Religion and Philosophy

¿Onions basada o noble?

Also, what am I missing?

  1. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous
    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      3/7

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        4/7

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          5/7

          • 4 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            6/7

            • 4 weeks ago
              Anonymous

              7/7
              Books I read last year

              2022 Anno Domini
              'The Odyssey of Homer' Palmer's Edition
              'The Plot Against the President' - Written by Sam Bourne
              'I Have No Secrets' - Written by Penny Joelson
              'Hermetica : The Greek Corpus Hermeticum'
              'Meditations of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus'
              'Common Sense' by Thomas Paine
              'Of Mice and Men' by John Steinbeck
              'Curley Sue as Kindnezz Girl' by Teresa Allen
              'The Holy Qu'Ran'
              'The Book of the Dead' The Scribe of Ani
              'The Epic of Gilgamesh'
              'Aesop's Fables'
              'The Bible' of King James
              'Arabian Nights'
              'Quadrivium' Wooden Books
              'The Great Divorce' C.S. Lewis
              'Rendezvous with Rama' by Arthur C. Clarke
              'The Apocrypha'
              'The Republic' by Plato
              'The Scarlet Letter' by Nathaniel Hawthorne
              'A Holiday to Remember' By Jillian Hart
              'Rights of Man' By Thomas Paine
              'Collection of The Chaldean Oracles' Arranged and Translated by Thomas Taylor
              'Analects of Confuscious'
              'The Illiad' of Homer
              'Aeniad' Of Virgil
              'Sonic Art : An introduction to Electroacoustic Music Composition' by Adrian Moore
              'The Divine Comedy' By Dante Alighieri
              'Music Business: Real World Insights' Second Edition By Dick Weissman
              'Trivium' Wooden Books
              'The Vedas'
              'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn' by Mark Twain
              'The Death of Ivan Ilych and Other Stories' by Leo Tolstoy (Family Happiness , The Kreutzer Sonata, Hadji Murád)
              'The Digital Musician' Andrew Hugill
              '1984' George Orwell
              'Statistics 101' David Borman
              'Kidnapped' Robert Louis Stevenson
              'The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' Robert Louis Stevens
              'Ethics 101' Brian Boone
              'The Everything Guide to Comedy' Mike Bent
              'The Megillos and Haftoros'
              'The Confessions of Saint Augustine'
              'Stuart Little' E. B. White
              'The Federalist Papers' Hamilton, Madison, Jay
              'The Last Days of Socrates' Plato
              'The Forest People' Colin M. Turnbull
              'The Outline of History' H.G. Wells
              'The Sibylline Oracles Translated From the Best Greek Copies' John Floyer
              'Physics Part I & II' Halliday & Resnick
              'The Anti-Federalist Papers and Constitutional Convention Debates' Ralph Ketcham
              'The Jungle' Upton Sinclair
              'Year One' Jacob Xavier Harding
              'Origin of Species' Charles Darwin
              'The Stand' Stephen King
              'A Treasury of American Folklore' Edited by B.A. Botkin
              'The Complete Works' William Shakespeare
              'Modern Man in Search of a Soul' C.G. Jung
              'The Power of Your Subconscious Mind' Dr. Joseph Murphy
              'China' Life World Library
              'Russia' Life World Library
              'Greece' Life World Library
              'Black Forest Dreams, A Journey Through Germany' Joseph Kuhn Carey

