Christianity

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Lacewing
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Re: Christianity

Post by Lacewing »

Dubious wrote: Mon Sep 19, 2022 10:58 pm The dead neither require nor desire any such sequel. The concept of an immortal soul is as inherently ridiculous as the biblical mandate one must believe in Jesus to be saved. It never ceases to amaze that by virtue of being human an extra dimension of existence should be appended beyond what is given...being that part which insists on having more.
Well said!

An immortal soul also suggests individuality. Why must human beings cling to their imagined separateness rather than accepting that they are part of the magnificence of all-that-is? Furthermore, where do we imagine the increasing number of immortal souls are coming from as world population increases? Were they waiting hundreds of thousands of years to come forth in human form, or is God still churning them out from his workshop in the sky? It's all so illogical, and such obvious fantasy.

It's a relief to move on from such ideas and find acceptance and fulfillment in being a PART of the Universe along with all the other parts. The scary nonsense stories no longer serve a purpose for many people (as they did for early man), rather, like all of nature, it's enough to BE and EXPLORE and CREATE in this moment... and as humans, we can enjoy it and do it with gratitude.

If done well, this moment is enough.
Last edited by Lacewing on Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Lacewing
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Re: Christianity

Post by Lacewing »

Immanuel Can to Harry Baird wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 4:04 pm Bottom line: If you're certain, if you don't mind staking your own future on that, then no harm done.
Do you think it's destructive to spread false information to others?

Fortunately, we're on a philosophy forum that explores and challenges claims. If you want to help 'save' people, go start a church.
Immanuel Can to Harry Baird wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 4:04 pm But if you're wrong, I've done you the biggest favour I could possibly do a human being, by alerting you to the danger and telling you there's a way to avoid it, before it comes.
What favor are you doing by spouting claims and evading the resulting challenges with whatever evasive and deceptive tactics you can? It is that, not your words, which demonstrates your nature and purpose. People are not on this forum to receive your alerts of danger based on what you believe!
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 4:04 pmAll you really have to be concerned about is whether or not there's any chance I'm right, and the Bible does say what I've showed you it says, and it is the Word of God speaking to you. But you've already said that's not possible, haven't you? So again, what's the source of the consternation?

Bottom line: If you're certain, if you don't mind staking your own future on that, then no harm done. But if you're wrong, I've done you the biggest favour I could possibly do a human being, by alerting you to the danger and telling you there's a way to avoid it, before it comes.
If I may interject . . .

There is a whole range of questions about the facticity of all aspects of Christian belief just as the same is true for the beliefs and belief-systems of all religions. We have, in this thread, examined them in some depth. For example I make the assertion that an asserted religious construct (in this case the Christian construct) is a 'picture', but the picture is not the reality. Our pictures (and this is so in a range of areas) may provide us with a general allusion, but they do not seem to give us factual pictures but rather storifed pictures that we *believe in* in differing degrees.

One of the facts about the Christian belief system, and the threat of hellish outcomes if thus-and-such is not done (or thus-and-such is done) is that it is and it has been part of a moral and ethical compulsion-system. Somewhat comparable to scaring children by saying some sort of monster will get them if they do not behave. The function of accentuations of hellish visions -- in Christianity, in Vedic religion, also in Buddhism -- also has a didactic function. For example in one Buddhist story those who were gluttons in life are pictured as suffering a hellish existence in a future life where they have exaggerated and insatiable appetites, and all the mechanism for mastication, but a throat with the diameter of a needle. So for all their chewing they can never get enough food down to satisfy them. Is this a 'true picture' of a future life? No matter what it has a didactic function.

Christianity is expressed through a Story. You could say it is a fable. Or a mythology. But it is presented as an absolutely true set of events, as if it is a history. And it is the Story that the Occident has engaged with for well over 1,000 years. Europe was conquered and pacified, and civilized, through the use of these pictures and stories. and people received ideas (moral ideas, the sense of what is right and wrong) through entertaining the Pictures conveyed in the stories.

These are things that we know beyond doubt. One can examine religion through a sociological lens and, doing so, one quickly understand this function.

