Secular Intolerance

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Walker
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Walker »

Nick_A wrote: Mon Jul 03, 2017 5:24 am
Maybe Jimmy Buffett has the right idea in his song Margaritaville. I’ll retire to Margaritaville, find some island girls, play island music, drink island rum while eating shrimp. If the people ask was there a woman to blame I’ll say yes. It was Greta’s secularizing that did it. How much can one take?
One song.

Jimmy Buffett's Net Worth: $550 Million In 2016
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Nick_A
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Nick_A »

Harbal wrote: Mon Jul 03, 2017 8:34 am When you take the trouble to actually read what Nick is saying, it doesn't seem to mean a damn thing. Nick obviously doesn't like the way things are, probably because he can't fit in, and he's glimpsed a shadow of something he's convinced is far preferable. The trouble seems to be that, because he can't see what's causing the shadow, his description of it necessarily has to be very vague. Even if it turns out that the shadow Nick is chasing is made by the Sun, rather than the fire in Plato's cave, it is still only a shadow and contains no more "truth" than any other shadow. Or, to put it another way, Nick doesn't know what he's talking about.
This is just classic secular condemnation of what is not understood. Believe it or not there are still some people in the world concerned with the essential philosophical/religious question concerning who we are and why we are here. A secular dominated society believes we are here as a giant collective to serve the Great Beast. Of course these people don't fit in so they just play a part. They give to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's.

Secularists are always condemning God concepts while forgetting these concepts are really just God being made in the image of Man which is classic secularism. I invited a discussion of the Source free of man made considerations on the ONE thread. It wasn't really discussed.

Slavery to the shadows on the wall means we don't "know thyself." I've written about the human condition which creates imaginary fears, attachments and inhibitions increasing dependence on imagination dominating the psychological slavery of the human condition. It is offensive to secularism. If we don't know ourselves, the government, Oprah, and Dr. Phil will explain what the ancients couldn't understand.

We cannot verify a conscious Source for creation. However we can by sufficient conscious efforts to "know thyself," verify the absurdity of the human condition as it exists in us. This is considered insulting and worthy of secular intolerance. Now why would I want to fit into this mindset?
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Harbal
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Re: Secular Intolerance

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Nick_A wrote: Mon Jul 03, 2017 10:08 pm
This is just classic secular condemnation of what is not understood.
It wasn't a condemnation of any kind, it was merely my analysis of the situation.
Believe it or not there are still some people in the world concerned with the essential philosophical/religious question concerning who we are and why we are here.
I do believe it but I also believe there are more worthwhile questions than those two.
A secular dominated society believes we are here as a giant collective to serve the Great Beast.
Secularity is essential for a fair society, it doesn't guarantee fairness but you can't really have fairness without it.
Of course these people don't fit in so they just play a part. They give to Caesar what is Caesar's and to God what is God's.

Secularists are always condemning God concepts while forgetting these concepts are really just God being made in the image of Man which is classic secularism.
In my experience most people don't condemn "God concepts" unless they're being preached at by someone like you.
We cannot verify a conscious Source for creation. However we can by sufficient conscious efforts to "know thyself," verify the absurdity of the human condition as it exists in us. This is considered insulting and worthy of secular intolerance.
I am well aware of the absurdity of the human condition but I can't see any evidence of it being diminished by religion and spirituality. Face it, Nick, you've just got some kind of Don Quixote complex.
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Greta
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Greta »

Nick_A wrote: Mon Jul 03, 2017 5:24 am
... I have more problems with those without expertise who causally denigrate the work of those who are smarter and more productive and more diligent than themselves. This anti-expert attitude is understandable, although very much about the ignorant and lowbrow.
You aren’t attracted to knowledge which devolves into opinions you argue about. The world agrees with you and prefers to battle over opinions. However, there are some who are attracted to the knowledge representing the source of opinions and why this devolution and all the problems associated with it takes place. Authentic philosophy and religion stimulates the mind and heart into conscious contemplation of the source while the world remains totally absorbed in arguing opinions.
A student of psychology you are not. If I was uninterested in spirituality, I would not test self-proclaimed spiritualists to see if they are for real. I would ignore them.

I am not impressed by the claims of those incapable of doubting the veracity of their perceptions, as though our senses and emotions delivered noumena to us rather than phenomena. When people make these newbie errors it's hard to take them seriously.

