This "quiz" is neither theme nor value neutral.
Rather is the subset of a doctrinally preloaded view.

Thus it is not an "existential" but rather a meta-thematic
post-it note for (in this case) a specific theology.

Yep, another Christian subterfuge masks itself as "existential".


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Robin Carlsen" <maskedzebra@...>
wrote:
>
> Quiz To Determine How Sincere You Are About Knowing Reality
>
> Directions: Read each statement carefully. Decide whether you Strongly
Agree (SA), Agree (A), Strongly Disagree (SD), or Disagree (D).
>
> Score 4 for the maximally desired answer, which will always be either
SA or SD. Score 2 for the desired answer, which will always be A or D.
Score 0 for the undesired answer, Score -1 for the maximally undesirable
answer. Perfect score = 100. There are 25 questions.
>
> I understand more or less how I came to my present view of reality.
>
> I can't conceive of understanding or experiencing reality in any other
way than I do.
>
> When I sense some challenge to my view of reality (or any given issue)
I harden and hunker down; it doesn't matter at that point whether I am
right or wrong; I must preserve the sense of my own sense of integrity:
I must defend myself.
>
> I have had the experience of realizing I was wrong about something,
and have enjoyed surrendering to a different truth than I started out
believing.
>
> I feel I am a pretty good judge of the sincerity or insincerity of
someone who takes a point of view opposed to my own.
>
> I believe it is possible to be a good person and yet have a view of
reality or even any important issue which is opposed to my own point of
view.
>
> I would like to have a greater awareness of all the reality that there
is to know.
>
> I am living a life that is not ignoring the fact that I know I must
die someday.
>
> I wish I could be in an actual state of grace all the time, supposing
this were possible.
>
> I am willing to brave my fears and my own conditioning in order to get
a connection with reality which will ask some form of sacrifice of my
familiar way of seeing things, and my own vanity.
>
> I am interested in having an experience of my own essential innocence
and sincerity--at least this is a desideratum I seek.
>
> I consider a clear conscience to be a good thing. It is something I
wish to possess in my own life.
>
> When I am in the presence of an intuition of a greater or higher
reality I tend to contract rather than expand.
>
> I have done my best to find the purpose of life, even the purpose of
my own life.
>
> I like learning new things about myself; I am in the quest of greater
self-knowledge all the time.
>
> I feel motivated in some sense to seek the truth even if that truth is
inconvenient to me, to my assumed beliefs and predilections.
>
> I think I am a pretty good judge of the character of other human
beings.
>
> I feel that my life has been governed by a fate which did not take
into account my own desire or free will. I feel I am not essentially
responsible for where I have ended up in my life.
>
> I am willing to have a change of heart about someone should they
indicate some willingness to reach out to me.
>
> My enemies, they are fixed for all-time for me. I don't see
reconciliation or negotiation. I will fight to the end, never giving any
quarter--no matter what.
>
> I would rather be who I am than to be any other person who has ever
lived.
>
> I am willing to see the truth of when irony is directed towards me.
>
> I feel I want what is the most real experience that any human being
can have in the universe.
>
> I feel the truth about something always has a better potential for
being useful to me than some falsification of that same truth.
>
>  I am living a life so as to deserve to be happy when I die.
>


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