Sigmund Freud



 Religions > Atheism > Sigmund Freud

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1

1

 
Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "Jong Kim"
Date: 14 Jun 2007 10:01:04 AM
Object: Sigmund Freud
"Christopher A.Lee" <calee@optonline.net> wrote in message
news:uka273tvt8lpd0g54l4tq0354sg9092k6n@4ax.com...

On Thu, 14 Jun 2007 02:46:59 -0700, "Jong Kim" <rhl71@hotmail.com>
wrote:

And how 'bout the late Francis 'Baconian freak' Crick? This arrogant
little hellbilly redtroll surely knows what's up now, i.e. his tormented
spirit.


You Sir, are a disgustingly nasty certifiable psychopath who lives in
a world of his own.

Last month I met and was impressed by a retired lady who had worked in
molecular genetics with Watson and also knew Crick. She had more
intelligence, understanding and knowledge in her little finger than
you do in your entire body.

It's sad that people like that grow old and retire, but their
contribution to the understanding of reality, and their contribution
to the future are immeasurable.

Unfortunately religion keeps trying to drag us back into the dark
ages.

Especially your kind that is based on hatred for those better educated
and less gullible than you are, who actually contribute to society and
civilisation.

James Clerk Maxwell (The Life of, p. 80, 1882):
TO L. CAMPBELL, Esq.
[June ? 1850]
....
Lemma: Metaphysics.-A man thinks, feels, and wills, and therefore
Metaphysicians give him the three faculties of cognition, feeling, and
conation. [142]
Cognition is what is called Understanding, and is most thought of
generally.
Feelings are pleasures, pains, appetites, desires, aversions, approval
and disapproval, love, hate, and all affections.
Conations are acts of will, whatever they be.
Now to move a man's will it is necessary to move his affections. (How?
Wait!) For no convictions of the understanding will do, for a man does what
he likes to do, not what he believes to be best for himself or others. The
feelings can only be moved by notions coming through the understanding,
for cognition is the only inlet of thoughts. Therefore, although it can be
proved that self-love leads to all goodness, or, in other words, that
goodness is happiness, and self loves happiness, yet it can also be
proved that men are not able to act rightly from pure self-love; so that
though self-love is a very fine theoretical principle, yet no man can keep
it
always in view, or act reasonably upon it. Now, most moralists take for
granted that the end which men, good or bad, pursue is their own happiness,
and that happiness, false or true, is the motive of every action, and that
it is the only right motive. Others say that benevolence is the only virtue,
and that any action not done expressly for the good of others is entitled to
no praise. Most of the ancients, and Hobbes among the moderns, are of
the first opinion. Hutcheson and Brown (I think) are of the second, and call
the first selfish Philosophers and the selfish school. A few consider
benevolence to the whole universe as the proper motive of every action,
but they all (says Macintosh) confound men's motives with the criterion of
right and wrong, the reason why a thing is right, and that which actually
causes
a man to do it. In every book on Moral Philosophy some reference is made
to that precept or maxim., which is declared to be the spirit of the law and
the prophets (see Matt. vii. 12), and the application of it is a good mark
of
the uppermost thoughts or mode of thinking of the author.
Jesus the Christ:
Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye
even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets.
~~Matthew 7:12
He that hateth me hateth my Father also.
~~John 15:23
===
God took seeds from different worlds and sowed them on this earth, and
His garden grew up and everything came up that could come up, but
what grows lives and is alive only through the feeling of its contact with
other mysterious worlds. If that feeling grows weak or is destroyed in you,
the heavenly growth will die away in you. Then you will be indifferent to
life and even grow to hate it.
~~Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov (1880)
7 And as all have not faith, seek ye diligently and teach one another words
of wisdom; yea, seek ye out of the best books words of wisdom, seek learning
even by study and also by faith;
(Doctrine and Covenants | Section 109:7)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Brothers_Karamazov
The Brothers Karamazov is the last novel by the Russian author Fyodor
