alone. But if the slave delcares, ?I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go out a free person,? then his master shall bring him before God. He shall be brought to the door or the doorpost; and his master shall pierce his ear with an awl; and he shall serve him for life. (Exodus 21:2-7)


    The Divisions of Love, second album by my Cabbalacore band, the Friends of Design, out now:

    https://vimeo.com/110528857
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #45 - May 03, 2009, 09:58 PM

    BTW I think it's too bad you turned down Tariq Ramadan -- that would have been an interesting one! Although it might have ended up a sort of replay of this, which I guess most of you have been following:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtO5Zo9grz4
    (I prefer Ayaan over Ramadan in terms of authenticity.)





    I love the bit where he goes: "You are muslim, PUNK SLUT!"



    (Yes I know what it actually means...)

    "At 8:47 I do a grenade jump off a ladder."
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #46 - May 03, 2009, 11:04 PM

    Thanks Hassan, all clear: so you feel that these passages are basically a kind of incoherent babble, possibly utilizing symbolic or archetypical terminology to attract people, but not in a systematic or coded fashion. Certainly not in any valuable or Divine fashion.


    Yes, that's pretty much what I think.

    And you believe that any possible additional meaning or coherent symbolism present in these hadiths was invented by people after Muhammed who knew better (presumably Bukhari, unless his books were altered after him).


    No. I don't think there is any consistently coherent code in there at all. I do believe that some hadiths are later fabrications where people projected later ideas - be they mystical, philosophical, sectarian or political - back onto the prophet - so they could gain divine sanction for their ideas/beliefs (This is accepted by many modern scholars of Islam - including some Muslim ones.)

    Would you say the same thing (regarding the use of the term "slave") in that passage of Torah I gave as well?


    I don't know the Old Testament well enough to comment on that.
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #47 - May 05, 2009, 09:33 PM

    @ Tailor

    Have you ever seen Monty Python's the Life of Brian.

    The scene below is how I imagine many a prophet began - babbling away to a small crowd on Market day.

    In fact Mecca was known for it's soothsayers and fortuneteller and religious men of all types - not to mention poets (who were also believed to be in touch with the supernatural) - all amazing the crowd with mysterious words or half-truths mixed with fantasy or just plain crazy jumbled up gobbeldy-gook nonsense:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIRb8TigJ28
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #48 - May 05, 2009, 09:37 PM

    And this is the next part when Brian drops onto one of these 'Prophets' and so tries his hand at being a prophet until the Roman soldiers chasing him pass by - the crowd mock him until... Until he stops mid way and walks away without finishing his sentence - suddeny they all want to know what he's hiding, because he appears to know a "secret" and now has an aura of mystery about him lol...

    That's the way of getting ppls attention! Wink

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9czBBKof7Yo
  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #49 - May 05, 2009, 10:42 PM

    Look at all the early Suras Muhammad came out with - they were all attention grabbers - mysterious, dramatic imagery aimed and drawing in ppls attention with startling and mysterious imagery.

    For example Al-'Aadiyaat

    By the (Stallions) that run, with panting (breath),
    And strike sparks of fire,
    And push home the charge in the morning,
    And raise the dust in clouds the while,
    And penetrate forthwith into the midst (of the foe) en masse...


    OR a-Tariq

    The (Day) of Noise and Clamour:
    What is the (Day) of Noise and Clamour?
    And what will explain to thee what the (Day) of Noise and Clamour is?
    (It is) a Day whereon men will be like moths scattered about,
    And the mountains will be like carded wool...

  • Re: It's Metaphorical!
     Reply #50 - May 05, 2009, 10:50 PM

    Yeah, and once he started attracting a crowd he had to learn how to control them, which led to...................

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
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