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INNO: Incredulity - Its Credo - NOT Facts!  (C)   Jón Erlendsson 2006
http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/philo_Incredulity_Its_Credo_Not_Facts_1.htm     
 
Incredulity - Its Credo - NOT Facts!
Jón Erlendsson:       News   MBL   RUV    BBC  GN     BREAK WF    See JE-Principles   Logic   Methods
    
"It is striking how great influence Incredulity and Credulousness (beliefs etc.) - have in human affairs. 
Yet, it is well known how we displace these with real facts. 

See also Logic

Long after new ideas have been proposed
- they are still debated on these slippery bases

when we can
-  replace them speedily with elementary logic
- or better - with testing.  Sometimes quite quickly.

Credo should only be a very temporary affair
- labeled from its birth
as a quite unsatisfactory state of mind
to be quickly replaced with evidence!


AND never given much weight. 

BUT the common fact is quite the reverse. Credo reigns!

THE MOTTO: 

Place beliefs in a mental limbo - never to be taken too seriously
and to be replaced with facts at the earliest possible moment!

 
   
 
More later.

JE 2006-04-18 
  (ŢRIĐ)  11.56   N5    
Actually: "Its elementary"  (ELEM)    Project Clarity
       
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From: wiki.cotch.net    NEWS  GO  LK

"Argument from incredulity"

 

See Source Article

 
See   JECOSMO   Failed   HRIK   Beliefs  Barriers   COD Swallowing
 
 

 


Creed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Credo)

 

A creed is a statement of belief — usually religious belief — or faith.The word derives from the Latin credo for I believe.

Contents

 

 

Christian creeds

Christianity, affirming that God has been begotten and manifest in the human being Jesus, has formulated a number of statements of faith that seek to assert his doctrine.

In this sense, perhaps the earliest statement of Christian faith is the slogan affirming that Jesus is Lord, which appears in St Paul's Epistle to the Romans 10:9. The meaning and importance of this slogan comes from its affirmation that Jesus Christ is the full revelation of the God Yahweh of Judaism made incarnate, a doctrine thought impossible and indeed blasphemous by the rest of the Jewish community.

As Christianity wrestled with the implications of this statement, its developing theology required more complex formulations.

 

Apostles' Creed

It is likely that the earliest creed of Christianity that deserves the title in full is the Apostles' Creed. Christian mythology attributes this creed to all twelve Apostles as a joint composition, and assigns one phrase of the creed to each Apostle. This attribution is unlikely, but the creed itself is quite old; it seems to have developed from a catechism used in the baptism of adults, and in that form can be traced as far back as the second century. The Apostles' Creed seems to have been formulated to resist Docetism and similar ideas associated with Gnosticism; it emphasizes the birth, physical death, and bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ.

The Nicene Creed clearly derives from the Apostles' Creed, and equally obviously represents an elaboration of its basic themes. The most salient additions to this creed are much more elaborate statements concerning Christology and the Trinity. These reflect the concerns of the First Council of Nicaea in 325 A. D., and have their chief purpose the rejection of Arianism, which the church adjudged a heresy. In the Roman Catholic liturgy the Nicene Creed is repeated during each Mass.

Christians today probably use the Nicene Creed most widely, followed by the Apostles Creed.

 

A creed as a catalogue of heresies

In an atmosphere of increasingly complicated theological controversy, orthodox belief might become more complicated in outline. In the decade before 594, Gregory, bishop of Tours set out to write a Historia Francorum ("History of the Franks"). In Gaul, a part of Europe recently beset with both royal Arians and royal pagans (until the conversion of Clovis), Gregory prefaced his history with a declaration of his faith, "so that my reader may have no doubt that I am Catholic" (Book I.i). The confession is in many phrases, each of which refutes a specific Christian heresy. Thus Gregory's creed presents, in negative, a virtual catalogue of heresies:

I believe, then, in God the Father omnipotent. I believe in Jesus Christ his only Son, our Lord God, born of the Father, not created. [I believe] that he has always been with the Father, not only since time began but before all time. For the Father could not have been so named unless he had a son; and there could be no son without a father. But as for those who say: "There was a time when he was not," [note: A leading belief of Arian Christology.] I reject them with curses, and call men to witness that they are separated from the church. I believe that the word of the Father by which all things were made was Christ. I believe that this word was made fresh and by its suffering the world was redeemed, and I believe that humanity, not deity, was subject to the suffering. I believe that he rose again on the third day, that he freed sinful man, that he ascended to heaven, that he sits on the right hand of the Father, that he will come to judge the living and the dead. I believe that the holy Spirit proceeded from the Father and the Son, that it is not inferior and is not of later origin, but is God, equal and always co­eternal with the Father and the Son, consubstantial in its nature, equal in omnipotence, equally eternal in its essence, and that it has never existed apart from the Father and the Son and is not inferior to the Father and the Son. I believe that this holy Trinity exists with separation of persons, and one person is that of the Father, another that the Son, another that of the Holy Spirit. And in this Trinity confess that there is one Deity, one power, one essence. I believe that the blessed Mary was a virgin after the birth as she was a virgin before. I believe that the soul is immortal but that nevertheless it has no part in deity. And I faithfully believe all things that were established at Nicća by the three hundred and eighteen bishops. But as to the end of the world I hold beliefs which I learned from our forefathers, that Antichrist will come first. An Antichrist will first propose circumcision, asserting that he is Christ; next he will place his statue in the temple at Jerusalem to be worshipped, just as we read that the Lord said: "You shall see the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place." But the Lord himself declared that that day is hidden from all men, saying; "But of that day and that hour knoweth no one not even the anger in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father alone." Moreover we shall here make answer to the heretics [note: the Arians] who attack us, asserting that the Son is inferior to the Father since he is ignorant of this day. Let them learn then that Son here is the name applied to the Christian people, of whom God says: "I shall be to them a father and they shall be to me for sons." For if he had spoken these words of the only­begotten Son he would never have given the angels first place. For he uses these words: "Not even the angels in heaven nor the Son," showing that he spoke these words not of the only-begotten but of the people of adoption. But our end is Christ himself, who will graciously bestow eternal life on us if we turn to him." [1]

