Subj : Gods as Premise To : Todd Henson From : Joseph Voigt Date : Thu Oct 26 2000 07:36 am As you continue to argue the gods of your judeoxian mythology as truth, I think it only proper that we argue ALL gods of ALL mytholgies as truth. As you see no reason to support your premises, I cannot be expected to either. We'll start with Greek mythology as truth. We can accept the premise as true that the first creatures that had the appearance of life on the earth were the children of Gaea and Ouranos. They were monsters. Three of them, monstrously huge and strong, had each a hundred hands and fifty heads. To three others was given the name of Cyclops because each had only one enormous eye, as round and as big as a wheel, in the middle of the forehead. We'll consider the above premise true. Now that we have a true premise, we can argue the attributes of the first three monsters. As they had fifty heads (that's a FACT, remember) we can now draw a conclusion about their dgree of consciousness. Since they had fifty heads each, their -I- must work in concert with all their heads, hence fifty brains per mind would raise their consciousness to a mind-numbing degree. Since the Cyclops each had only one eye (that's a FACT, remember) we can know for certain that they had very poor depth perception and likely clouded their perception of reality. We can draw numerous futher conclusions about truth since we know our premise to be true. We'll continue to move on through the Greek mythology to make more clear all these truths. Then we'll move on to Babylonian myths and after that Egyptian myths. It'll be quite a few weeks before we get to the Aztec and Mayan myths, but we'll get to them as well, as all myths are to be considered true per your own arguments. .... "This god's dead." "No, he moved." "You pushed him!" --- FastEcho 1.46 (reg) * Origin: The Danse - Where Norse Gods Ponder Their Navels (1:387/638) .