On Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 8:57 PM, Steven D'Aprano <st...@pearwood.info> wrote: > On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 01:42:51 am Richard D. Moores wrote: > >> The formatting operations described here are obsolete and may go away >> in future versions of Python. Use the new String Formatting in new >> code. >> >> I hope that use of '*' does disappear. It's the most confusing thing >> I've recently tried to get my mind around! > > If you think that's confusing, you should try reading up on Monads. > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monad_(functional_programming) > > >> Before that, maybe, was the Trinity.. > > [Note: the following may be offensive to some Christians, in which case, > remember that nobody has the right to not be offended, and nobody is > forcing you to read on.] > > The Trinity is simple to understand once you realise one thing -- > despite all the obfuscatory pseudo-justifications for it, it is not > meant to be understood, it's meant to be believed.
It is meant to be understood, and it is understood, yet man has attachments to an 'earthly' realm, which leads to a hinderance in the principles given to guide them...to be all Zen about it. It is a Mystery, > something beyond human understanding. Not merely a small-m mystery, > something which is possible to understand in principle, if we only knew > enough. As Tertullian said (in a related but slightly different > context): > > "It is certain because it is impossible". > > Or, to paraphrase, "I believe it because it is absurd". > > Like many religious beliefs (e.g. transubstantiation and dietary > restrictions), belief in the Trinity is a shibboleth. Belief in the > Trinity distinguishes Us ("true Christians") from Them (heretics and > pagans[1]). The more ridiculous and crazy the belief, the more > effective it is as a shibboleth. Anyone can believe that the son and > the father are different people, because that's just ordinary > common-sense[2]. But to believe that the son and the father are one and > the same while being different *at the same time* makes no sense. Think of the parent child windows, while one is the master the slave has limitations, but still can display the 'words' of the parent. It > is, as Tertullian would almost certainly have admitted, absurd and > ridiculous and totally crazy. Tertullian would have believed it > *because* it was unbelievable. Debate 101 can cause men to take strange stances in order to perfect their arguments. > > It really is frightening to realise that, essentially, the Chewbacca > Defence has held such a grip on human society for so many centuries. Haven't read it yet, but will get to it eventually. > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewbacca_defense > > > > > [1] Actually many pagans also believe in trinities. But they believe in > the *wrong* trinity: the three-as-one nature of Brahma/Vishnu/Shiva, > Ra/Horus/Osiris, Ceres/Liber/Libera, or (two-in-one) Apollo/Bacchus is > mere pagan superstition, Who can really say what is and what isn't, if your stance above is that [It] is undefinable and a mystery to man. while the three-as-one nature of > Father/Son/Spirit is self-evidently true, at least according to those > Christian sects which believe in a trinity. > > [2] So rare that it ought to count as a superpower. Anyone can believe that the son and > the father are different people, because that's just ordinary > common-sense[2] How does this relate? > > > -- > Steven D'Aprano > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - tu...@python.org > To unsubscribe or change subscription options: > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor