@Superdog,
Thanks for your reply. You wrote:
I have to agree with Kathryn, you are nitpicking and your baiting in order to use reverse logic was figured out before you may give me credit for.
Okay, I'm sorry if I came across this way. I was simply voicing my thoughts out loud. The way my mind works is that I think about all the different angles on a situation. And when someone tells me something, I think about it means, and about how all the different parts relate to each other. I engage in intellectual debate as a thinking and learning process, not as a way to score points or "bait". This process of questioning and "nitpicking" is part of how I make sense of the world and try to make sure my ethical principles are consistent. But I understand that it can probably be annoying to others discussing with me. (People used to say that I should be a lawyer, and I wasn't sure whether to take it as a complement or an insult
When I raise nitpicking sort of questions like I did at the end of the last thread, it still seems to me that they're relevant questions. There really did used to be Coast Salish spirit-canoe tradition, at least according to some scholarly sources. Does this mean that Sequoyah learned about the spirit-canoe during his trips to British Columbia? I don't know. But I don't see why these details are irrelevant, given that you had claimed that spirit-canoe traditions don't exist in any tribe.
And again, I had the impression that Sequoyah was talking about the alien stuff based on his own purported experience, rather than presenting it as an Indian teaching, but I could be wrong. Either way, again, I don't see why these details are irrelevant.
I appreciate your comments about the importance of the specific community context of a ceremony, language, and so forth. It all makese sense to me, and I take it to heart.
You wrote:
so why would I believe that he somehow has permission over the standard of those communities.
Right, I'm definitely not saying you should believe that. From my perspective, however, I wouldn't rule out the possibility that he received some sort of permission. (I realize that this sort of "innocent until proven guilty" principle can get taken too far, and I actually respect the skeptical approach you guys take. But other criticisms aside, I don't see it as all that unlikely that Sequoyah received some form of permission.)
You wrote:
You seem to be attributing the thoughts of everyone here to me
That's the opposite of my approach. I began by asking a question about something educatedindian had posted. You answered for him. Then I asked you to clarify your stance, and you directed me the website, which seemed to imply that you subscribed to some sort of shared opinion. As far as I'm concerned, every person speaks for him- or herself.
so far you've carried yourself as someone who's not to be trusted and is searching to turn an individuals words around on him to prove the whole board wrong.
Given that this discussion is basically anonymous, I'm not sure that "trust" should play a major role. Realistically, what we have to go by are people's posts, which we can assess on their own merits. If you don't agree with some specific points in my posts, perhaps you can mention them specifically. As for your posts, I highlighted what struck me as an inconsistency between two things you had said. I didn't do this to be mean or disrespectful or literal. I simply pointed it out because it seemed like a point of ambiguity and therefore I thought it merited further clarification.
I look forward to hearing any further thoughts you'd like to share.
Lerner