[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> ENGLAND IN CONTEXT
>
> The English experiment in life is, admittedly, part of a wider
> and longer process which reaches back to the 'spread' to Indo-
> European ways into the lives of others, and before that a
> European 'neolithic' stage which made the 'spread' of Indo-
> European possible.
>
> Looking at things from this perspective, the moment at which
> one group of people renounce a belief in transubstantiation is
> a crucial disappearing or vanishing point of a long tradition
> which reaches back into the common ground between the West and
> First Peoples.
>
> The contrast provided by Quiros and Governor Phillip
> highlights the two sides of this vanishing point. Both images,
> no doubt, surrounded by chaos as you rightly demonstrate. But
> striking figures for all that, as fractal images of a more
> complex system.

Bruce,

Would you explain what  you mean by 'renouncing a belief in transubstantiation' and 
how that
constitutes a 'vanishing point of a long tradition which reaches back into the common 
ground
between the West and First Peoples'?

Trudy

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