I am especially not impressed when the above people start positing their naive views as superior to those who have done the work. Basically you are playing a status game.
Nick_A wrote:
Sure, and as a science and sci fi fan, amateur musician, cartoonist and digital artist, and keen, if psychonaut I love to create and use my imagination. I just don't like works of imagination presented as fact.
Neither Jesus or Socrates were overly concerned with earthly facts. They are just partial truths. Jesus enabled the apostles to experience the psychological truth of what he taught. Socrates through the Socratic dialogue enabled those participating to reach intellectual truth. Arguing earthly facts and their interpretations was left to the Pharisees or the government.
It is theists who present what appear to be works of imagination as absolute fact.

Jesus and Socrates may not have cared much for facts (and Jesus, as presented in the Bible, most likely did not exist, his legend seemingly being based on those of Osiris and Horus) but they actually did care very much about facts - the "facts" that they themselves imparted. Again this is a game, this time philosophers cleverly trying to undermine their memetic competition.
Nick_A wrote:
Objective human meaning is clear enough to me ATM. We are not only part of the Earth (and the Sun and galaxy) but agents of the Earth's current transformation and disseminators of the things it created on its surface so as to continue this remarkable story - from the molten geology through to today's Anthropocene period.

What is not meaningful about being part of all this? To be a human being living safely ensconced in a society, given all that we have learned (from experts!) about how we came about, is an incredibly privileged position existentially. In our societies we are safely partitioned from many of the dangers and torments that plague almost all other animals. How is it that we should be so lucky while trillions of others aren't?

There is meaning to be found everywhere in existence if one is fairly happy. However, when people are miserable, unable to accept the (admittedly often hard-to-accept) chaos, injustice, foolishness and perils of their lives, then meaning is harder to find. At that point we might look to either the profane or the metaphysical for meaning.
You’ve described animal meaning and purpose well often provided through idolatry of the Great Beast which determines what should be done. In contrast to meaning and purpose for the human animal which is provided by the world, conscious human meaning and purpose is actualized by consciously receiving awakening influences from above and giving to below. Animal purpose is on the ground. Human purpose unites levels of reality – above and below. It is the conscious potential for human being. The Beast struggles against it since it threatens its imagined self importance and dominance in the world or Plato’s cave.
Okay, noted. You are a theist who despises God's creation. I would say that scientists do far, far more to provide awakening than the blinkered and stultified ideas of ancient religions.

Basically you are miserable because the world is undergoing a period of significant change, and change is difficult. Yes, life can be painful at times, but if we focus on the negatives then we fail to appreciate the good, like ungrateful children who think that having a roof over their heads and being kept safe and healthy is nothing.

I believe that every rich westerner who complains about their situation basically spits in the eye of the poor who would give that eye (and more) to be in such a comfortable position. Billions would trade places with you in a heartbeat. Why not appreciate what we have? It's just that our outrageous good fortune is not a right, and could be taken away at any time.
Nick_A wrote:
Note that whatever it is you focus on, positively or negatively, the more you become like it. Is that what you want?
You only give yourself two choices and argue these choices. However, there is a third choice. One can open to the direction from which these choices appeared and reconcile duality on that basis.
Actually we have numerous choices.

Your issue is that you fixate on negtive things. Constantly. I cannot remember a post of yours that lacked some complaint, and most usually, numerous complaints. You are a complainer and unusually negative thinker.
Nick_A wrote:
I'm old enough to tell passion from malcontent. You come across as anxious, depressed and deeply paranoid. Everything is a problem. Everything is a big deal.
If this were true I couldn’t be good in bed or even have a sense of humor. The human condition is a big problem. It seems quite clear that technology is advancing while human understanding remains the same. If this continues, our species is doomed. Real philosophy and the essence of religion seeks to promote human understanding through providing what is necessary to acquire it. Has philosophy sunk so low that its main concern now is to argue politics? It is depressing to read of what takes place in the world but does no good to become depressed or paranoic over it. It is better to find those in the real world who share these concerns and unite in this common cause in support of human understanding.
Given that being funny on philosophy forums invites criticism and most people claim to be good in bed, your claims are at best untested, and preferably will remain so.

