View Full Version : Racer - Law, Liberty and Sin
Ace42
04-09-2005, 09:26 AM
I think you guys are misinterpreting what I meant by perfect.
Yeah, when we use the words correctly that tends to happen.
Perfect in the sense of health, mental ability, and physical.
Although not perfect in his "mental ability" to follow a simple commandment from his humble benefactor.
I guess innocent, would have been a better choice.
If you backpedal any faster, you'll fall into the Atlantic.
racer5.0stang
04-09-2005, 11:54 AM
Yeah, when we use the words correctly that tends to happen.
Which is why I tried to clarify myself.
Although not perfect in his "mental ability" to follow a simple commandment from his humble benefactor.
Mental ability as in not handicapped or disabled.
If you backpedal any faster, you'll fall into the Atlantic.
If I were facing the Atlantic, I wouldn't.
Ace42
04-09-2005, 12:27 PM
Mental ability as in not handicapped or disabled.
Well, compared to you he was no doubt an intellectual.
If I were facing the Atlantic, I wouldn't.
You are aware of the fact that the Earth is round, right?
Funkaloyd
04-09-2005, 03:47 PM
Geeze Ace, we've been over this. You can't prove that the sphericalness of the Earth isn't an illusion; a lie that your false god of science drempt up to weaken the moral fabric of society.
Schmeltz
04-10-2005, 02:32 AM
Perfect in the sense of ... mental ability
If he was perfect in mental ability, wouldn't he have automatically made the right choice? Or is it still possible, in spite of having a perfect mental ability, to improperly weigh the consequences of one's actions and so proceed to a morally incorrect conclusion? If so, how can that possibly be described as a perfect - and therefore infallible - mental ability?
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