Your function, the function of your apologetics, can be examined similarly. But the belief-system that you are fronting (Evangelical Christian belief of a recent form and with tenets recently defined) must be seen as being part of a socio-political structure. Your brand of Christianity is a derivative of Christian Zionism and this Christian Zionism is, as I say, a recent concoction. It involves seeing the world, seeing events in our world, through the lens of Bible prophecy. But, it also involves taking steps and making choices that push forward or 'hasten' the realization and manifestation of what is prophesied. So for example Christian Zionism anteceded Jewish Zionism, though the hope of 'next year in Jerusalem' had always been part of Jewish liturgy.

Your brand of Christian Zionism has been held, in varying degrees, by 5-6 American presidents, and indeed (as all should know) a set of recent wars have been championed by Christian political factions. The way these beliefs are used or set in motion, has dramatic and very real consequences.

So one aspect of my opposition to you (and by *you* I mean Evangelical Christian Zionism) comes about because I see your belief-system holistically. That is, as socio-political. Even though I might (and I certainly do) consider elements of the Christian Story as having metaphysical validity and relevance (I talk about this all the time) I find it very hard to join with mass-Christianity, of the sort that you are directly involved in, and in fact I find that I must reject the mass current of irrational, thoughtless 'following' that, in fact, I see you as representing.

So when you refer to a source of consternation I am interested in it as a question. In fact as a philosophical and a sociological question. You say you are a philosopher and you want to discuss the tenets of your Evangelism cooly and rationally. But the fact is that your belief, your religious fanaticism, is not philosophical! You simply select and insert Bible quotes and those Bible quotes are your argument.

But no one with a sound philosophical grounding could find in 'religious assertion' enough ground for defense of the idea presented. Very simple, religious belief, and the faith of religious belief, are part of another category of action and activity. And as I say, and this is factual and not fanciful, modern Evangelical Christianity is a socio-political movement. It can be compared, if it is done fairly, to the same sort of fanatical belief that Islamists are known for. And when the ramifications, let us say, of the invasion and occupation of Iraq is considered, the consequences of the influence of Christian Zionism and Jewish Zionism in bringing about these events, pales the actions of most Islamist actions that we can name. Even if 9/11 is seen as exclusively as act of radical Islam, the loss of 3,000 lives in minuscule when compared to the social consequences of the invasion and occupation of Iraq.

So, just to cite one example, there are solid grounds for consternation.

The fact of the matter is that right now, all of us, are (in the sense that you employ the phrase) staking our lives on how we live our lives, that much is certain, but also how our complicity in existing systems (the systems of which we are inexorably a part) has moral consequences for us. The question is, then, how we choose to deal with issues of complicity? And what value-structure we apply to, say, minor sins and transgressions and to those transgressions of more major consequence. Because I know Harry I know that the largest part of his concerns lie with the larger aspects of complicity.

Born Again Christianity, Evangelical Christianity, and Evangelical Zionist Christianity (not to mention some of the Catholic factions) are all socio-political. Anyone with an Internet connection can find the websites and listen to the pastors and watch the amazing religious performances, the conversions, the tele-mystical show as it were. And one can see, very easily, that these fit into political and social machinations of consequence.

So I thought I'd speak a bit about consternation. [Alarm, dismay: a sudden, alarming amazement or dread that results in utter confusion; dismay.]

Factually, you cause in me consternation. You (again in the plural, mass-Christian sense) require a very careful examination. In no sense is your ideology merely neutral. It fits into a far larger picture.

You have no means to argue philosophically, for all the faux-assertions that your orientation is philosophical! At each crucial juncture all you do is to copy and paste a Bible quote. These comprise your 'argument'.

Now, the issue of 'judgment' either in the present (as moral realization, as self-reckoning), these can indeed be conversed philosophically. And it is also possible to converse philosophically the issue, or the possibility, of a reckoning in the face of the Divine (a Divine court as it were). The picture is a very old one, indeed an ancient one. The soul has to make an account of itself.

I will assume, perhaps presumptuously, that Harry can quite easily entertain the notion of the soul's reckoning. I will also assume that he could grasp 'punishment' for a soul (a consequence applied by a divine authority). But what he opposes, and what is non-consistent with the very essence of Christianity itself, is a sort of punishment that is eternal and, it would seem, based in an all-too-human vindictive mood. To capture his view (and mine as well) is not hard and yet you fail to capture it!