I suppose we all are doomed, aside from Christians living eternally in heaven and Muslim men presumably still banging a new crop of virgins. Then again, what are you and your believer pals going to do with your eternal afterlives at the end of the universe? Are you going to play with black holes? There won't be much else around by then.

Oh yes, I forgot. I am being a materialist, controlled by your Great Beast. Only your GB bothers with black holes rather than the higher immaterial structures of heaven than enlightened beings like yourself will enjoy in dimensions not subject to time rather than base and degraded physical reality [sic].
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Nick_A »

Harbal
It wasn't a condemnation of any kind, it was merely my analysis of the situation.
This is the classic description of secular intolerance. It is considered analysis of the situation in progressive secularism. It begins with the premise that it is right and true so intolerant of anything getting in the way of its techniques.
I do believe it but I also believe there are more worthwhile questions than those two.
This is true for regular mundane concerns like where are my car keys? What are your three most important philosophic questions?
Secularity is essential for a fair society, it doesn't guarantee fairness but you can't really have fairness without it.
What is fair society and how does secularism further it? Are you saying that humanity left to its own devices has the potential for fairness? And you say you understand the human condition?
In my experience most people don't condemn "God concepts" unless they're being preached at by someone like you.
Secularism condemns the expression “One nation under God” which America is founded upon and seeks to eliminate it. What could be a more vivid expression of this preaching as an expression of secular intolerance?
I am well aware of the absurdity of the human condition but I can't see any evidence of it being diminished by religion and spirituality. Face it, Nick, you've just got some kind of Don Quixote complex.
Secularized religion and New Age fantasy are just part of cave life which is an expression of what we are so doesn't change. Progressives want to replace oil and gas with windmills. Who in their right mind wouldn’t want to fight windmills?
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Nick_A »

Greta
A student of psychology you are not. If I was uninterested in spirituality, I would not test self-proclaimed spiritualists to see if they are for real. I would ignore them.

I am not impressed by the claims of those incapable of doubting the veracity of their perceptions, as though our senses and emotions delivered noumena to us rather than phenomena. When people make these newbie errors it's hard to take them seriously.

I am especially not impressed when the above people start positing their naive views as superior to those who have done the work. Basically you are playing a status game.
Your ego is interested but you have not been willing to sacrifice it so as to experience something more real. St. John advised to test the spirits. Do you know what that means?

Were Socrates and Plotinus playing a status game?
It is theists who present what appear to be works of imagination as absolute fact.
Secularist who worship the Great Beast as the high point of universal evolution are far more gullible and guided by self justifying imagination than any theist could be.
Jesus and Socrates may not have cared much for facts (and Jesus, as presented in the Bible, most likely did not exist, his legend seemingly being based on those of Osiris and Horus) but they actually did care very much about facts - the "facts" that they themselves imparted. Again this is a game, this time philosophers cleverly trying to undermine their memetic competition.
Secular philosophy is trying to dispute the Socratic axiom: “I know Nothing.” Have they succeeded or have they proven it?
Okay, noted. You are a theist who despises God's creation. I would say that scientists do far, far more to provide awakening than the blinkered and stultified ideas of ancient religions.
Why would I despise the body of God. You just like to throw meaningless accusations around. You are one of those who would shoot first and ask questions later. You have no conception how silly all your accusations make you appear.
Basically you are miserable because the world is undergoing a period of significant change, and change is difficult. Yes, life can be painful at times, but if we focus on the negatives then we fail to appreciate the good, like ungrateful children who think that having a roof over their heads and being kept safe and healthy is nothing.

I am not miserable. That is just another silly accusation. Life in Plato’s cave consists of the constant fluctuation between what we call good and bad. But what is objectively good about hypocrisy ruling the day? Anyone speaking of the alternative to the dominance of hypocrisy will earn the wrath of secular intolerance both on the net and in real life.
Your issue is that you fixate on negative things. Constantly. I cannot remember a post of yours that lacked some complaint, and most usually, numerous complaints. You are a complainer and unusually negative thinker.
You should write a book called “My favorite Complaints.´Readers will marvel at your ability to create so many. Recognizing the human condition for what it is isn’t complaining – it is philosophy. I can speak of the joys of a cute blonde, merlot, and shrimp by a fireplace but what does it have to do with philosophy?
Oh yes, I forgot. I am being a materialist, controlled by your Great Beast. Only your GB bothers with black holes rather than the higher immaterial structures of heaven than enlightened beings like yourself will enjoy in dimensions not subject to time rather than base and degraded physical reality [sic].
Yes, the great question. Conscious evolution or dust to dust. A tough choice within Plato's cave.
Matthew 13: 26 What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul?
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Re: Secular Intolerance