              • 4 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                2023 Anno Domini
                'The Eagle Has Landed' Jack Higgins
                'Edgar A. Poe : A Study' John W. Robertson, M.D.
                'The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud' Translated and Edited by Dr. A. A. Brill
                'For Whom the Bell Tolls 'Ernest Hemingway
                'Beyond Good & Evil' Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
                'Our Town' Thorton Wilder
                'Understanding Electricity and Electronics' Buban and Schmitt
                'Dune' Frank Herbert
                'Zealot' Reza Aslan
                'A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents : 1789-1906 : Volume IV' James D. Richardson
                'Engaging Crystallization in Qualitative Research' Laura L. Ellingson
                'The Secret Life of Bees' Sue Monk Kidd
                'Alcoholics Anonymous'
                'Discovering the Universe' Neil F. Coming, William J. Kaufmann III
                'Introduction to Organizational Communications' Kent Bradshaw
                'Pearl Jam: The Illustrated Biography' Brad Morrel
                'Duty' Bob Greene
                'Digital Culture' Charlie Gere
                'Platform Revolution' Geoffrey G. Parker, Marshall W. Van Alstyne, Sangeet Paul Choudary
                'Understanding Digital Culture' Vincent Miller
                'Balkans' Life World Library
                'The Autobiography of Malcolm X' As Told to Alex Haley
                'Fourteen Byzantine Rulers' Michael Psellus
                'The Adventures of Tom Sawyer' Mark Twain
                'Learning to Look: A Handbook for the Visual Arts' Joshua C. Taylor
                'Indigo Reflections' Lori Frank
                'How to Be a Record Producer in the Digital Era' Megan Perry
                'Doctor Dolittle' Hugh Lofting
                'The Unstoppable Organization' Shawn Casemore
                'Innovation by Design' Thomas Lockwood and Edgar Papke
                'Designing the Mind : The Principles of Psychitecture
                'India' Life World Library
                'Your Self Sabotage Survival Guide' Karen Berg
                'Decisive Intuition' Rick Snyder
                'The Travels of Marco Polo'
                'Make the Most of Your Workday' Mary A. Camuto
                'Emote' Vikas Gopal Jhingran
                'The New Glucose Revolution' Jennie Brand-Miller, PhD, Thomas M.S. Wolever, MD, PhD, Stephen Colagiuri, MD, Kaye Foster-Powell, M Nutr & Diet
                'Yes to Life' Viktor E. Frankl
                'Cuban Color in Tourism and La Lucha' L. Kaifa Roland
                'The Luftwaffe' Time-Life Books
                'The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich' William L. Shirer
                'Dune Messiah' Frank Herbert
                'Otherworldly Politics' Stephen Benedict Dyson
                'Writing with Style: APA Style Made Easy' Lenore T. Szuchman
                'Candide' Voltaire
                'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' Ken Kesey
                'Uncle Tom's Cabin' Harriet Beecher Stowe
                'When Work Disappears' William Julius Wilson
                'The Rest of the Robots' Isaac Asimov
                'The Naked Sun' Isaac Asimov
                'The Life and Times of Dante' Curtis Books
                'Slavery by Another Name' Douglas A. Blackmon
                'Paradise Lost' John Milton
                'The Human Face of Big Data' Rick Smolan and Jennifer Erwitt
                'As I Lay Dying' William Faulkner
                'Our World and the Universe Around It : Matter and Energy' Aberdale Press
                'Our World and the Universe Around It : The Universe' Aberdale Press
                'The Martian Chronicles' Ray Bradbury
                'The Book of the Law' Aleister Crowley
                'Tao Te Ching' Lap Tzu
                'Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art' Scott McCloud
                'Our World and the Universe Around It : Life' Aberdale Press

              • 4 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                >Stuart Little
                Why do people hate this book?

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                I couldn't tell you, maybe because the movie is only loosely based on the book with a few scenes directly incorporated into the movie?
                I haven't heard anything negative about the book.

                I thought it was a nice little afternoon read, only an hour or so to finish.

