Part I. In which Steve responds to Herr Doktor Blaster's reminder of the subject of his inquiries.
Oh, to be so wrong...
You've been asserting that ancient peoples, including specifically the ancient Egyptians, had this esotaric/transcentdental knowledge *BECAUSE* they were immersed in nature. Since I KNOW we aren't going to see eye-to-eye on the existence of those things, I chose instead to address your supporting claim that they were immersed in nature. That's why their existence as an agricultural and urban civilization is RELEVANT. My point has been that the agricultural society I grew up in (everything farms except a few scattered woods, wetlands, and towns) is certainly no less connected to nature as they were. I used Egypt specifically because it is so clear with Egypt (being confined by deadly deserts) and Egypt has been a primary subject of this thread and a place where you have specifically made this "immersed in nature" claim.
(and yet again, my attempt to keep the conversation focused on a sub-point until it was finished fell victim to the expansion impulse)
Nope, didn't make that claim. It's strictly about your "Egypt was immersed in nature" argument to your claim about "transcendent".
Irrelevant. Not the point I am making. You are arguing against the straw man. (Here's a hint for good conversation, just because you know something about the other person, does not mean you should focus your response on that aspect of them when it is not the subject. What is it we call an argument that focuses on the opponent instead of the argument?)
Part II. In which Hans asks Steve to provide evidence that the ancients, particularly the Egyptians, were immersed in the transcendent. [Me: Based on what evidence? (Subject is EGYPT.) ] To which he replies a full page. Does he answer the question? Let's see...
I'm not the subject.
I'm not asking for general claims about "transcendent spirts". I want evidence on how we know Egypt was immersed in them.
I'm not asking for your opinion of skeptics. I know how much you despise us.
I didn't ask for you to tell me what I believe. I know what that is and you don't. One more paragraph, will you respond to the question?
I'm not asking for some more ranting about "material science" or the back of your front (whatever that is about).
In summary, you didn't answer a simple question.
[end of part II response to question "Based on what evidence? (Subject is EGYPT.) "]
Part III In which Steve valiantly avoids answering questions about Egypt and agriculture.
Question the first: [ I literally just told you that Egypt was an agriculture and urban culture. How is agriculture and cities "immersed in nature"?] The response:
No "how is ag and cities "immersed in nature" question and a very reasonable one given your claims.
Not the claim I was making. I was asking how being agriculturalists meant Egypt was "immersed in nature" as you have been asserting.
I didn't make that claim here. I asked you a question about agriculture and nature. Transcendentalism wasn't the subject of the question.
Somewhere about three paragraphs back you walked completely past the point of the question.
Question the second: In which I had asked sarcastically if the Egyptians knew nature well because they were hunter-gathers (they obviously weren't) [Me: Did the Egyptians spend their days hunting on the savanna for meat and hides to sew into simple clothing?] Will the response reflect the question?
School children know the answer. The answer is "No. They didn't. They had farms and cities."
When you are reading our posts and have them up in the edit box, are you just waiting to dump whatever floats into your mind onto the screen. As with every other part of this "reply" to the second question of part III, this is not relevant in the slightest.
It's weird that you seem to be denying that Egypt was agricultural. Why is that?
Your mal-understanding of QM isn't even close to the topic.
Oh boy, this is not only not a reasonable answer to anything I've asked, but I also don't care.
The
third sub-part in which to the statement "On the other hand the nature of Egyptian agriculture is well established." Steve replies.
I take it you've never been near a farm. We were all very connected to the seasons, the full moon and the sun, the ebb of nature, etc. Nothing has changed here. You're starting to sound like one of those urban interlopers that come out to our open farm lands to "experience nature" and get "holistic understandings" of everything. We hated those guys.
Now to
question the final ["What has that got to do with Egyptian urban and agricultural society?"] to which Steve replies
SMH.