Surely you must realise how terribly undefined is your question! You would have to specify an area. Also, either here or on another thread we spoke of man's 'imagined world'. Since our worlds are imagined (held in the imagination, visualised), the imagination of them is not reality but *reflects* reality, or expresses an interpretation of reality. These views and 'organisations of perception' change. But then so do those having to do with scientifically-defined or explained reality.Sthitapragya wrote:Are you saying that the old conception is wrong and the new one is right?
The nature of our reality, where we are, who we are, what we are doing here, how we came (as awarenesses, as consciousnesses) to be here, what *all this* is, and very much more, are the prime questions. They HAVE to be asked and answered. But it is possible to shut down the doors of perception, and to ask only limited questions. The questions you appear to have are those that are similar to a math problem or a science problem, or perhaps a mechanical problem. To all appearances you no longer feel you need to ask (as Inglorious has said) 'depth' questions. You seem to have narrowed your human project into very precise channels, and you do this for a host of reasons that could be explored and defined. I suggest that there is a 'new metaphysic' or Weltanschauung that dominates your mind and consciousness. It is part of a narrowing-down project, a project of elimination. In other posts I have linked it to a destructive project but *destruction* has to be carefully defined. I do not mean that you are malicious. I suggest 'turning the lens of examination around', and just as you are asking bold questions, that a group of questions be asked of you. That you be made to stare a mirror and to see your operative tenets and predicates. This is a work of metaphysical self-analysis. But, because you are so weak in history, literature, theology and numerous other areas and cannot visualise these areas and the meaning-content they contain, and because you seem to desire to focus so narrowly in your chosen and restricted domain, you are ill-equipped to undertake this analysis. And you resist it like all hell. (And so does Team Atheism that operates on PN). You must understand that this is a serious game - a game, yes, but one with serious consequences.Why do gods need to be defined anew? Were the old definitions wrong? If the old definitions were wrong, why is it not a possibility to be considered that since the old definition is wrong, then maybe there is no god at all? why do you need to define him 'anew"? What is the need?
Not involved in questions like 'what man is to do with himself and his present' and yet you say you are involved in or interested in philosophy? What is your area of concern then?No I am not. I am not involved in any question like "what man is to do with himself and his present" and I definitely do not think there is any "new order of reality". Reality is reality. If you think there is a new order of reality then there is your problem. Reality has always been. Maybe your perception of reality is different now. I know what a man is to do with himself. Man has to survive and thrive and procreate so that his genes get passed along. That is it. No more. No less. Whatever else I do to make my life more "meaningful" or 'purposeful" is just misplaced ideology I indulge in. I understand that.
Unless I have gotten it wrong the prime questions of philosophy are: What is this place? and What are we to do here?
You are wrong about 'new orders of reality'. It is a phenomenological question I suppose but it has been established that people define their world through their view of it. The world that Shakesepeare lived in, though materially the same, is not the same world that we live in. But I am using the word 'world' here to mean conceptual order. These are apparently new ideas for you and it is not a surprise that they may take some time to sink in.
Well, that is one thing that man may choose to do, and is a biological imperative for the race. But there are an infinitude of other activities that man dedicates himself to and which are part of civilisation. In order to understand what is being referred to will, I reckon, involve some study on your part. And in that study you may also come to understand and appreciate the power of the Idea and also 'great ideas'.I know what a man is to do with himself. Man has to survive and thrive and procreate so that his genes get passed along.
That is like saying that you do not believe it possible to assign a higher or a lower valuation to anything at all. In one way or another, through persuasion or coercion, we are all under the sway of ideas. If we don't serve some we serve others. The point is obviously that we have to make the effort to define our values. I argue that the project of defining values is, in fact and in reality, the project of the higher man. This is an idealistic statement, and it is also a statement about reality and politics that is troublesome and problematic. But right here on this beloved PN Forum, as everyone is very aware, the game of definitions is a acutely relevant, acutely contested. It is not so much about if a person 'believes in God' or not, and much more about what system of defining reality he subscribes to. It is a similar project. I argue that 'you' (plural) who define yourself as 'atheist' are also involved in projects of definition of reality, and recall again the vast state atheistic enterprises which established prison camps and psychiatric wards as a means of effecting control and power (and often in these areas). I propose no solution to any question of belief but rather an openness to the full dimension of the questions. And with all this, naturally, the conversation becomes more interesting, more relevant.Theists can do whatever they want, as long as they do not try to force their ideology on me or believe they are better than me. You live your way and I will live mine. They minute you insinuate that you are better than me or try to force your ideology on me, I will retaliate. That is all. I do not care for your God. It does not matter to me one whit whether he exists or not. If he does, fine. If he does not, fine. As far as I am concerned, God is as relevant to reality as Harry Potter or Santa or the abominable snowman is. But that is my opinion. I do not think your belief in God makes you a lesser man. But if you think that my lack of belief in God makes me a lesser man and you tell me to my face, I will retaliate. Otherwise, my dear, I just don't give a damn.
What you value and what you don't value, what you privilege and what you don't, is of course ultimately irrelevant. To the degree that you grasp the magnitude of the questions is the degree that you can interact with their importance. If none of this is important to you, why (I ask again) are you involved in the questions?