If you are a Solipsist, you aren't talking to me. I don't exist. Only you do.
Stop talking to yourself...it's mad.
1. I believe in the necessity of an ineffable source. The universe for this source is the body of God. God doesn't exist; rather God IS beyond the limitations of time and space. The universe serves the process of EXISTENCE within the isness of God. A person like Einstein can feel its necessity:Again, I'm considerably less interested in what Christians or Muslims or Jews or Hindus or Shintos etc., believe and more interested in how they take those beliefs here...
1] a demonstrable proof of the existence of your God or religious/spiritual path
2] addressing the fact that down through the ages hundreds of Gods and religious/spiritual paths to immortality and salvation were/are championed...but only one of which [if any] can be the true path. So why yours?
3] addressing the profoundly problematic role that dasein plays in any particular individual's belief in Gods and religious/spiritual faiths
4] the questions that revolve around theodicy and your own particular God or religious/spiritual path
The fact that we need proof of the obvious or God is proof of the limitations of the fallen human condition"Every one who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe-a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble."
Nick, bubba doesn't care. His interest is in tearin' down what you believe, not understandin' it. He's convinced, becuz he sits at the crossroads unable to pick a way, no one can, or should. He claims he wants a rational and virtuous font but he lies. He's a dirty dealer. There's no good faith in him. He is, as Alexis might say, a destroyer. He is desolate, so we all should be desolate. Engage him as you like, but be mindful: he has nuthin' but hate in him.
Well, the way that my own interests dovetail with what I gather you are saying -- filled to the brim as you must be with declarations and assertions (or do you avoid such things in your *concern* about, say, the myriad daseins?) -- is through my concern for certain modern situations and events. The one I'll mention is present day France and the political, social, cultural, philosophical, and ideological issues that are strongly at play in that culture and in the on-going election.iambiguous wrote: ↑Sun Apr 10, 2022 1:52 amWhat I attempt to expose are the objectivists among us. Moral, political and/or spiritual. Those who argue it is their God, their ideology, their deontological assessment, their understanding of nature, that reflects the optimal or the only rational understanding of the human condition. And then the inherent danger embedded in communities where they come into power and get to decide which behaviors are rewarded and which are punished. And are in turn able to enforce their moral, political and/or religious agenda.
This is an odd statement when you examine it. What you note here as taking place, must take place, and always takes place. It is in Classical Liberalism that defines the possibility of disparate peoples with disparate goals & aspirations, who yet opt to live and get along together under one general political roof, is it not? Apparently, we are living within a historical period where that form of liberalism is in danger of collapsing.And then the inherent danger embedded in communities where they come into power and get to decide which behaviors are rewarded and which are punished. And are in turn able to enforce their moral, political and/or religious agenda.

Oh, even a casual perusal of bubba's posts thru out the forum show his goal is far broader than offin' Christianity.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 1:29 amNow I must address what I think is your primary objective and one shared by many (most) who have strong opinions about Christianity. You wish to see it dissolved. You really have a problem that *it* believes it is right in defending the moral code it defines and defends, and you really do not like that it exerts itself through its moral, political and religious agenda.
See, he notes things like this without it really sinking in that this is exactly what all the other "a God, the God, my God" folks out there are insisting about their own Gods!!! They can't all be right, but to the denomination, they'll insist that they are. Or, rather, that their own existential, rooted in dasein, leaps of faith to God are likely to get you the immortality and salvation that you crave.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm If "immortality and salvation" are at stake, then the question of what you believe about God is not irrelevant. But the wrong beliefs of other people, no matter how numerous or elaborate they may become, do not make the truth stop being the truth.
all that matters is that they believe what they do?!!
What, this is what he means by demonstrating that the Christian God does in fact exist?!!! Quoting Scripture?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm Jesus Christ says otherwise. He says, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life;" and then, in case anybody misses the point: "no one comes to the Father except through Me." (John 14:6)
So if there are many roads, they are not going to the same place "the way" is taking people. Take your pick, and live (and die) with the consequences.
1] For one reason or another [rooted largely in dasein], you are taught or come into contact with [through your upbringing, a friend, a book, an experience etc.] Christianity.
