Give it your best shot.
and be prepared to be VERY frustrated...
It's your thread...of course they will be frustrated. :rotfl:
Give it your best shot.
and be prepared to be VERY frustrated...
so if you don't believe in Gravity it cannot effect you...?
and
jump out of an airplane w/o a chute and test your theory
questions are not an argument
if
you understand the basic rules of communication
physis "nature,"
from phyein "to bring forth, produce, make to grow"
(related to phyton "growth, plant,
"phyle "tribe, race," phyma "a growth, tumor")
from PIE root *bheue- "to be exist, grow" (see be). .
I would like to add, here, that the ancient Greeks perceived the physical world to be a material expression of a whole complex of divine ideals, and that the ideals exist, first, and eternally, while the matter only temporary arranges itself via the ideal. Example, there is the ideal tree, that exists perfectly and eternally, and then there is the temporary and imperfect material manifestation of that ideal, that we see and experience as a particular tree. Even their gods were mythical manifestations of these eternal, divine ideals.Well I hope I wasn't too rude to Town, but now that I'm more serious maybe we could talk about that word origin again since it has been mentioned..
Here's the deal: The ancient Greeks did not see nature as the earth and sky apparently. It seems (to me) to be tied to living earthy things. From the Online Etymology Dictionary:
The original that is also related to our word "physical" was also (perhaps ultimately) going to be opposed to "surgical" in matters of healing according to the same dictionary.
So this word "nature" is from a Latin translation of the Greek "physis" and is carrying the idea of "birth" in it. As you know and has been said.
Did ancient man ever think there were no higher powers? My guess is though many may have been far from God, they seem not to be so far as we may be today in our general thinking. It seems they left room for God and did not include many things as "nature" that we do or that the Druids did.
Ancient man apparently did not worship nature while thinking of it as "nature".
For me nature is the visible creation. It is fallen whether it is our human nature or the natural world around us. (And is up for Redemption)
I would like to add, here, that the ancient Greeks perceived the physical world to be a material expression of a whole complex of divine ideals, and that the ideals exist, first, and eternally, while the matter only temporary arranges itself via the ideal. Example, there is the ideal tree, that exists perfectly and eternally, and then there is the temporary and imperfect material manifestation of that ideal, that we see and experience as a particular tree. Even their gods were mythical manifestations of these eternal, divine ideals.
The reason "nature" is related to "birth" in the ancient Greek language is because "nature", to the ancient Greeks, is the material expression of those divine ideals: forever coming into being, existing for a time, imperfectly, and then passing away, … only to be replaced again, as the divine ideals that define them remain, forever.
As with most cultures, it was the philosophers that generated and proposed these concepts; the regular folks were just doing what regular folks do, everywhere, throughout history.That is very interesting, PureX, though it is a rather broad sword to swing to say the ancient Greeks saw nature as material expressions
of divine ideals. I am guessing that took a philosopher or two?
*know what i mean?!, wink wink, nudge nudge*
As with most cultures, it was the philosophers that generated and proposed these concepts; the regular folks were just doing what regular folks do, everywhere, throughout history.