 

Other creeds

Other notable creeds include the:

 

Islamic creeds

The most basic attempt to put the religion of Islam in a brief statement of doctrine is the shahada, the proclamation that there is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is His prophet.

More detailed credal declarations of Islamic dogma constitute aqidah.

 

See also

 

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Material from WIKIPEDIA:   "This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, which means that you can copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license"   http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html      Jón Erlendsson 2006
See also Wikipedia   Creative Commons    Open Access Publishing    Open Content   Open Source  E-Books JE-Excellence

 

 

 

FNF: Nýtt á vefnum  http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/n.htm 
References and various items    See HELP  JE-2005
  1. FNF: SoulPad A portable Computing Environment SOURCE: Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/mem-SoulPad.htm
  2. "Vantage Learning Selected as an Eduventures 100 Company
    Chosen as one of eight most innovative companiesREF
    FNF: Vantage Learning: Computerized Essay Scoring  http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ha-Computerized-Scoring.htm

  3. INNO: "the engineer of the future will be called upon to become a leader"  Wulf Heroes  http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/2020-c.htm    engfut1.htm

  4. " For ultimate convenience, install 1-Click AnswersTM software, and click on any word in any
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  5. Posted on Thu, Aug. 11, 2005


    United States has crisis in innovation


    Pacific Rim nations pose a threat to the engineering prowess and renowned
    innovation of the United States.

    BY KEVIN G. HALL

    Knight Ridder News Service
    "The NSF tries to target resources to developing breakthrough technologies that hold both
    commercial and scientific applications. But its total research-support budget this year is
    $4.2 billion, which doesn't go far when the high-tech equipment involved often costs many
    millions of dollars. Bush Trillion Budget

    ''In the longer term, when you couple the manpower issue in science and engineering with
    the lack of [federal] investments, we are slipping. There's just no other way you can
    interpret that,'' said Giddens, the Georgia Tech engineering dean.

    U.S. universities continue awarding more doctoral degrees in engineering than
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    foreign nationals received 58 percent of the U.S. doctoral degrees in engineering last
    year: 3,766 degrees out of 6,504. A decade earlier, foreign nationals accounted for less
    than half of American engineering doctorates."

  6. INNO: WEB SERVICES - AUTOMATING PROGRAM INTERACTION OVER THE WWW  
    SOURCE:  InfoWorld  2004-02-18 http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/webserv4.htm   

  7. FNF: $178 Billion in Employee Productivity Lost in the U.S. Annually Due to Internet Misuse, Reports Websense, Inc. http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ns-Internet-Misues-178bn.htm


  8. FNF: SUMMARIZATION: "Saving up to 80% of reading time!" (Text Summarization)
    SOURCE: CLAIR  http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/summar1.htm

  9. "There are few places outside South Korea where you can today access and transmit data at 100 megabits per second. Now, the Lightwave Architectures for the processing of Broadband Electronic Signals (LABELS) EU-funded project intends to bring data to European homes at speeds of 1 gigabit per second (Gbps)."
    Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends   Comment JE: Excellent!   

  10. "NanoMarkets believes that the unique
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  11. Internet use threatens to overtake TV in Canada   - 2005-08-10

    CTV.ca News Staff

    The gap between Internet and TV usage is closing, with the Internet
    threatening to overtake television, a new poll suggests.

    The survey, conducted by Ipsos Reid, shows that the amount of time
    Internet-using Canadians are spending actively using the Web is up
    46 per cent since 2002 and now averages 12.7 hours per week.

    That's up from 8.7 hours per week three years ago.
    http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1123592641078_62/?hub=Canada

  12. FNF: Next-generation optical discs SOURCE: Techtree.com India   http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/ns-Blue-Ray-1.htm

  13. FNF: Short message service - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://www.hi.is/~joner/eaps/sms-c.htm

  14. ShortHand-Aided Rapid Keyboarding
    "Texting Is Too Slow? Draw Your Words!

    Admit it, typing an SMS on a cell phone takes time, and
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    Instead of typing words on these ridiculous small
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    a stylus.
    "

 

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