2] Over time, you become convinced that Christianity expresses and encompasses the most rational and objective truth. This truth then becomes increasingly more vital, more essential to you as a foundation, a justification, a celebration of all that is moral as opposed to immoral, rational as opposed to irrational.
3] Eventually, for some, they begin to bump into others who feel the same way about Christianity; they may even begin to actively seek out folks similarly inclined to view the world in a particular way.
4] Some begin to share their Christianity with family, friends, colleagues, associates, Internet denizens; increasingly it becomes more and more a part of their life. It becomes, in other words, more intertwined in their personal relationships with others...it begins to bind them emotionally and psychologically.
5] As yet more time passes, they start to feel increasingly compelled not only to share their Truth about Christianity with others but, in turn, to vigorously defend it against any and all detractors as well.
6] For some, it can reach the point where they are no longer able to realistically construe an argument that disputes Christianity as merely a difference of opinion; they see it instead as, for all intents and purposes, an attack on their intellectual integrity....on their very Self.
So, now the profoundly problematic and ofttimes conflicting beliefs in a God, the God, my God -- with all that is at stake on both sides of the grave -- is likened to 2 + 2 = ? Like some say 3 and some say 1 and some say 5 and some say 11 and some say 4. But there is only one correct answer. Just as there is only correct answer in regard to God...
Logic?!!Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm That's right.
Either the God I am telling you about exists, or He does not. There is no other possibility: it's one or the other. Logic tells you that. And if, as I believe, He does exist, then following any other so-called "god" is futile, and leads to death -- just following no god (or oneself) will.
With all that is at stake if you choose the wrong path?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pmThat's a different question, and a serious one.
What remains irrelevant is how many wrong answers are "out there." It just doesn't matter. Ever.
Right, as long as it is you who gets to decree that only the path you are on is the right one. And even though those on all the other paths are decreeing the same for their own God/No God spiritual path their own Scriptures are all irrelevant because in not being sync with your path they are all necessarily wrong.
So, go ahead and ask them about the Christian God path. See if they "get" that the only true path is the one that you are on.
Yes, that is precisely my point! All of the denominations proclaim that they and only they are The Way. But, again, with so much at stake none of these all-powerful Gods seem able to actually demonstrate to mere mortals that He is the one!!Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm Don't be naive: everybody does that. The most inclusive person still believes that being inclusive is better than being exclusive. And the inclusive views of religion all reject the exclusive ones as being too narrow or wrong, just because they're exclusive.
Exactly!! Everybody's God gets to exist merely by proclaiming that their God really is the one exclusive God. And even though the atheists aren't claiming that God exists it's still their obligation to demonstrate that He does not.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm So that means everybody is exclusive about God. And you won't find anybody more dogmatic about it, or more exclusive, on less evidence, than the Atheists.
And even though those on all the other paths are decreeing the same for their own God/No God spiritual path their own Scriptures are all irrelevant because in not being sync with your path they are all necessarily wrong.
My guess: they are saying exactly the same thing about their own God. And just like IC, their "proof" revolves around a more or less blind leap of faith to their scripted narrative. They're all in exactly the same boat but don't have either intellectual honesty or integrity to accept each other as such.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm They aren't wrong because they are not in sync with me; they're wrong because God says they're wrong. It's Him they're out of sync with.
It's not the same!! Not if arguing over the shape of the Earth doesn't result in "Inquisitions and crusades and jihads and theocracies and rigid orthodox communities where practically everything that everyone does will land them either in Heaven or Hell.
What difference does it make which brutal repression and violence you assign to which denomination. It all comes down to insisting that only your own denomination, your own God is the God. And providing no accumulation of evidence other than the leaps of faith themselves.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm Inquisitions = Catholic. Crusades = big, long ones Muslim, short ones Catholic. Jihads = Muslim. Theocracies = never been one. Rigid Orthodox Communities = maybe you're picking on Jews? Or maybe Mennonites, now?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm I am none of these. Let them answer as they choose: I do not speak for them. And in the end, for whatever they have done, they, like us all, will answer to their Judge.