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Nick wrote:
Yes, the great question. Conscious evolution or dust to dust. A tough choice within Plato's cave.
You think you have got out of the Cave but you are still watching the shadow play.
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Nick_A »

Belinda wrote: Wed Jul 05, 2017 4:22 pm Nick wrote:
Yes, the great question. Conscious evolution or dust to dust. A tough choice within Plato's cave.
You think you have got out of the Cave but you are still watching the shadow play.
Why would you say that? Do you believe that when a person first hears piano music, they can play a piano? My advantage here is in having personally experienced the absurdity of the human condition in relation to human conscious potential and the willingness to admit it. I didn't invent these things. I refer to the greats of the past who dwarf my understanding in the real meaning of the word but help me to learn. Secularism can mock them and call them a cast of characters. They call the denial of reality greater than man on earth intellectual progress and are intolerant of those who know awareness of this reality is essential for human conscious development as well as society having the potential to discover its objective purpose of furthering individuality rather than sacrificing it in service to the transient whims of the Great Beast. Those like Greta can curse me out all they like, it doesn't matter. My concern is for the young who suffer this attitude in institutions of child abuse called schools. I support those who defend the psyche of the young and keep the great ideas alive in society which promote conscious evolution for those drawn to it much like a moth is drawn to the flame.
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Harbal
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Re: Secular Intolerance

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Nick_A wrote: Wed Jul 05, 2017 4:55 pm My concern is for the young who suffer this attitude in institutions of child abuse called schools.
Didn't you go to school, Nick?
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Belinda »

Nick, if anybody has got out of the Cave they cannot know that they are free of the shadow play. Possibly, and for all we can know, nobody has got out of the Cave. The Great Beast, aka the culture of any specified society, is one of many shadows . There is no absolute knowledge.To affirm some knowledge as absolute is idolatry.
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Nick_A »

Belinda wrote: Wed Jul 05, 2017 6:46 pm Nick, if anybody has got out of the Cave they cannot know that they are free of the shadow play. Possibly, and for all we can know, nobody has got out of the Cave. The Great Beast, aka the culture of any specified society, is one of many shadows . There is no absolute knowledge.To affirm some knowledge as absolute is idolatry.
Plato went to great lengths to describe the difference between knowledge and opinion.

Why do secularists become so obsessed with facts and yet fight against recognition of the objective qualitative relativity of the human perspective? A philosopher king will have left the cave and reentered cave life for the sake of awakening people from blind obedience to the human condition. Secularists scream FACTS FACTS but never a peep about what creates a conscious human perspective in which conscious ACTION is possible as opposed to a conditioned perspective where only conditioned REACTION is possible.

Simone Weil's elder brother André Weil the famous mathematician in a 1932 letter (1241)
It will now be I think 23 years that you made your entry into the phenomenal world to create the greatest pain in the ass for rectors and school directors
Yes I know. The ugly crazy lady started early. But again regardless of the educated secular growls, sometimes we need these Hemorrhoid types, these true pains in the ass, to shake things up and raise the essential human questions that are being destroyed in the young.
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Harbal
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Re: Secular Intolerance

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Nick_A wrote: Wed Jul 05, 2017 8:48 pm the objective qualitative relativity of the human perspective
:?
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Belinda »

Nick wrote:
-----regardless of the educated secular growls, sometimes we need these Hemorrhoid types, these true pains in the ass, to shake things up and raise the essential human questions that are being destroyed in the young.--
I assure you that it is a live issue with educationists to present a balanced view to children. Children are taught the skill of critical thinking and this skill includes the variety of ideas and religious affiliations, the manner of the presentation as suited to the age and ability of the child.

By the way, Nick, your remark about Don Quixote and tilting at windmills misses Harbal's point altogether. The psychology of Don Quixote has nothing to do with sustainable energy sources. In fact, the story of Don Quixote excites interest because so many people recognise this tendency in ourselves. One should look at the reality of a problem before one gives time and psychic energy to it.