What I oppose, mostly, is not the essence of the notion of an eventual retribution, but rather that of the manipulative compulsion that is so evident in the structure of belief that you represent. There are other aspects, too, and I have written them out carefully. You've commented on none of it.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:26 pm You've commented on none of it.
Actually, I gave you my comments on your theory long ago. You stick with your theory. What else is there to say? :shock:
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Lacewing wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:17 pm
Immanuel Can to Harry Baird wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 4:04 pm Bottom line: If you're certain, if you don't mind staking your own future on that, then no harm done.
Do you think it's destructive to spread false information to others?
I'll let you know if I think I'm about to do that.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Lacewing wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 5:31 pm
Dubious wrote: Mon Sep 19, 2022 10:58 pm The dead neither require nor desire any such sequel. The concept of an immortal soul is as inherently ridiculous as the biblical mandate one must believe in Jesus to be saved. It never ceases to amaze that by virtue of being human an extra dimension of existence should be appended beyond what is given...being that part which insists on having more.
Well said!

An immortal soul also suggests individuality. Why must human beings cling to their imagined separateness rather than accepting that they are part of the magnificence of all-that-is? Furthermore, where do we imagine the increasing number of immortal souls are coming from as world population increases? Were they waiting hundreds of thousands of years to come forth in human form, or is God still churning them out from his workshop in the sky? It's all so illogical, and such obvious fantasy.

It's a relief to move on from such ideas and find acceptance and fulfillment in being a PART of the Universe along with all the other parts. The scary nonsense stories no longer serve a purpose for many people (as they did for early man), rather, like all of nature, it's enough to BE and EXPLORE and CREATE in this moment... and as humans, we can enjoy it and do it with gratitude.

If done well, this moment is enough.
Thanks for the reply! As you expressed it, I can only agree. I don't know if you ever read Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse. It was, I admit, never one of my favorite stories - actually more like a novella in length - but there are parts in it which really makes one think and reflect which your post reminds me of.
I'm specifically referring to its final chapter called Govinda, a highly philosophic summary of insights which Siddharta was striving for all along and finally came to know fully as an old man. It's extremely well-written as always with Hesse, even in translation, with many fine poetic nuances. It conforms a lot with the sentiments expressed in your final paragraph.

If you're interested here is the link...

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/2500/25 ... htm#chap12
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 4:04 pm I simple refuse to accept any of the premises you've tried to compel upon me. And, of course, I explained why they were false.
No, you haven't provided any explanation, and everybody here can see that.

I asked you a direct question, and your evasive response was merely to ask questions in return, in response to which I called you out on your evasiveness. Despite being called out for evading a direct answer, you continued to evade one by simply asking more questions. I was generous enough to answer the essence of your questions even though you refused to answer mine. You then continued to avoid a direct response to my question, instead simply asking another question. Again I was generous enough to answer that question even though you continued to evade mine.

You then implicitly acknowledged that you'd failed to respond directly when you wrote:
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Sep 18, 2022 6:55 pm I'm working on an answer. I'm accepting both your question and your answers.
That answer never came.

Later, I broke down my question for you into an argument with six premises+inferences, challenging you to explain which premise(s) you reject, and why. Your response was to completely ignore it.

