But in the present PC-determined environment these issues have become so politicized that they are hard indeed to talk about.
You're attempting to defeat any point you can't meet by labeling it PC.
I will say that man's defining capacity, his thinking capacity, his analytical capacity, and his ability to function within abstract through is one of his core important activities.
I don't dispute this, and have been asking you to use this capacity throughout this thread. You're only willing to take it so far.
Out of these activities come all that we value and the structures in which we live: civilization to put it bluntly.
I don't dispute that thought is very important to civilization etc, but am addressing my comments as best I can towards the topic of this thread you have started, Christianity, theology, religion in general etc.
It is important to understand this and not to fall into the trap of denigrating this orientation, which is, naturally, quintessentially masculine.
Sigh, gender has nothing to do with any of this, and it is fair to denigrate intellectualism in the context of the spiritual inquiry.
There are reasons why this denigration takes place; there are reasons why men are, shall we say, 'tricked' into performing this act against themselves, and you, Felasco, are almost a 'textbook case'. You have so interiorized it that you cannot even distinguish it nor are you aware that you do it/that it has been done. You justify it with every breath, and yet I suggest that you have not really examined nor do you really understand what you are doing. And I further say that it is exactly this that needs to be rectified.
You want everybody to place intellectualism at the pinnacle of the human experience so that you, an intellectual, will also occupy that pinnacle.
To rectify, one has to examine and to understand. This is not easy when one is driven by Politically Correct thinking.
From here out, when ever I can't defeat one of your points, I will simply wave my hand and label your thoughts PC thinking. Lazy, lazy, lazy.
What I am talking about and referring to is distinct from what you project onto me.
What I'm projecting on you is the mirror you'd rather not look in.
And truthfully, the 'bias' which I most certainly have and also desire to cultivate and to accentuate, is not one of 'tools', though tools have something to do with it, but of even more fundamental questions and issues.
Another way of saying the same thing. You insist everything must be analyzed, because you are an analyzer.
This is funny, I admit, and yet it is also revealing, I think. I would suggest that in perhaps a significant way this reflects your core attitude toward 'hierarchies' (in this case of religious figures and of institutions they might organize and create). Your humor is a form of ridicule, perhaps?
I am ridiculing my own pompousness, the degree to which I take my own bloviations seriously. It's an interesting procedure called sanity.
Is there a religious/theological structure that you admire?
Religious and theological are not equivalents. Religious is experience, theological is talk about experience. One is real, the other merely symbolic.
In Christianity I admire the walking of the walk, the experience, the reality part.
Because you are 'in reaction', and the terms I use, which you will not make the effort to understand, run quite counter to PC attitudes that you have installed and defend, it follows inevitably that you must paraphrase and rephrase my words.
I must admit I get bored quickly with lazy posters. The next time you
chant PC, PC, PC as a defense I may become an ex-reader.
And if you did you could then begin to consider what I am actually attempting to talk about.
What you are actually attempting to talk about is as many words as possible for as long as possible.
But I am not myself speaking about being an asshole, or a socially clueless nerd, nor ego-driven.
Because you're too young yet, and not quite honest enough. You're not speaking about it, you're just doing it, apparently sort of blindly.
I am attempting to speak about concrete and objective ideas in relation to which we (as men) can orient ourselves, or not. You make a severe mistake, as well as reveal your own hand, in reducing this a priori to an 'ego-battle'. It is not.
My point is about the process as a whole. This forum is primarily about ego, not the stated topics. Many of us, including me, often get carried away in buying the cover story that it is the subject matter which is the primary driver of this experience.
Example, you are spending literally hours a day typing to 2 or 3 people, as am I. That can hardly be described as logical, or a recognition of the great importance of these topics etc etc. You and I are the same, in that both of us will keep typing until the end of time if even only one person will pay attention to us.
You like to talk, talk, talk about masculinity. Being "manly" is being brave enough to see these less the glorious things about ourselves, and maybe admit them in public too. But, to be fair, it is rarely a lesson one learns early in life. It usually takes time to become that confident a man, a slow natural process which unfolds at it's own pace.
