Inventions To Thank Pagans For

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yes it is a very broadly used term now! it actually translates as 'old ones' in one of my book about celtic religion.

according to Wikipedia:
In its broadest definition, pagan denotes all non-Abrahamic religions, that is to say it denotes all religions other than Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

Other usages are:

* Paganism may mean Polytheism: The group so defined includes most of the western religions, Native American religions and mythologies, as well as non-Abrahamic folk religions in general.

* Paganism may denote a narrow historic definition not including any of the current world religions. This may be restricted to local or rural currents, particularly those not organized as civil religions, or may focus on the ancient, largely extinct, polytheistic religious traditions of Greece, Rome, and other classical civilizations. Characteristic of pagan traditions is the absence of proselytism and the presence of a living mythology which explains religious practice.[2]

The term "pagan" is a Christian adaptation of the "gentile" of Judaism, and as such has an inherent Abrahamic bias, and pejorative connotations among Western monotheists,[3] comparable to heathen, and infidel also known as kafir (كافر) and mushrik in Islam. For this reason, ethnologists avoid the term "paganism," with its uncertain and varied meanings, in referring to traditional or historic faiths, preferring more precise categories such as polytheism, shamanism, pantheism, or animism; however others[who?] criticise the use of these terms, claiming that these are only aspects that different faiths may share and do not denote the religions themselves.

i have to be thankful to the pagans who learned to use and give back to the land. for herbalism too! i am not too keen on most medicine used today.
 
considering it is an open source of information for others to add to it and manipulate. sometimes it is not always accurate or has been properly fact checked.

but at least it can give you a general idea of a definition when you need it.
 
Having Fun on BYC invented By Debiraymond
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, thanks Debi.
 
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I believe that it goes back to the Halloween thread, where someone posted "they don't participate in anything pagan". Could be wrong but it would be the same as someone saying they don't participate in anything black/white/hispanic/etc, and then someone started a subesquent thread of "inventions to thank black/white/hispanic/etc for". Or it could simply be a strange coincident that I drew a line of connection between. LOL

Nowadays, so many things have multiple meanings or history, it's nearly impossible to participate in anything pagan or non-pagan. Take Christmas for example, it has so many meanings to so many different people, it all boils down to what you celebrate it for. I and my family are Christians, but we participate in Christmas trees. It's simply what you believe and why you believe it. Same thing with Easter, we paint eggs and gift Easter bunnies, we celebrate it as the day Christ rose, but still participate in practices that have bases in pagan belief.
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-Kim

The Halloween thread inspired this one but I didn't mean it as a cut to anyone's beliefs. I was just thinking of how interconnected we all are. Definitely not my intention to put down other's interpretations of their religion. So, yes there is a connection but in the sense that it started a line of thinking in my head, not in the sense that I am putting anyone down for not enjoying Halloween.

History is fascinating.
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Actually, the Romans were pretty patriarchal. They also had little to no tolerance of or respect for any way of life that wasn't Roman. Now the Gauls on the other hand were pretty matriarchal.

There was a great BBC show called "Barbarians" that was hosted by Terry Jones. It's available from Netflix. We learned so much from that little 4 part series.

I think that I might have seen that. Here in the states the History Channel aired a series of shows entitled The Barbarians. I might bore my poor kids and see if I can't rewatch the series.

I don't think that Greek women had a lot of rights either.
 
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I understand it wasn't meant to as a cut, I was just pointed out the inspiration to Dave who asked why the connection of pagans and inventions. You have to admit, it does seem like a strange topic to pop up out of the blue, if you don't know the inspiration for the thread.
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