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KHEEMA-PALAK (INDIAN GROUND MEAT WITH SPINACH)
Servings: 4 servings

4 tbl cooking oil
1/2 tsp mustard seeds
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 fresh green chili pepper
-finely (and seeded, chopped
-if milder flavor preferred)
1 inch cube of root ginger
-peeled and, finely grated
6 cl garlic, peeled and crushed
1 lb lean beef (or lamb), ground
1 large onion, finely sliced
2 cinnamon sticks, 2 inches
-long each, broken up.
1/2 tsp turmeric, ground
1 tbl cumin, ground
1/2 tsp black pepper, ground
1 lb fresh spinach leaves
-chopped -or-
8 oz frozen spinach, defrosted

Directions: heat half the oil in a skillet over medium heat and fry the mustard seeds until they crackle. add the cumin seeds and immediately follow with the chili pepper, ginger and half the garlic. stir and fry for 30 seconds. add the meat, stir and fry until all the liquid evaporates - this will take 8 to 10 minutes. remove the pan from the heat and set aside. in a separate pan, heat the remaining oil over medium heat and stir in the rest of the garlic. add the onions and cinnamon sticks and fry until the onions are lightly browned (6 to 8 minutes), stirring frequently. adjust heat to low and add the turmeric, cumin and black pepper. stir and fry for 1 minute. add the spinach and mix thoroughly. add the meat and stir until the spinach and the other ingredients are thoroughly mixed. cover the pan and simmer for 15 minutes. adjust heat to medium, add salt and the tomatoes, stir and cook for 2 to 3 minutes. add the garam masala, stir and cook for a further 2 to 3 minutes. remove the pan from the heat. _the complete indian cookbook_ mridula baljekar, 1993 smithmark publishers isbn 0-8317-1487-5 typos by jeff pruett submitted by jeff pruett on 08-11-95
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Josephine Trzaska Honor's West. Civ.
Critical Paper 3
Fides et Ratio, One or Both?

The Middle Ages saw a period in time that was deeply rooted in Christianity. Almost every aspect of life was monitered and ruled by the Church. This period in time also saw the emergence of men beginning to question whether the existence of God can be proved by faith , reason, or as Thomas Aquinas insists, by both faith and reason. There were differing opinions of this matter in both scholarly and religious circles. Faith is what all believers must have within them, it is a crucial part of man's relationship with God. On the other hand, reason is a part of science and some believed that matters of The Divine should not be subjected to reason; there should not be a justification for God.

Thomas Aquinas was a teacher of the Dominican Order and he taught that most matters of The Divine can be proved by natural human reason, while "Others were strictly 'of faith' in that they could be grasped only through divine revelation." This was a new view on the faith and reason argument contradictory to both Abelard with his belief that faith should be based on human reason, and the Bernard of Clairvaux who argued that one should only need faith.

Aquinas, in the Summa Theologiae, stated that, "Man should not seek to know what is above reason." His argument was, in very simple terms, that men need reason to understand all of God's truths. Yet there are certain truths that are beyond reason which men can only understand through Divine Revelation, or faith. And sometimes there might be certain aspects of faith that one day reason might have been able to prove but only a few men would know and understand this, so it is necessary that all men know this through Divine Revelation and faith.

In a personal point of view, I see this interpretation the same way that I see all explanantions of religious beliefs. Religion, in my definition, is a simple way to attain the answers to the mystery in life. It holds all of the 'truths' about who made the us, what happens to us after we die. It is a way to give people a purpose and sense of something in their life when there might otherwise be nothing. It is also a way of keeping society in safe behavioral limits by supplying mankind with a code of laws and punishments. How very coincidental it is that God and religion supply all of these things that are so necessary to human society. Of course as time went on these simple religious ideas and laws grew into a very complicated and contradictory system that may be seen as void of any holiness.

It seems very easy to just make explanations as Aquinas does about why things are as they are. He was able to use reason to prove certain Divine Truths, but not all, and when he found he could not prove with reason he uses faith as the answer. How is it philosophically reasonable that reason may be applied to certain aspects but not all? Maybe it is easy for a believer to accept this, but using this 'reason' may be a bit more difficult in proving anything to a non-believer. But of course the non-believer was a very rare site, if not non-existant in the Middle Ages to even contradict or question Aquinas' theologic ideas. "Aquinas was convinced that reason and faith could not really conflict with one another. He wrote, 'Christian theology isues from the light of faith, philosophy from the natural light of reason. Philosophical truths cannot be opposed to the truths of faith'." Where is the reason for this? Reason is associated with fact and it is evident that Aquinas does not have a strong concept of either reason or fact.

Aquinas also used his Reason to explain "Whether matrimony is of natural law". In this he states that matrimony may not be viewed as natural because it is not neccesary in the wild, but in the case of humans it is required for the good of the offspring. He argues that children need parents with a strong bond. "We derive three things from our parents, namely existence, nourishment, and education." Marriage was also neccesary in, "...the mutual services which married persons render one another in household matters." And because nature finds it that man should live together in communities that they should also be together as man and wife for reasons of subsistance. When looking upon modern society these reasonings, except for that fact that men need to live in societies, can be easily disproved. As fifty percent of America's once married population can tell you, marriage is not at all neccesary in the development of a child although it may be beneficial. Marriage is a concept that did not exist at the beginning of mankind. Christian law made marriage neccesary for the survival and even birth of any children.

Aquinas wrote,"The existence of God can be proved in five ways." These five ways all illustrated the need for a higher being by philosophical means. First was the argument of motion, that all things in motion must be moved by another. Second is "from the formality of efficient causation.", where there must be a cause to make an effect. Third is the existence of all things and they must have been put into existence by a higher existence. The fourth is the "cause of their being, goodness, and every other perfection...". And the fifth is the need for an intelligent "governance of the world". All of these proofs of God's existence are basically the same in that they are all, essentially, examples of cause and effect. This cause and effect does not neccesarily prove there is a God but it does lead one to wonder what may be the highest cause, and for this there is no proof.

In the question of faith and reason it is ridiculous to claim that God or any matter of the Divine may be proven by reason. And although I agree with the Bernard of Clairvaux on this one matter I agree for a different reason. He leaves the only answer to be faith. I do not think there is any true way to prove religious matters. Though it may be easy at times to disprove them with the use of reason, it becomes difficult to do so with faith. It is impossible to use faith and reason in conjunction with eachother. Faith is a belief in something that does not have reason, so therefore if something can be proved with philosophical reasoning there would be no reason to have faith except for in the case where reason does not answer the question. This reasoning equation, in the end, does not add up.






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