There are larger ideas and principals operating under and over the specifics.
Yes, life is full of things that can be analyzed. What I've been asking readers to do in my posts is more carefully analyze where it is productive to analyze, and where it is not. You wish to analyze everything, except analyzing itself, because to do that would threaten the game itself, which you find unacceptable.
If you were to realize this your relationship to what is being talked about, and why it is being talked about, might change. It is possible. Yet, if this is at the core, for you, an 'ego-issue', and if you take your own ego very seriously, you will only be able to defend your ego-structure and thus lose sight of the objectivities. Trippy, huh?
I am smiling here, because I'm guessing you are 30 at best, and you are attempting to advise someone twice your age on the great issues of life etc. But ok, that's fair, go for it.
And that the 'tools' we are presently using, and which get us into a mess of indecision and self-sabotage, need to be brought out into the open and examined.
You talk endlessly of examining things, but then you decline to actually do it.
Yet what I am speaking about it distinct insofar as it has to do with the construction of ideals, the definition of ideals, and the institution of ideals which is a whole other arena and involves work.
Yes, you are an analyzer and so you wish to elevate analysis to an exalted status at the center of everything, not just for you personally, but in a universal sense. If analysis is very important, then so is the analyzer.
I know from reading your posts that what you imagine is needed is this thing your call 'love'.
In the Christian context yes, all you need is love. In the East they approach the challenge by addressing that which is the source of the apparent division within and without us, thought. In both cases, the aim is to address the fundamental human condition. I think they are both good approaches, and each is suitable for some, while being less suitable for others.
This is an odd statement. First, let Harry deal with things for himself. But it also pegs my discourse, my choices, my thrust, to your actions and choices.
No, it doesn't. You are entirely free to go after Harry on the personal level if you don't mind me doing the same thing to you. I suspect Harry probably has too much class to join us to any great degree, but I don't myself have that obstacle.
If we don't find a common ground of agreement, do you suppose that we might bring it to a rest for awhile?
You are fully in control of how and when you engage my posts. You surely have no obligation to engage.
Yet I think that the view and the information that supports it is so foreign to you that it will take some time. It certainly appears so.
You are arguing for analysis. I am asking you to analyze analysis itself, in the context of the subject of this thread. You decline to challenge analysis itself. You are declining to do the very thing you are arguing for.
The Bible itself has only become available, and people have only become sufficiently literate to read it, recently. Say 500 years. I don't have specific numbers yet I would imagine that before that 90% of the population would have been illiterate.
Which clearly demonstrates that the Christian experience can easily survive the loss of literate analysis, because it has already done so for over a thousand years.
So, when you say 'Confront your own tool-bias' I am forced to conclude that you are not exactly sure just what you are referring to.
Tool Bias 101: If the evidence were to show that ideology is not an aid but an obstacle to the religious inquiry, would we then drop ideology? If not, we have tool bias, that is, a particular means have become more important to us than the stated end.
I should add that this is hardly a crime, as surely no one is obligated to pursue a religious inquiry. But philosophically speaking, tool bias which is not openly disclosed represents either a lack of clarity, or a dishonesty.
To be able to approach an ideational world is the beginning of the 'possibility of self'.
The tiny little prison cell of self is just what we hope to escape. But first we'll usually try making the tiny little prison cell bigger, bigger, bigger.
In order to confront the Reality in which we find ourselves, we recur to ideas, symbols, sentiments, and so much that it cannot really be named.
Ah, but I say that is not confronting reality at all, but ideas, symbols, and sentiments etc, ie. symbols that point to reality.
You are confusing the photo of your friend with the real friend. Look up at the night sky. The moon does not have a name anywhere except in our minds. In the real world beyond our minds, the moon is entirely nameless.
It is the water we swim in. Language and ideation is the 'tool' of our being.
It is the tool of YOUR being. And mine as well to a large degree. Now you are confusing particular personal situations with some universal truth.
To be literate means to have a relationship to this world and to have fluidity in it.
To be literate does not mean having a relationship with this world, but
a relationship with words about this world. It is primarily the "literateness" which obscures a relationship with the actual real world.