3] that your belief in the Christian God is rooted in part in the particular life that you lived...from your indoctrination as a child [if that is the case] to the accumulation of personal experiences you had as an adult
Of course it is the case! Around the globe in community after community children are being brainwashed to believe in one or another God. And each of them as individuals has a unique trajectory of personal experiences that brings them closer to one point of view rather than another. That's just common sense.
Unbelievable. The evidence of course is the lives that each of us lived! Who here has not been indoctrinated as a child? Who here has not rooted their value judgments in the existential trajectory of "personal experiences that brought them closer to one point of view rather than another?"I've lost count: is that your third or fourth claim for which you have zero evidence?
Here's what he comes up with:Okay, given your own life and your own belief in the Christian God note in some detail how my points above didn't matter in shaping and molding your own spiritual/religious path.
He doesn't dare go there. It means confronting the fact that my points are basically just common sense. All of us live lives where there the experiences we have and the experiences we don't have, the people we meet and the people we don't meet, the information and knowledge and ideas we come upon and the information, knowledge and ideas that we don't. Of course that will have a profound impact on who we come to think we are!!!Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Why? You seem to think you know me already, and can analyze my "spiritual path" on no evidence at all. Are you now saying you were bluffing, and you won't actually know, unless I tell you?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am What Dawkins can't explain is the phenomenon known as "conversion." People can change their minds, and routinely do. Somebody born in an Islamic land can end up being a Hindu, or a Catholic can become a Buddhist. It happens all the time. But Dawkins' theory can't explain how that's possible. It requires Determinism-by-environment.
No, given the existence of free will, it just requires that you have a new experience, sustain a new friendship, come upon new information and knowledge etc., that prompts you existentially to think about something like religion in a different way. It's only "Determinism-by-environment" if the environment itself [including the human brain] is ever and always wholly -- only -- in sync with nature's laws of matter. Then memes would be entirely interchangeable with genes. No, given the existence of free will, it just requires that you have a new experience, sustain a new friendship, come upon new information and knowledge etc.,
Ultimately of course presuming some measure of free will, it will always come down to a fundamentally complex relationship between nature and nurture out in a particular world historically and culturally understood in particular ways by each of us as individuals. Then in regard to things like God and religion the gaps between what we believe and what we are able to demonstrate that all rational men and women are obligated to believe in turn.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am If that's true, then you are now denying that culture Predetermines one's belief system. The "memes" as Dawkins calls them, do not actually explain how people choose their beliefs, ultimately.
Well, you either believe that all of the factors in your life prior to this experience inevitably led up to this fated or destined choice, or you recognize that had your life been different for any number of hundreds and hundreds of reasons you may have never ended up in the university at all.
Is he actually arguing that his choice to go was not embedded in all of the thousands upon thousands of variables in his life that might have been otherwise and prompted him not to go? He's completely different from all the rest of us?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am False dichotomy. Those are not the only possible interpretations, and neither is the right one, actually. I was not "fated" to go; I chose to. And we never know what would have been in counterfactual situations. We know only what did happen.
How the hell would I know?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am You would know, because you have a will.Don't you think you do?
That means that, at minimum, there would be two actual wills in the universe; yours and God's. And you also believe in my will, because you're arguing with me, trying to make an impression on my thinking. That means you must believe I have a will, too. So you DO know -- if you admit to yourself what you ought to know, rationally.
You presuming that we have free will
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am No, I'm not assuming. You are.Your behaviour proves it.
You believe you are a will, and you are treating me as a will. And you do the same to Alexis...you talk to him as if he has a will. So you know people have wills, and that they can choose to change them. So don't say, "How the hell would I know?" Of course you know.
No, I already discussed aspects of exchanges like this on the compatibilist thread:
First, of course, there is no getting around how surreal these discussions are.
Here I am arguing that I believe that I am compelled by the laws of matter to type these words in the only possible reality in the only possible world.
But then, as with all the rest of us, I go on to defend myself as though, on the contrary, I am opting freely to choose the words I use just as you opted freely to read them.
But: the bottom line [mine] never changes...
First, the astrophysicists tell us, was the Big Bang. Out of nothing at all came everything there is. Trust them here. Stars eventually formed, resulting in, over billions of years, countless supernovas that created the heavier elements that eventually led us.
In other words, over these billions of years the heavier elements "somehow" evolved into living matter that evolved into conscious matter that evolved into self-conscious matter able to identify itself as matter "somehow" intertwined in the laws of nature.
But, to the best of my current knowledge, no scientist or philosopher is able to encompass definitively how all of this "works" so as to result either in human autonomy or in nature's own automatons.
And then [of course] the theologians have their own narrative: God.
Or the No God equivalent?
As for the compatibilist account of all this, it still seems ridiculous to me. Especially the part [given my own obsession with "I" in the is/ought world] where determinism is reconciled with moral responsibility.
If there is no God with His "mysterious ways" able to finally explain to us in Heaven why He brought into existence all those things, I have to conclude that they "just happen" in an essentially meaningless universe. No God, no teleology. Just the "brute facticity" embedded in all of the terrible consequences of them "just happening".
No, I don't know whether a God, the God exist or not. But for those claiming that He does, convince me. Not only that God does exist but it is your God. And my argument revolves around the fact that many people choose God because the thought that human existence in a No God world is essentially meaningless, purposeless and culminates in oblivion is just more than they can bear. So a leap of faith or a wager it is then. Like IC's own.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Yes, that is what you would have to assume if there's no God.
But you don't know there isn't. So you don't have to assume it. And I believe there is, so I don't have to assume it.
I'm not sure what your argument is, there. Can you make it?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am No. I mean, go ahead and describe it to yourself in detail.
Try to conceive how a universe would run, in which free will is real, but the environment is strictly governed so that no bad things ever happen. Picture it, if you can. Just see if it's a coherent idea.
You're asking me, an infinitesimally tiny and insignificant speck of existence in the staggering vastness of "all there is" -- https://www.sciencechannel.com/show/how ... ks-science -- to "conceive" of something like that?!!
Why on Earth do you suppose it is necessary for those of your ilk to invent a God, the God, my God so as to have the answer? Those of my ilk no longer have that comforting and consoling security blanket to nestle in.
Not that I wouldn't give almost anything to find it again.
Again, he gets to be the one, after consulting his Bible, who gets to say what the good and the bad things are. And any life that I imagine doesn't make this...Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am No. Something much simpler. I'm just asking you to imagine how your own life would go, if you lived in a world where no bad things ever are allowed to happen. Picture it. See yourself getting out of bed in the morning, and walk yourself through a day like that.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am We can walk through it, if you want. But I'm pretty sure you're not interested anyway.
Did or did not this loving, just and merciful Christian God of yours create this virus? And what of those who got the disease through blood transfusions or, as a baby, was born with it?
As with covid, just Google, "was the AIDS virus man-made?"There's debate over who created AIDS. One documentary I saw said it was a product of unethical vaccination programs in Central Africa -- if I remember correctly, scientists used chimps or bonobos as incubators, and ended up transferring the virus to humans thereby. But in any case, we can eliminate AIDS in one generation, if we could get people not to behave badly. And it would never reappear in humans again.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am You don't have to worry: you're working too hard.
I will stipulate for purposes of our discussion that earthquakes happen, and that they aren't man-caused. Or, if you prefer volcanoes, that's fine too.
Yeah, but the point was you connecting the dots between these "acts of God", you, the Christian God and the terrible pain and suffering that result when they occur.
I forget, what was the question?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Yes, that is exactly what I intend to do. But I'm still waiting for your answer.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am So let's not waste our time that way. Instead, I'll ask you up front: if I were to give you evidence you would accept for the existence of God, what would that look like to you?
Well, it would look a lot like the evidence someone would provide to demonstrate to those who live in a No Pope world, that, in fact Jorge Mario Bergoglio -- Pope Francis -- does in fact exist.
He doesn't believe that Popes have in fact existed at the Vatican down through the centuries?! Or he doesn't believe that Catholicism reflects the one true Christian God?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Well, if you'll forgive me for saying so, you're making my job way too easy for me. I don't believe in Popes.
No, as per usual, he is doing everything he can to prolong this exchange such that, while claiming that "shortly" he will provide me with proof that God resides in Heaven...the equivalent of evidence that Popes have resided and still reside in the VaticanImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Look, Iam...I'm actually trying to help you here. I'm trying to make the question tough enough to be a challenge. Human-caused or even things half caused by humans are too easy to explain as simply the bad behavior of free will creatures. AIDS, COVID, even Black Plague...all have at least human components to them. And we can definitely blame humans for at least a significant part of their evils.
Okay, this then: https://www.vox.com/2014/9/5/6108169/ye ... o-eruptionImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Make it hard. So far, this isn't even a challenge. Go with your "volcanoes" example, maybe.
Consider this profound quote from Simone Weilhenry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Apr 10, 2022 10:51 pmNick, bubba doesn't care. His interest is in tearin' down what you believe, not understandin' it. He's convinced, becuz he sits at the crossroads unable to pick a way, no one can, or should. He claims he wants a rational and virtuous font but he lies. He's a dirty dealer. There's no good faith in him. He is, as Alexis might say, a destroyer. He is desolate, so we all should be desolate. Engage him as you like, but be mindful: he has nuthin' but hate in him.
A lot of worldly atheists and deniers are highly intelligent. But they cannot understand where the sincere believer is coming from since their supernatural part hasn't awakened. Naturally the chronic denier thinks I am absurd and living in fantasy. Iam is not really a hater. He wants us to experience that we are nuts only because his supernatural part has not yet awakened.Religion in so far as it is a source of consolation is a hindrance to true faith; and in this sense atheism is a purification. I have to be an atheist with that part of myself which is not made for God. Among those in whom the supernatural part of themselves has not been awakened, the atheists are right and the believers wrong.
- Simone Weil, Faiths of Meditation; Contemplation of the divine
the Simone Weil Reader, edited by George A. Panichas (David McKay Co. NY 1977) p 417
You're absolutely right.iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 3:04 amSee, he notes things like this without it really sinking in that this is exactly what all the other "a God, the God, my God" folks out there are insisting about their own Gods!!! They can't all be right,Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm If "immortality and salvation" are at stake, then the question of what you believe about God is not irrelevant. But the wrong beliefs of other people, no matter how numerous or elaborate they may become, do not make the truth stop being the truth.
all that matters is that they believe what they do?!!What, this is what he means by demonstrating that the Christian God does in fact exist?!!!Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm Jesus Christ says otherwise. He says, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life;" and then, in case anybody misses the point: "no one comes to the Father except through Me." (John 14:6)
So if there are many roads, they are not going to the same place "the way" is taking people. Take your pick, and live (and die) with the consequences.
For one reason or another [rooted largely in dasein],
Yep.Logic?!!Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm That's right.
Either the God I am telling you about exists, or He does not. There is no other possibility: it's one or the other. Logic tells you that. And if, as I believe, He does exist, then following any other so-called "god" is futile, and leads to death -- just following no god (or oneself) will.
Yep.So, is it also logical to suppose that even though there have been hundreds and hundreds of God and No God religious denominations down through the ages insisting it is not his God but theirs that offers mere mortals the one true path to immortality and salvation, his God and only his God really does provide it?
No, as long as God does. My opinion adds nothing, either way. I am not God.With all that is at stake if you choose the wrong path?Right, as long as it is you who gets to decree that only the path you are on is the right one.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pmThat's a different question, and a serious one.
What remains irrelevant is how many wrong answers are "out there." It just doesn't matter. Ever.
They say exactly the same: if somebody doesn't follow their path, they say that path is also wrong.And even though those on all the other paths are decreeing the same for their own God/No God spiritual path their own Scriptures are all irrelevant because in not being sync with your path they are all necessarily wrong.
Yes, that is precisely my point!Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 6:18 pm Don't be naive: everybody does that. The most inclusive person still believes that being inclusive is better than being exclusive. And the inclusive views of religion all reject the exclusive ones as being too narrow or wrong, just because they're exclusive.
What's your evidence He hasn't? And what evidence would you accept to prove He had?But, again, with so much at stake none of these all-powerful Gods seem able to actually demonstrate to mere mortals that He is the one!!
My guess: they are saying exactly the same thing about their own God.They aren't wrong because they are not in sync with me; they're wrong because God says they're wrong. It's Him they're out of sync with.And even though those on all the other paths are decreeing the same for their own God/No God spiritual path their own Scriptures are all irrelevant because in not being sync with your path they are all necessarily wrong.
