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From Pontius Pilate to Ignaz Semmelweis: a Brief History of Clean Hands
Pontius Pilate washed his own hands. Eventually, Ignaz Semmelweis arrived and taught that washing the hands can have BOTH a symbolic meaning AND direct, practical significance. So the Bible critic’s question, “Figurative or literal?” can commit the logical fallacy known as “false dilemma.”
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=13892895&postcount=5
If you want to know whether or not your arguments are sound, then you need to look for flaws in them. One cannot even proofread a document for trivial typographical errors unless one looks for errors. You cannot attempt to revise an argument and remove a flaw until after you are aware that the flaw exists.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=12629100&postcount=179
(In response to the following:
“Why should we waste any more time on such trivialities?”)
Perhaps that was a rhetorical question, but I’m thinking that I might be able to provide at least the beginning of an answer.
- The less knowledge required, the greater the number of people who can understand and participate in the discussion.
- If I provide a very clear and simple counter-example to a claim (and I mean clear and simple ideas, not attitudes), then it doesn’t merely serve to gain approval from people who are on “my side” in a debate, but has a chance of actually influencing the beliefs of my opponent in the debate.
- Should I continue, or are two reasons enough?
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=14339701&postcount=373
No, the Prophet (S) did not complain about the food he ate.
I apologize for providing an example that seems to have created a misunderstanding. I didn’t intend to ask specifically about complaints. I intended to ask whether or not he said anything about food, not abstract generalizations about food, but ordinary comments and requests that are appropriate when interacting with people, such as “Could I have more chick peas, please? They were delicious, and I’m still hungry.”
If
everything that he said was from Divine inspiration, then all such utterances – if the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) actually spoke like that on occasion – were from Divine inspiration.