When Paganism Ends...
My deep philosophical question for the season:
Is it possible to be an Atheist (or Agnostic), and be a Pagan at the same time?
I don't have an answer, I'm just mulling it over in my mind. I used to think "yes," and identified as such, but since then I've had Pagan friends I trust and respect tell me I can't be both at the same time.
Sorting out belief...
-Hagrid
Is it possible to be an Atheist (or Agnostic), and be a Pagan at the same time?
I don't have an answer, I'm just mulling it over in my mind. I used to think "yes," and identified as such, but since then I've had Pagan friends I trust and respect tell me I can't be both at the same time.
Sorting out belief...
-Hagrid
no subject
Also, you should remember that the absorption of early ethnic european traditions were stripped of there meaning (to get a better idea of what I am getting at, either remember or read Jean Baudrillard's (Simulacra and Simulation)... so although it can be traced or argued to a source does not mean it has the same meaning it had or that when people put their rabbits everywhere or hoist their Christmas trees that it has anything to do with those earlier traditions anymore.
I understand that Christains aren't *really* as close as they claim, however, over the last couple of years, I have witnessed how they are able to unite under the aegis of "Christian" when they want or need to. For example, did you know that before the last presidential election, white christians went into the churches of B/black christians (I read about this happening in place like Detroit for example) and asked them to put aside their differences to do the work of god and keep them/us homosexuals from getting married? What someone believes, in a sense, matters less than what someone can do by saying, "If you are, then you will agree...".
Watching their fireworks would be more interesting if it didn't always come at the expense of my freedom.