Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 This has probably been covered a million times, sorry. I have some very thick fresh raw cream and some fresh raw buttermilk. Can I make the crème fraîche on p. 84 of NT with these ingredients or do I need specially cultured buttermilk? Tom _______________ When religion abdicated the explanation of " how the world works " —cosmology—to physics, it retreated to the realm of the non-worldly. Spirit became the opposite of matter, something elevated and separate. It did not matter too much what you did in the world of matter, it was unimportant, so long as your (immaterial) " soul " were saved. Under a dualistic view of spirituality, living right as a being of flesh and blood, in the world of matter, becomes less important. Human life becomes a temporary excursion, an inconsequential distraction from the eternal life of the spirit. Other cultures, more ancient and wiser cultures, did not see it like this. They believed in a sacred world, of matter infused with spirit. Animism, we call it, the belief that all things are possessed of a soul. Even this definition betrays our dualistic presumptions. Perhaps a better definition would be that all things are soul. If all things are soul, then life in the flesh, in the material world, is sacred. -- Eisenstein Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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