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                2023 Anno Domini
                'The Eagle Has Landed' Jack Higgins
                'Edgar A. Poe : A Study' John W. Robertson, M.D.
                'The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud' Translated and Edited by Dr. A. A. Brill
                'For Whom the Bell Tolls 'Ernest Hemingway
                'Beyond Good & Evil' Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
                'Our Town' Thorton Wilder
                'Understanding Electricity and Electronics' Buban and Schmitt
                'Dune' Frank Herbert
                'Zealot' Reza Aslan
                'A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents : 1789-1906 : Volume IV' James D. Richardson
                'Engaging Crystallization in Qualitative Research' Laura L. Ellingson
                'The Secret Life of Bees' Sue Monk Kidd
                'Alcoholics Anonymous'
                'Discovering the Universe' Neil F. Coming, William J. Kaufmann III
                'Introduction to Organizational Communications' Kent Bradshaw
                'Pearl Jam: The Illustrated Biography' Brad Morrel
                'Duty' Bob Greene
                'Digital Culture' Charlie Gere
                'Platform Revolution' Geoffrey G. Parker, Marshall W. Van Alstyne, Sangeet Paul Choudary
                'Understanding Digital Culture' Vincent Miller
                'Balkans' Life World Library
                'The Autobiography of Malcolm X' As Told to Alex Haley
                'Fourteen Byzantine Rulers' Michael Psellus
                'The Adventures of Tom Sawyer' Mark Twain
                'Learning to Look: A Handbook for the Visual Arts' Joshua C. Taylor
                'Indigo Reflections' Lori Frank
                'How to Be a Record Producer in the Digital Era' Megan Perry
                'Doctor Dolittle' Hugh Lofting
                'The Unstoppable Organization' Shawn Casemore
                'Innovation by Design' Thomas Lockwood and Edgar Papke
                'Designing the Mind : The Principles of Psychitecture
                'India' Life World Library
                'Your Self Sabotage Survival Guide' Karen Berg
                'Decisive Intuition' Rick Snyder
                'The Travels of Marco Polo'
                'Make the Most of Your Workday' Mary A. Camuto
                'Emote' Vikas Gopal Jhingran
                'The New Glucose Revolution' Jennie Brand-Miller, PhD, Thomas M.S. Wolever, MD, PhD, Stephen Colagiuri, MD, Kaye Foster-Powell, M Nutr & Diet
                'Yes to Life' Viktor E. Frankl
                'Cuban Color in Tourism and La Lucha' L. Kaifa Roland
                'The Luftwaffe' Time-Life Books
                'The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich' William L. Shirer
                'Dune Messiah' Frank Herbert
                'Otherworldly Politics' Stephen Benedict Dyson
                'Writing with Style: APA Style Made Easy' Lenore T. Szuchman
                'Candide' Voltaire
                'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' Ken Kesey
                'Uncle Tom's Cabin' Harriet Beecher Stowe
                'When Work Disappears' William Julius Wilson
                'The Rest of the Robots' Isaac Asimov
                'The Naked Sun' Isaac Asimov
                'The Life and Times of Dante' Curtis Books
                'Slavery by Another Name' Douglas A. Blackmon
                'Paradise Lost' John Milton
                'The Human Face of Big Data' Rick Smolan and Jennifer Erwitt
                'As I Lay Dying' William Faulkner
                'Our World and the Universe Around It : Matter and Energy' Aberdale Press
                'Our World and the Universe Around It : The Universe' Aberdale Press
                'The Martian Chronicles' Ray Bradbury
                'The Book of the Law' Aleister Crowley
                'Tao Te Ching' Lap Tzu
                'Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art' Scott McCloud
                'Our World and the Universe Around It : Life' Aberdale Press

                This is highly impressive. How do you make time to read these? And do you have a daily target?

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                I've have a few things going for me
                >not working as an employee somewhere
                >full time college
                >food stamps and Medicade
                >home is provided

                I've had a few different reading schedules/goals I alternate between
                >reading a small(er) book in an entire day
                >reading 10 pages from a single book each day, between 3-5 books at a time
                >reading 1 page of main Abrahamic books, 4 pages of each other book, of all the books (What I am currently doing, I'm actively reading all the books pictured)

                I also read while walking ( I walk around 12-14 miles a day)

                Eat healthy, take care of body, spirit, and mind.

                Life is good

            • 4 weeks ago
              Anonymous

              Where do you buy old books like that?

              • 4 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                Random used book stores ran by old farts across the country

              • 4 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                Library sales also, I found a Classics Club copy of More's Utopia at one

  2. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    now that's what I call mucho texto
    you've probably most of these OP but in case you haven't
    >Twain: The Mysterious Stranger Manuscripts
    >Voltaire: Philosophical Dictionary
    >Nietzsche: Thus Spoke Zarathustra
    >Frazer: The Golden Bough
    >James: Varieties of Religious Experience
    >Paine: The Age of Reason
    >Keenan: England's Hidden Reverse

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      I haven't read any of these, thanks Anon.

      Read 'Beyond Good and Evil' by Nietzsche, building up my vocabulary and dexterity before reading more from him.

