I'm worried about gwayneco. Nobody was celebrating anybody's death. Some opinions of someone's life were shared in another thread. The difference between what you perceive and what is happening:
RIP. "Moral Sense" was a very well written book on morality. Its conservative stance made me reconsider many things I accepted without question.
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<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/cFmqMe0pQ5A" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> Sicko party, V.I.P, no guest list #swag
R.I.P to the guy though, he seemed like a reasonable person who believed in what he believed, and not necessarily what I believe. still--- a loss for his family, and his community. I respect his fight for what he believed in.
Just a couple of points to make. This thread title called us all sickos. This is true even though nobody was really celebrating anyone's death before. But who is the real sicko? The person who wants multiple posters on this board to die, and has said so on the board, even to those like me who've defended him from personal attacks, or people who disagree with him on politics.
Hey gwaynee Bet yer happy this guy died yesterday as well huh? William Hamilton dies at 87; theologian questioned God's existence Hamilton wrote the book 'Radical Theology and the Death of God.' It and an ensuing Time article called 'Is God Dead?' became part of a national questioning of establishment values. Theologian William Hamilton, a member of the Death of God movement of the 1960s that reached its peak with a Time magazine cover story, has died. He was 87. Hamilton died Tuesday at his home in Portland, Ore., from complications of congestive heart failure, his family said. Hamilton told the Oregonian newspaper in 2007 that he had questioned the existence of God since he was a teenager, when two friends — an Episcopalian and a Catholic — died from the explosion of a pipe bomb they were building, while a third — an atheist — escaped without a scratch. The image of God as all-knowing and all-powerful couldn't be reconciled with human suffering, especially after the Holocaust, Hamilton said. "I wrote out my two choices: 'God is not behind such radical evil, therefore he cannot be what we have traditionally meant by God' or 'God is behind everything, including the death camps — and therefore he is a killer.' "