by Interaxus » Fri Jul 14, 2006 12:28 am
Hi BP&,
Sorry I gave the wrong impression. It was certainly unintentional. I was using ‘bias’ in what I thought was a neutral and descriptive sense, as in these Google examples: “Please also keep in mind that Lawrence and I are most definitely not vegetarians, and our choices will reflect a bias towards red meatâ€, “Blue will carry a bias towards Green or Violet, Red will be biased towards Violet or Orange, and Yellow will carry a bias towards Orange or Green†[referring to a Color Wheel], etc, etc.
Over recent years, I may myself have developed something of a bias (prejudice) against religions, being constantly reminded of some of their nastier outcomes, but I have absolutely no bias against Bach, Praxiteles, the alHambra or the Bagavadh Gita. I confess I may have had an initial bias against ecclesiastical Latin (after all, it’s easier to keep it simple if you’re a stupid beginner) but I’ve outgrown that.
To anyone whisked off by exhausted parents to Sunday School and Church when a child, reading biblical extracts in Latin is like studying with a cheat sheet (in a positive sense, I hasten to add!). At the very least, it’s an easy vocabulary builder. I recommend IESUS NAZARENUS, VITA DOMINI IMAGINIBUS ILLUSTRATA, from the European Language Institute (1984), for those with a suitable cultural background.
While on the subject of illustrated ‘comic books’ in Latin, there are also: Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Caesar’s Bellum Helveticum and a whole horde of Asterix adventures – all done into Latin by one Rubricastellanus. No mental cheat sheets for these.
I agree with you about Lingua Latina. It’s in a class of its own. Love it!
Cheers,
Int