  3. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >Also, what am I missing?
    Obviously a purpose with your reading. Giga cringe fr

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      I'll be praying for you along your path anon

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Also, if you genuinely don't understand the purpose of reading these books, I'm exploring the roots of human civilization, spiritual and cultural, so that I have a better understanding of the world around us.
      >Remember, I'm only offering you the Truth

      • 4 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        if you want an archaeological perspective, I would recommend David Rohl's "The Lost Testament". I like his ideas. A little more mainstream, and digging up some of the earliest times, you can read "The Horse, The Wheel, and Language"

        • 4 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          Thanks anon, I'll be on the look out for both of these books

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        >I'm exploring the roots of human civilization, spiritual and cultural, so that I have a better understanding of the world around us.
        Bugman mentality. I respect your life choice and your wide interest in human culture, but if you just remain an observer you will never get it.
        When you manage to grasp the essential then the details become superfluous

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          >studying the greatest, most significant sacred texts of religions and mythologies worldwide to expand one’s worldview and taste is “bugman”

          LULZ memes and buzzwords are overused by edgy teens so much now they no longer have meaning. “Bugman” would be reading Sam Harris and Yuval Noah Harari and shit, and even then I’d be embarrassed to use that terminally-online-zoomer’s word to describe it.

          • 3 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            >studying the greatest, most significant sacred texts of religions and mythologies worldwide to expand one’s worldview and taste is “bugman”
            Yes. Read Plato.

            • 3 weeks ago
              Anonymous

              I have. Plato was an initiate of the Greek mysteries, affiliated with at least the Orphic and the Eleusinian mysteries. Anamnesis, the transmigration and immortality of the soul, the doctrine of forms, the soul’s relation to the divine, the urging of the living of the philosophical life in general … these “mysteries” and their equivalents or analogues in other cultures are essentially what help make people less of “bugmen”.

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                Nice summarization of his ideas like you would expect from a pedantic intellectual i.e a bugman. Now read him again and keep reading him, until understand why your task is clearly misguided (judging solely by your behavior in this thread obvs)

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                I have. Plato was an initiate of the Greek mysteries, affiliated with at least the Orphic and the Eleusinian mysteries. Anamnesis, the transmigration and immortality of the soul, the doctrine of forms, the soul’s relation to the divine, the urging of the living of the philosophical life in general … these “mysteries” and their equivalents or analogues in other cultures are essentially what help make people less of “bugmen”.

                >studying the greatest, most significant sacred texts of religions and mythologies worldwide to expand one’s worldview and taste is “bugman”
                Yes. Read Plato.

                >studying the greatest, most significant sacred texts of religions and mythologies worldwide to expand one’s worldview and taste is “bugman”

                LULZ memes and buzzwords are overused by edgy teens so much now they no longer have meaning. “Bugman” would be reading Sam Harris and Yuval Noah Harari and shit, and even then I’d be embarrassed to use that terminally-online-zoomer’s word to describe it.

                >I'm exploring the roots of human civilization, spiritual and cultural, so that I have a better understanding of the world around us.
                Bugman mentality. I respect your life choice and your wide interest in human culture, but if you just remain an observer you will never get it.
                When you manage to grasp the essential then the details become superfluous

                There seems to be some neurosis in your argument as you are both arguing against shadows of ideas that have long lost meaning from their original authors to now. Let go and find the humanity of who you are talking to at the moment, that person is here on this planet alongside you, living and breathing

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                >The banality of this post
                Yikes...

              • 3 weeks ago
                Anonymous

                A bell can ring a thousand times and stay in tune anon.

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          >you will never get it
          That's where you are mistaken anon, I already have it. Allah blesses you and those who you walk beside

  4. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Dostoevsky is for knuckle-draggers.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Oh Ivan

  5. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >religion and philosophy
    >what am I missing
    you are missing Shankara (pbuh)

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Thanks Anon, I'll keep Shankara's writings on my radar.

      I'm also missing Mormon writings as well, but I'll steep my toes into Mormon books slowly.

  6. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >"Onions"
    beaners pwned

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      It translated as
      >onions basado..
      Before posting, not sure what happened
      >Also, beans taste good my brother

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        >somethings filtering my word from Ŝōý to onions

  7. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    how can there be a hell if buddha needs to eat but he is smart because he meditates, and why did

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Yes, hello?

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        A bell can ring a thousand times and stay in tune anon.

        ???
        i go here

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          Oh, okay. So do I.

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