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I once read that a respected religious leader was bothered by a relatively unimportant opponent. So he arranged for the opponent to die. Unfortunately, a dear friend of the Leader was also present, and, from this literature, APPROVED by his own Church, it would appear that the Leader was just too stupid to figure out some way to harm the opponent, without also killing the friend.

Does your religion, or your philosophy, accept his behavior as natural, reasonable, and right?

2006-09-07 00:34:28 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

4 answers

No. And my philosophy is, relatively speaking, one easily considered "depraved". Love is the law.

2006-09-07 00:41:07 · answer #1 · answered by angk 6 · 0 0

Philosophy strengthens a faith. Noble Laureates :- (a million) Erwin Shrodinger (2) Werner Heisenberg (3) Joseph Oppeheimer (4) Octavio Paz ---were no longer Hindus-- different psychological scholars like (5) Mark Twain (6) Arnold Toynbee (7) David Bhom ( i do no longer recognize no matter if he turned right into a Noble laureate in Quantum Mechanics) (8)W.V.Humboldt (9) Heinrich Zimmer (10) Arthur Osborne---were no longer Hindus yet all of them very a lot conventional,loved,eulogised Hindu UPANISHSDS and VEDHANTHA--Philosophical Substratum of Hindu faith.

2016-11-06 19:33:33 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

RELIGIONS ADVISES US NOT TO HARM EVEN AN ENEMY. BUT PHILOSOPHY ......

2006-09-07 00:49:51 · answer #3 · answered by tinor 1 · 0 0

not mine

2006-09-07 01:04:16 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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