Difference between revisions of "Thread:Talk:Quote/How to use this template"
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Henry van Til wrote: | Henry van Til wrote: | ||
{{:Quote|Culture is not something neutral, without ethical or religious connotation. Human achievement is not purposeless but seeks to achieve certain ends, which are either good or bad. Since man is a moral being, his culture cannot be a-moral. Because man is a religious being, his culture too, must be religiously oriented. There is no pure culture in the sense of being neutral religiously, or without positive or negative value ethically.<ref>Henry van Til, '''Calvinistic Concept of Culture''', 27</ref>}} | {{:Quote|Culture is not something neutral, without ethical or religious connotation. Human achievement is not purposeless but seeks to achieve certain ends, which are either good or bad. Since man is a moral being, his culture cannot be a-moral. Because man is a religious being, his culture too, must be religiously oriented. There is no pure culture in the sense of being neutral religiously, or without positive or negative value ethically.<ref>Henry van Til, '''Calvinistic Concept of Culture''', 27</ref>}} | ||
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+ | Notice that the <nowiki><ref></nowiki> tag will create an automatically numbered footnote. |
Revision as of 18:23, 24 July 2020
This is an abstraction for standardizing blockquotes.
Example:
Henry van Til wrote: {{:Quote|Culture is not something neutral, without ethical or religious connotation. Human achievement is not purposeless but seeks to achieve certain ends, which are either good or bad. Since man is a moral being, his culture cannot be a-moral. Because man is a religious being, his culture too, must be religiously oriented. There is no pure culture in the sense of being neutral religiously, or without positive or negative value ethically.<ref>Henry van Til, '''Calvinistic Concept of Culture''', 27</ref>}}
which produces:
Henry van Til wrote:
Culture is not something neutral, without ethical or religious connotation. Human achievement is not purposeless but seeks to achieve certain ends, which are either good or bad. Since man is a moral being, his culture cannot be a-moral. Because man is a religious being, his culture too, must be religiously oriented. There is no pure culture in the sense of being neutral religiously, or without positive or negative value ethically.[1]
Notice that the <ref> tag will create an automatically numbered footnote.
- ↑ Henry van Til, Calvinistic Concept of Culture, 27