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To: Talisker

With all due respect, reputable universities do not expend more than 10-minutes of classroom discussion if they discuss this tract at all on the musings of the Gita either in their religious; philosophy; or even comparative religion courses. I don’t mean to be disrespectful. This is simply a fact of life.

More time is spent on the writings of Aquinas’ and Augustine that any other theologian; scholar; and philosopher. Don’t take my word on this, go ask the chair of these departments and trying asking them about Gita and test for yourself the responses you get. I asked a friend of mine who studied comparative religions at Princeton and was told that she could not recall any extended discussion of this matter. 90% of the time was spent on Catholic dogmas; Judaism; Protestantism and some discussion on Moslem, Hinduism, and Buddhism. More was discussed on Buddhism because it is not confined simply to the Indian sub-continent.

I understand you inquiry for rational discussion and thought and this is good - but as Pope Benedict XVI (whom TIME magazine called a “walking theological encyclopaedia” Others have called him an “theological Einstein” ) states in his book “On The Way To Jesus Christ” that Catholic inquiry should not be faulted if at some point we say the search has ended and we have found the God of Creation in the Christ.

This is not a fear of reading other texts and treatises. Please remember that for centuries Catholic doctrine has been analyzed and scrutinized like no other school of thought or faith on this earth. Indeed, it was Benedict XVI who has urged that faith and reason must go together and his quoted passage from a Byzantine period on Islam led to riots not dialogue.

As a former professor of theology at Regensberg University in Germany his book is brilliant and illuminating a tour-de-force, indeed a sweeping panorama of several strands of intellectual thought on this topic from pre-Christian times.

The comment I made was not to slander a “billion” people but rather to avoid being politically correct and call a belief for what it is. The reference to “genocidal barbarians” was predicated on a news column that called Hindu massacre of Christian a “crime against humanity”

If tomorrow Catholics were to be intolerant of Hindus and start sacking their temples, as a student of constitutional history, I would be among the first to brand this as criminal and terroristic. The right to belief is absolute.


127 posted on 07/31/2009 9:24:46 PM PDT by Steelfish
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To: Steelfish
With all due respect, reputable universities do not expend more than 10-minutes of classroom discussion if they discuss this tract at all on the musings of the Gita either in their religious; philosophy; or even comparative religion courses. I don’t mean to be disrespectful. This is simply a fact of life.

You aren't treating me disrespectfully - you're treating those supposedly reputable universities with (presumably germane) courses on religion philosophy or comparative religion disrespectfully, by attributing to them a glaring lack of scholarliness and limited comprehension of their own fields.

Billions of people and thousands of years is not an exaggeration, you know. The Bhagavad Gita is literally that influential and revered. Disagree with it's teachings if you will, but to refuse to acknowledge it's global influence and acceptance is simplistic bigotry, not discussion.

And your tired repetition of the word "tract" is a sophmoric insult, meant solely to express disrespect while declaiming otherwise. How clever of you.

While you're at it, why not simply claim that India itself is inhabited by vast swaths of illiterate masses who's beliefs, practices, rituals and customs can only charitably be described as barbaric and unfit for accommodation in western societies?

Oh wait, you already did.

128 posted on 07/31/2009 9:55:40 PM PDT by Talisker (When you find a turtle on top of a fence post, you can be damn sure it didn't get there on it's own.)
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