Dostoevsky, generally considered the culmination of his life's work.
Dostoevsky spent nearly two years writing The Brothers Karamazov, which was
published as a serial in The Russian Messenger and completed in November of
1880. Dostoevsky intended it to be the first part in an epic story titled
The Life of a Great Sinner,[1] but he died fewer than four months after
publication.
The book is written on two levels: on the surface it is the story of a
parricide in which all of a murdered man's sons share varying degrees of
complicity but, on a deeper level, it is a spiritual drama of the moral
struggles between faith, doubt, reason, and free will. The novel was
composed mostly in Staraya Russa, which is also the main setting of the
book. ... The novel explores the existence of God, the nature of truth, and
the importance of forgiveness through the actions of its characters. ...
Each of the brothers played a part in his father's murder: Dmitri had the
motive, Ivan could justify the killing through rationalism, Smerdyakov
finally carried it out, and Alyosha, an otherwise benign character, did not
prevent the actions of his brothers although he clearly knew their true
desires.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oedipus_the_King
Oedipus the King (Greek, "Oedipus Tyrannos"), also known as Oedipus Rex,
is a Greek tragedy, written by Sophocles and first performed in 428 BC.
The play was the second of Sophocles' three Theban plays to be produced,
but comes first in the internal chronology of the plays, followed by Oedipus
at Colonus and then Antigone.
Journal of Discourses, Vol.20, Pg.201, George Q. Cannon, April 6, 1879:
It has come down to us from the Greeks and Romans, than whom a more
abominable lot of people never lived upon the earth. To read their books is
enough to make a man with the least feeling of modesty blush and be ashamed
of his race. Yet they are introduced into our literature. Whoever reads
Horace, Sallust, and numbers of those authors, well knows how full of
corruption they are. Not only crimes, but crimes against nature were
justified by some of the best and most noted of Greek philosophers, and were
practised by Sophocles, Socrates, and others; and yet this is the philosophy
that has come down to us.
8 And it was also, saith the Lord, that these things were also taught among
them before the flood which caused my wrath to be kindled against the
inhabitants of the whole earth.
9 And thus it is that as in the days of Noah, so are they even now, which is
the day of the coming of the Son of Man with the clouds of heaven, in this
day, saith the Lord God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
10 For it was that this anti-Christ, was he not detected in that day by my
servant Alma even as Freud hath he not also been detected in this day
through the medium of mine appointment, even my servant Art Bulla?
11 And this by the revelations which I the Lord God have given him.
12 And is not this medium in the power and might and wisdom thereof more
intelligent than all the earth which combined against mine anointed in these
things, in all ages of the world, even against Melchizedec who is of old and
who is one of the Ancients, saith the Lord?
Revelations of Jesus Christ 32:8-12

What's done cannot be undone, saith Lady Macbeth. The Holy Ghost
manifests now that Francis Crick is indeed in hell (at about 7:15 am).

On Nov. 10, 2006.

Crick the Freak is a hellbilly, quite literally. Let this be a warning

unto

all blasphemers and atheists.


You're a certifiable lunatic.

[reams of cut'n'paste pig-ignorant stupidity deleted]

1 HEARKEN, O ye Gentiles, and hear the words of Jesus Christ, the Son of the
living God, which he hath commanded me that I should speak concerning you,
for, behold he commandeth me that I should write, saying:
2 Turn, all ye Gentiles, from your wicked ways; and repent of your evil
doings, of your lyings and deceivings, and of your whoredoms, and of your
secret abominations, and your idolatries, and of your murders, and your
priestcrafts, and your envyings, and your strifes, and from all your
wickedness and abominations, and come unto me, and be baptized in my name,
that ye may receive a remission of your sins, and be filled with the Holy
Ghost, that ye may be numbered with my people who are of the house of
Israel.
(Book of Mormon | 3 Nephi 30:1 - 2)
.

 

NEWER

pg.3585     pg.2749     pg.2106     pg.1612     pg.1232     pg.940     pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER