← Back to context Comment by s1mplicissimus 1 day ago Lots of religious over- and undertones going on, I assume that's where you get the vibe 4 comments s1mplicissimus Reply Aeglaecia 21 hours ago would you care to explain exactly what gives you the impression of religious undertones ? NoraCodes 19 hours ago The invocation of Gregory of Nyssa, for one. PeterHolzwarth 18 hours ago I dunno, I associate Gregory of Nyssa with the unequivocal rejection of slavery. Aeglaecia 19 hours ago it seems very clear to me that the inclusion of a singular religious reference does not justify labelling an entire excerpt as having religious over/undertones ... not sure what im missing
Aeglaecia 21 hours ago would you care to explain exactly what gives you the impression of religious undertones ? NoraCodes 19 hours ago The invocation of Gregory of Nyssa, for one. PeterHolzwarth 18 hours ago I dunno, I associate Gregory of Nyssa with the unequivocal rejection of slavery. Aeglaecia 19 hours ago it seems very clear to me that the inclusion of a singular religious reference does not justify labelling an entire excerpt as having religious over/undertones ... not sure what im missing
NoraCodes 19 hours ago The invocation of Gregory of Nyssa, for one. PeterHolzwarth 18 hours ago I dunno, I associate Gregory of Nyssa with the unequivocal rejection of slavery. Aeglaecia 19 hours ago it seems very clear to me that the inclusion of a singular religious reference does not justify labelling an entire excerpt as having religious over/undertones ... not sure what im missing
PeterHolzwarth 18 hours ago I dunno, I associate Gregory of Nyssa with the unequivocal rejection of slavery.
Aeglaecia 19 hours ago it seems very clear to me that the inclusion of a singular religious reference does not justify labelling an entire excerpt as having religious over/undertones ... not sure what im missing
would you care to explain exactly what gives you the impression of religious undertones ?
The invocation of Gregory of Nyssa, for one.
I dunno, I associate Gregory of Nyssa with the unequivocal rejection of slavery.
it seems very clear to me that the inclusion of a singular religious reference does not justify labelling an entire excerpt as having religious over/undertones ... not sure what im missing