A huge difference. It means some people did what you claim, and some people had nothing to do with those things.What difference does it make which brutal repression and violence you assign to which denomination.
Except you don't have the foggiest idea what life I have lived. You don't know my age, my gender, my hair colour, my height or weight, my family, my languages, my culture, or anything else about me...just that I'm a Christian.Unbelievable. The evidence of course is the lives that each of us lived!
He doesn't dare go there.
That's not Determinism. So if that's what you think, then that kills Dawkins' "meme" nonsense. Dawkins cannot presume ANY "understanding" causes anything or that ANY free will exists.Ultimately of course presuming some measure of free will, it will always come down to a fundamentally complex relationship between nature and nurture out in a particular world historically and culturally understood in particular ways by each of us as individuals.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am If that's true, then you are now denying that culture Predetermines one's belief system. The "memes" as Dawkins calls them, do not actually explain how people choose their beliefs, ultimately.
Why are you "arguing"? In a Deterministic world, you can't change anybody's mind, or even your own. The state of your mind at any given time is simply fated to be whatever it is.Here I am arguing that I believe that I am compelled by the laws of matter to type these words in the only possible reality in the only possible world.
And doesn't that strike you as odd? You're somehow drawn to pretend that Determinism isn't true, and that there 's "you," a genuine, self, who is "choosing" and "writing," and a "me" who is reading and responding.But then, as with all the rest of us, I go on to defend myself as though, on the contrary, I am opting freely to choose the words I use just as you opted freely to read them.
You need to watch this little animated video, if you want to understand just how problematic what you just wrote really is.In other words, over these billions of years the heavier elements "somehow" evolved into living matter that evolved into conscious matter that evolved into self-conscious matter able to identify itself as matter "somehow" intertwined in the laws of nature.
Finally we agree.As for the compatibilist account of all this, it still seems ridiculous to me.
No, no...try it. Trust me. I'm not asking you to take anything on faith here. I'm going to build a point out of your answer, whatever it is. So feel free to do it, and let's see what happens next.Again, he gets to be the one...Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am I'm just asking you to imagine how your own life would go, if you lived in a world where no bad things ever are allowed to happen. Picture it. See yourself getting out of bed in the morning, and walk yourself through a day like that.
Right. I will do that.Yeah, but the point was you connecting the dots between these "acts of God", you, the Christian God and the terrible pain and suffering that result when they occur.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am You don't have to worry: you're working too hard.
I will stipulate for purposes of our discussion that earthquakes happen, and that they aren't man-caused. Or, if you prefer volcanoes, that's fine too.
That doesn't make sense to me. You want proof that somebody named "Bergoglio," or some other jokers like him, wears a red frock and lives in Rome?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am So let's not waste our time that way. Instead, I'll ask you up front: if I were to give you evidence you would accept for the existence of God, what would that look like to you?Well, it would look a lot like the evidence someone would provide to demonstrate to those who live in a No Pope world, that, in fact Jorge Mario Bergoglio -- Pope Francis -- does in fact exist.He doesn't believe that Popes have in fact existed at the Vatican down through the centuries?! Or he doesn't believe that Catholicism reflects the one true Christian God?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Apr 08, 2022 5:30 am Well, if you'll forgive me for saying so, you're making my job way too easy for me. I don't believe in Popes.
The proof I'm looking for pertains to the former not the latter.
Volcanoes? Shall we go with volcanoes?The Christian God and Yellowstone.
My, my, you do make a lot of assumptions of the "I assume" variety and proceed from there to make your arguments. Admittedly, it's normal to make some assumptions in an argument but yours are mostly assumption-driven. This make a conversation boring and unenlightening.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Apr 09, 2022 2:34 pmNietzsche was radically Right-leaning and thoroughly anti-Liberal (and anti-democratic) and his ideas, when enacted, result in radicalism. I would submit for your perusal Ronald Beiner's recent book Dangerous Minds: Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the Return of the Far Right. The reason I reference Beiner is not because I support his positions (his base concern I gather is that the Right (radical Right and *Alt-Right*) that is now manifesting so strongly has a dangerous Jewish-critical (he would call it anti-Semitic) element. There is general alarm in the Jewish world of the rise of these movements and ideas. And Beiner explores this, credibly in my view, in his book.