Have you done any teacher training lately? Read the latest theories about how children learn?
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Re: Secular Intolerance

Post by Nick_A »

Belinda
I assure you that it is a live issue with educationists to present a balanced view to children. Children are taught the skill of critical thinking and this skill includes the variety of ideas and religious affiliations, the manner of the presentation as suited to the age and ability of the child.
The kiss of spiritual death. The Great Beast smiles its approval. Secularism has established in its own eyes that only the state representing the Great Beast can provide this “balanced view” designed to destroy what is essentially human in the young.

The goal of education would be a worthwhile topic but who would join me here to support Yoda’s views which are essentially mine and represent both Plato and Simone Weil? Gotcha. I refer to a different Yoda, not the one in Star Wars. He wrote a PhD theses for Columbia University and I refer to the abstract. I am pleased to read that somehow he survived having his spirit killed by education and becoming a zombie like slave to the Great Beast. This offers hope. It does mean that there is a minority who have not been absorbed by the Beast and can keep the essential purpose of education alive for the young fortunate to find them. Without it, these poor unfortunates will end up with the dreaded “age appropriate” education and begin their psychological descent down into indoctrination. If Yoda can figure it out, there is no reason others cannot as well.

https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/catalog/ac:176152
The concern of this study is the loss of the meaning or purpose of education and the instrumental view of education as its corollary. Today, education is largely conceived of as a means to gain social and economic privilege. The overemphasis on school children's test scores and the accountability of teachers and schools is evidence that education has lost its proper meaning. In such a climate, we observe general unhappiness among teachers, school children, and their parents. Society as a whole seems to have given up on education, not only school education but also the very idea of educated human beings. There is an urgent need to reconsider what education is and what its purpose is. However, these questions,once being the primary concerns of philosophers of education,are barely discussed today………………………….
They are barely discussed because dominant secularism in its narrow minded arrogance believes it already knows and follows the purpose of education.
……………………Thus, education is apprenticeship in reading and the learning of the method of contemplation. I conceive of Weil's thesis as a comprehensive response to the question in Plato's Meno: "Can Virtue be Taught?" Replacing the term "virtue" with "attention," Weil responds that it can be taught and it should be the sole purpose of education. Like Plato, Weil considers education to be the conversion of the soul to the Good, while attention is the orientation of the soul to the Good (or God). As we turn to see the contradictions between the transcendent Good and the reality in this world, we need to contemplate the without losing the love of the Good in life's bitterness and confusion. By learning to contemplate, reading better, and changing perspectives, one could learn to love better. Weil claims that this should be the sole purpose of education. This grand vision of education may re-kindle the meaning of education and suggests a compelling alternative to the now dominating instrumental view of education. It might then save the downcast situation of education observed in teachers, school- children, their parents, college professors, and our society as a whole…………
Plato and Simone Weil have rightly understood that conscious attention connecting above and below and opening a person to appreciate objective values normal for the soul is the goal of human education. This is poison to secularism and inspires its intolerance to all that questions its imagined superiority. Jesus, Socrates, Plato, Buddha, Simone Weil, and others are referring to what is necessary to awaken to reality which should be the goal of education. Progressive education prefers the kiss of spiritual death furthered through indoctrination and secular intolerance giving the impression of superiority but in reality is just self serving narrow-mindedness.
By the way, Nick, your remark about Don Quixote and tilting at windmills misses Harbal's point altogether. The psychology of Don Quixote has nothing to do with sustainable energy sources. In fact, the story of Don Quixote excites interest because so many people recognise this tendency in ourselves. One should look at the reality of a problem before one gives time and psychic energy to it.
Don Quixote mistook the windmill as the enemy. He was fighting an illusion. There are those fighting reality by considering windmills to be the solution. Either way their fight is with imagination. What kind of education would allow a young person to awaken to reality sufficiently to experience that it is useless to fight imaginary dangers while supporting spiritual death?
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Harbal
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Re: Secular Intolerance

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Nick_A wrote: Thu Jul 06, 2017 5:01 pm Don Quixote mistook the windmill as the enemy. He was fighting an illusion.
You see, you do have something in common.
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