Anen Sonbef: Difference between revisions

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<center>''"Death is never justice."'' </center>  
<center>''"Death is never justice."'' </center>  
<center>"Are you saying I shouldn't have killed him?"</center>
<center>"Are you saying I shouldn't have killed him?"</center>
<center>''"I'm saying we all shouldn't have had to kill him."'' </center>  
<center>''"I'm saying we shouldn't all have had to kill him."'' </center>  
Anen is a great scholar of philosophy and religion, fascinated by the great questions of existence. He also reads the science in connection or in opposition to these theories voraciously and is both a fervent believer and a great skeptic. Much of his theology and indeed, his 'need' for some purpose, some guiding hand, is motivated by his fear of there ''not'' being anything beyond the material. At the same time he is a profoundly rational and skeptical, but not cynical person, not closed off to the ideas of Gods and so called 'magical thinking' but doesn't see them in line with his own experience. He struggles with these conflicting convictions constantly, but is no longer silently wrenching himself over it. Or is he?
Anen is a great scholar of philosophy and religion, fascinated by the great questions of existence. He also reads the science in connection or in opposition to these theories voraciously and is both a fervent believer and a great skeptic. Much of his theology and indeed, his 'need' for some purpose, some guiding hand, is motivated by his fear of there ''not'' being anything beyond the material. At the same time he is a profoundly rational and skeptical, but not cynical person, not closed off to the ideas of Gods and so called 'magical thinking' but doesn't see them in line with his own experience. He struggles with these conflicting convictions constantly, but is no longer silently wrenching himself over it. Or is he?


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