Now you are noticing...Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Apr 10, 2022 6:23 pm
If you are a Solipsist, you aren't talking to me. I don't exist. Only you do.
Stop talking to yourself...it's mad.![]()
I watched that video, and it seems it's just more theorising about what we cannot know.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 4:29 am You need to watch this little animated video, if you want to understand just how problematic what you just wrote really is.
It's only about five minutes, but it really covers it nicely. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIorXcloIac
I've been banned by several forums not for breaking rules but since my beliefs are disruptive. What could be more disruptive than Plato's Cave? When a person cannot understand what an awakened person experiences, they react with negative emotion. These reactions are irritating. I'm not sure that it is hate but rather think it is an unfounded egoistic feeling of superiority.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Apr 11, 2022 11:56 amI can't agree, Nick. He is, and his only savin' grace is he's so very bad at bein' bad. You know how irritatin' the far more benign age is, yeah? Bubba is very much the same.
I approach these conversations differently. As I state openly: I am out for my own purposes. But I also believe it is best (more honest) to reveal one's own purposes so that others can *locate* one. It is an aspect of my fate that I have now and have had for many years a great deal of free time and that time I devote to reading. The best choice I ever made was to have begun reading authors whose ideas I never would have countenanced previously. One of those authors was certainly Nietzsche (Genealogy of Morals) and thereafter numerous others such as Robert Bork and Richard Weaver. And when I noticed that I got so much from these readings I thought "Why stop there?" and have continued reading way over in 'forbidden zones'.
I suggest just the opposite but whether you choose to engage, or not, is thoroughly irrelevant to me. Still I think you should ramp up your efforts. Make it interesting! Have fun at the same time.I suggest we stop communicating; neither of us is doing the other a favor.
The way I look at this -- that is if I understand what you are saying -- is that the Progressive Left, the Liberal Left, has shown itself as terrified and paranoiacally activist in blocking and censoring the ideas of an emergent Radical Right. I say *Radical Right* not because I agree with the Left's use of that term but because, in fact, the ideas of a radical Right fringe have been thoroughly ostracized from 'civil discourse' for a great long while. My understanding though is that Radical Left ideas are largely allowed and indeed focused on and encouraged.Strange isn't it that its the Left when in power which allows the Right to exist according to its free speech mandate which the right negates and never allow if it were in power. If Nietzsche had favored types like Bannon, Trump, Spencer, Dugin and all suchlike idiots under the rubric of far right then his reputation would hardly be above their level. Nietzsche was well-aware of being used in the future in a way completely contrary to what he tried to convey in his philosophy.
Perhaps you can then clarify what it was that he really intended to convey?Nietzsche was well-aware of being used in the future in a way completely contrary to what he tried to convey in his philosophy.
872. The rights which a man arrogates to himself are relative to the duties which he sets himself, and to the tasks which he feels capable of per forming. The great majority of men have no right to life, and are only a misfortune to their higher fellows.
What I would say in response to this is: neither you nor I nor any of us should become affixed in any misleading classification such as 'right' and 'left'. And I certainly agree that all thought should be as free as possible. And it is also extremely true that Nietzsche the man took his thinking to the farthest reaches of contradictory thought -- indeed to the enunciation of ideas that are always taken as cutting through the lies and the BS. And that is why Nietzsche said of himself *I am dynamite*.Dubious: One of N's prime directives was that a person be allowed to think and not consider anything so sacred it can't be examined...an idea the far-right would consider anathema against its own beliefs of exclusion.
OK, but would you kindly outline for me what are Nietzsche's 'right reasons'? What are you saying? Is it that if Nietzsche offered a summation of what he thought & wrote that it would be something different from what he thought & wrote?Beiner is only one of many who lives up to Nietzsche's fear of being used for all the wrong reasons.
I hope you won't take this in a bad way. I recall to mind some good advice:
When I read it I resolved to live by this powerful & wise admonition!Purifying oneself from misconceptions can be a life-long endeavor especially when more flow in than flow out!