Guys, I am currently experiencing same thing, I bought this book for the sake of increasing my reviewer score, but I haven't been given any bonus at all.
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Mark Maxwell 2 wrote: ↑May 31st, 2024, 9:44 am I believe that every book carries a unique message shaped by the author's thoughts, experiences, and passions. Unlike books written solely for profit, which I am sure "In It Together" is not, this book reflects the author's deeply held beliefs. The ideas within it are both relevant and universally applicable.agreed with your comment.
Eziokwu960 wrote: ↑May 23rd, 2024, 10:01 pm I disagree with this quote "There is no fight you need to win to have content inner peace and spiritual freedom."Hi, Eziokwu960,
Being a spiritual person, I believe and I am almost certain that there are spiritual forces that fights one's inner peace and spiritual freedom. I have seen cases where some spiritual sacrifices had to be done to free one from a bondage spiritually, and this is the reason for my answer.
Eckhart Aurelius Hughes wrote: ↑January 19th, 2023, 2:50 pm This is a discussion forum topic for the November 2022 Philosophy Book of the Month, In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All.I didn't find anything in the book that I would disagree with or that was controversial, at least from my point of view!
Do you agree with everything in the book, In It Together?
If not, what is the very first sentence in the book with which you disagree?
Please copy and paste the sentence in full.
Please explain why you disagree, including any evidence or argument you may have to support your alternate belief.
I love hearing and learning about different viewpoints. So thank you in advance for your honest answers to these questions.
I also love friendly, respectful debates, especially philosophical ones. Much like if I choose to invite you to my literal home for a game of chess or to play some sport or game, please note if I seem to want to or choose to question, debate, or argue you about some thing, please do take it as a major compliment and a sign of my respect and admiration for you. I deeply love, value, and respect people who can disagree and explain their side. And generally I don't bother to debate or argue with people unless I think there is a good chance they could win the argument and thereby change my mind.
If you read the whole book already and don't remember the specific sentence, I strongly encourage you to read the book again up to the point of the first disagreement, and highlight the first sentence you find disagreeable, and then come back here as soon as you can to post it here.
The book is available for purchase from all major book retailers in both ebook and hardcover format.
Eckhart Aurelius Hughes wrote: ↑May 21st, 2024, 1:35 pm
In analogy, it's like if you say "the gun-owning snake is armed" and I say "the gun-owning snake is not armed". It would sound like we were disagreeing, but rather we would likely just be using the word 'armed' to refer to different things. Neither of us would be wrong about anything and neither of us would be using the word wrong; it's just the nature of equivocal human language.
Words are just symbols that, like pointing fingers, point at ideas. But it's the non-verbal ideas that matter and determine whether we agree and/or are speaking truth. And the Christian Bible wasn't even written in English.
[...]
The equivocality of words [often] makes it falsely seem like [people] are disagreeing about things, such as whether the snake is "armed"
Juanita Phelps wrote: ↑May 23rd, 2024, 10:42 pm The body is a container that houses the spiritual part or the soul. So, according to the book, what others see is a shell, not the real person. But, by the laws of our society, if a person is convicted of, say, murder, and sent to prison. Which part of that person is culpable for having done the deed?Hi, Juanita Phelps,
Or, when a benevolent deed is done, or, a mundane act such as preparing a meal occurs, is God involved? Is the physical human in charge? Or is the free will of the spiritual part in charge? But if free will means I can change my mind, did God know that too? If so, is it fre will or is it written in that book? Are the plot holes the places where people get to surprise God?
With a grin,
Juanita
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