I've provided evidence that insofar as relaunch ST:TNG treklit is concerned, Picard is a believer.
As I mentioned above that's not what's in the text. It only says that Picard can see that faith can serve a purpose, not that Picard is a believer.
I've provided evidence that insofar as relaunch ST:TNG treklit is concerned, Picard is a believer.
I've provided evidence that insofar as relaunch ST:TNG treklit is concerned, Picard is a believer.
As I mentioned above that's not what's in the text. It only says that Picard can see that faith can serve a purpose, not that Picard is a believer.
The problem is that there's a lot of missing data from those premises...
Who's to say that France is still overwhelmingly Catholic in the 24th Century? How about those Frenchmen who join Starfleet? How many of them are religious?
And as an aside: I don't really think that 2000+years of Belief System/s (depending on the Belief System) will disappear within the next 200 years unless there is a paradigm shift (in the scientific sense eg such as the shift from Earth-centric Solar System to the Heliocentric system) in our understanding of the "Why" of our existence.
I think "He had never been a religious man, and while he knew something of Choudhury's beliefs and their historical roots, he couldn't claim to genuinely understand them" is a pretty clear indication that he's not an adherent of any religion, much less Roman Catholicism.
Now, let's not making a salad of logics. My argument is not "Picard is not Catholic", but that the claim "Picard is Catholic" is unsupported by evidences. It's not the same thing.Folks saying JLP is Christian/Catholic and those saying he's not, have the SAME handicap - it isn't explicit one way or the other in any ST lit.
So, both arguments are equally valid and invalid. You're in the same boat.![]()
It's not outed, I agree. Still, your argument is a non sequitur. In fact, I understand the importance of spiritual faith, and as I said, I am an atheist. So it doesn't prove anything about his personal beliefs.It is very clearthat no religion is identified, but that JLP understands the importance of spritual faith (which seems reasonable based on the full passage). So the fact is that is that JLP's faith or religion or whathaveyou is not outed.
But we are getting along, just disagreeing about a small issue. Trust me, if we weren't getting along, you would know it.Can't we all just get along?![]()
Now, let's not making a salad of logics. My argument is not "Picard is not Catholic", but that the claim "Picard is Catholic" is unsupported by evidences. It's not the same thing.
It's not outed, I agree. Still, your argument is a non sequitur. In fact, I understand the importance of spiritual faith, and as I said, I am an atheist. So it doesn't prove anything about his personal beliefs.It is very clearthat no religion is identified, but that JLP understands the importance of spritual faith (which seems reasonable based on the full passage). So the fact is that is that JLP's faith or religion or whathaveyou is not outed.
Dictionay.com said:
^ We pretty much agree about that.![]()
Well, for sure your copy&paste of the dictionary definition of "non sequitur" would had worked better if you didn't spell it consistently wrong.
Again, no. That's not my argument. I don't know why it is so difficult. The claim made upthread was that, since Picard recognized the importance of faith, he must be a believer. I offered a counter-example, saying that I agree about the importance of faith, and yet I'm still an atheist. So the conclusion does not necessarily follow from the premise, i.e. a non sequitur. Full stop.In fact, assuming that b/c you read in the passage and know that JLP is spritual, and b/c you are spiritual and an atheist, thus JLP is an atheist is a non sequitar.![]()
Sure, but I thought we were discussing the logic of claiming that Picard was a follower of a specific religion.But, can you also agree that beauty is in the eye of the beholder?
I don't see the big deal either. I just can't stand illogical reasoning.Whether he is Christian or an Atheist is not relevant to understand his spirituality or spiritual awareness, but b/c our world views are shaped by our own personal experiences, if you see a leg to stand on in your mind's eye that he's Catholic or Atheist, I don't see that as a big deal.
Heh. I only object to unsupported claims. I would have equally disagreed if someone had said something equally unsupported by evidences as "Picard is not really French but actually Belgian".I just generally find on the internet, the anti-religion faction comes out quite hard against anyone that mentions organized religion. "Faith" is not as dicey a topic.
DATA: I have a question, sir.
PICARD: Yes, Data. What is it?
DATA: What is death?
PICARD: Oh, is that all? Well, Data, you're asking probably the most difficult of all questions. Some see it as a changing into an indestructible form, forever unchanging. They believe that the purpose of the entire universe is to then maintain that form in an Earth-like garden which will give delight and pleasure through all eternity. On the other hand, there are those who hold to the idea of our blinking into nothingness, with all our experiences, hopes and dreams merely a delusion.
DATA: Which do you believe, sir?
PICARD: Considering the marvelous complexity of our universe, its clockwork perfection, its balances of this against that, matter, energy, gravitation, time, dimension, I believe that our existence must be more than either of these philosophies. That what we are goes beyond Euclidean and other practical measuring systems and that our existence is part of a reality beyond what we understand now as reality.
"Picard considered Choudhury a moment longer, wondering just how skeptical he should be about that claim. He had never been a religious man, and while he knew something of Choudhury's beliefs and their historical roots, he couldn't claim to genuinely understand them. He did, however, understand the importance of faith - it was a lesson that had been driven home for him in that desperate last hour of the Borg assault, by holding on to hope when reason told him that all was hopeless."
William Leisner, Losing the Peace, p156
This is the best rendering of the ongoing (uncredited) relevance of the Christian faith in ST that I've seen recently.
Note that Leisner's Picard does not in the slightest denigrate Choudhury's Hindu faith (let's put aside the odd californication of same), nor the bhuddist influences upon it (ditto).
At the same time, although the author stresses that Picard has never been a religious man, he still makes Picard take a critical decision fully in line with modern mainstream Christian belief.
Could Picard have made it anyway? Sure. Is this what the author intended? Based on what he wrote, I'm in the dunno group.
...which is where I always thought that Picard was, an agnostic.
Yet now in TrekLit the fact is that Leisner determined that the "faith" Picard might have once held as a child has now become a lesson "driven home" to the man. It's a faith reinforced in Leisner's recognition of the post Typhon Pact world, where Picard at some critical point determines to "hold...on to hope when reason told him that all was hopeless."
What that tells us is that in TrekLit there actually is recognition of "the importance of faith" and as far as we can determine - based on all that's been written to date - that makes Picard a Catholic christian.
I can live with that. If it's a choice between believer and non-believer, I'm goin' with the first.
"Picard considered Choudhury a moment longer, wondering just how skeptical he should be about that claim. He had never been a religious man, and while he knew something of Choudhury's beliefs and their historical roots, he couldn't claim to genuinely understand them. He did, however, understand the importance of faith - it was a lesson that had been driven home for him in that desperate last hour of the Borg assault, by holding on to hope when reason told him that all was hopeless."
Let's not forget this little exchange from "Where Silence Has Lease":
DATA: I have a question, sir.
PICARD: Yes, Data. What is it?
DATA: What is death?
PICARD: Oh, is that all? Well, Data, you're asking probably the most difficult of all questions. Some see it as a changing into an indestructible form, forever unchanging. They believe that the purpose of the entire universe is to then maintain that form in an Earth-like garden which will give delight and pleasure through all eternity. On the other hand, there are those who hold to the idea of our blinking into nothingness, with all our experiences, hopes and dreams merely a delusion.
DATA: Which do you believe, sir?
PICARD: Considering the marvelous complexity of our universe, its clockwork perfection, its balances of this against that, matter, energy, gravitation, time, dimension, I believe that our existence must be more than either of these philosophies. That what we are goes beyond Euclidean and other practical measuring systems and that our existence is part of a reality beyond what we understand now as reality.
I think that's one of the most important quotes in all of Star Trek, because it points to how one can have spirituality without organized religion.
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