So, somebody needs to call in the administrators, 'cos you're trading whilst insolvent.
Last edited by Harry Baird on Tue Sep 20, 2022 11:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Another post in which you excelled yourself, AJ. A few responses:
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:26 pm So when you [Immanuel Can --Harry] refer to a source of consternation I am interested in it as a question. In fact as a philosophical and a sociological question. You say you are a philosopher and you want to discuss the tenets of your Evangelism cooly and rationally. But the fact is that your belief, your religious fanaticism, is not philosophical! You simply select and insert Bible quotes and those Bible quotes are your argument.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:26 pm You have no means to argue philosophically, for all the faux-assertions that your orientation is philosophical! At each crucial juncture all you do is to copy and paste a Bible quote. These comprise your 'argument'.
Right. The basic premise of IC and Christians like him is that the Bible, though written by human beings, is the revealed Word of God, and, thus, is wholly reliable. This is the premise upon which IC bases part of his "response" to my argument: the Bible says otherwise, therefore, your argument is false. This, though, simply begs the question: the question is whether or not the Bible - upon which Christian belief is based - is reliable in the first place, and my argument, by proving that Biblically-based belief entails a contradiction, destroys this premise.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:26 pm The fact of the matter is that right now, all of us, are (in the sense that you employ the phrase) staking our lives on how we live our lives, that much is certain, but also how our complicity in existing systems (the systems of which we are inexorably a part) has moral consequences for us. The question is, then, how we choose to deal with issues of complicity? And what value-structure we apply to, say, minor sins and transgressions and to those transgressions of more major consequence. Because I know Harry I know that the largest part of his concerns lie with the larger aspects of complicity.
Perhaps it could be framed in terms of complicity, yes. My basic ethical approach is based simply on answering the question: "How can we reasonably do the least harm possible in this situation?", and then doing exactly that, albeit that, in some situations, the least possible harm is still pretty harmful.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 6:26 pm I will assume, perhaps presumptuously, that Harry can quite easily entertain the notion of the soul's reckoning. I will also assume that he could grasp 'punishment' for a soul (a consequence applied by a divine authority). But what he opposes, and what is non-consistent with the very essence of Christianity itself, is a sort of punishment that is eternal and, it would seem, based in an all-too-human vindictive mood. To capture his view (and mine as well) is not hard and yet you fail to capture it!
Your assumption is basically correct, however, in my view, our truly loving and just God doesn't punish punitively or retributively. God "punishes" only so as to teach a lesson or impart understanding. For example, as I think you suggested in an earlier post, a soul might be "punished" by experiencing all of the harm it did to others, so as to understand and learn the effects of its actions and why not to commit similar acts in the future.

An incidental note: a significant number of those who have had near-death experiences (NDEs) describe having a "life review". This is a sort of "soul's reckoning".
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Lacewing
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Re: Christianity

Post by Lacewing »

Dubious wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 9:28 pm Thanks for the reply! As you expressed it, I can only agree. I don't know if you ever read Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse. It was, I admit, never one of my favorite stories - actually more like a novella in length - but there are parts in it which really makes one think and reflect which your post reminds me of.

I'm specifically referring to its final chapter called Govinda, a highly philosophic summary of insights which Siddharta was striving for all along and finally came to know fully as an old man. It's extremely well-written as always with Hesse, even in translation, with many fine poetic nuances. It conforms a lot with the sentiments expressed in your final paragraph.

If you're interested here is the link...

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/2500/25 ... htm#chap12
Thank you for sharing that with me, Dubious! Wow. I had not read it before. It was like reading something that feels so familiar. Here are some excerpts that really resonated with me.

“When someone is searching,” said Siddhartha, “then it might easily happen that the only thing his eyes still see is that what he searches for, that he is unable to find anything, to let anything enter his mind, because he always thinks of nothing but the object of his search, because he has a goal, because he is obsessed by the goal. Searching means: having a goal. But finding means: being free, being open, having no goal. You, oh venerable one, are perhaps indeed a searcher, because, striving for your goal, there are many things you don’t see, which are directly in front of your eyes.”

So well said! The insistence on seeing nothing else but that which one seeks or believes... it's an intoxication.

"The opposite of every truth is just as true! That’s like this: any truth can only be expressed and put into words when it is one-sided."

Yes! An expressed 'truth' does not include that which is other than it. Therefore, it is not a complete view.

"...now see: these ‘times to come’ are a deception, are only a parable! The sinner is not on his way to become a Buddha, he is not in the process of developing, though our capacity for thinking does not know how else to picture these things. No, within the sinner is now and today already the future Buddha, his future is already all there, you have to worship in him, in you, in everyone the Buddha which is coming into being, the possible, the hidden Buddha."

That's beautiful. I think we're all of the same divine stuff... and we're doing a dance here. Wrestling and poking... as well as embracing and loving... or feeling compelled... the best that we can, wherever we are.

"The world, my friend Govinda, is not imperfect, or on a slow path towards perfection: no, it is perfect in every moment."

"...learn how to love the world, in order to stop comparing it to some world I wished, I imagined, some kind of perfection I had made up, but to leave it as it is and to love it and to enjoy being a part of it."


This makes much sense to me... and feels more right to my sense of spirit... than any claims of judgements and damnations and separation, which actually seem like evil creations despite claims that they're the opposite.

And then the chapter ended like this...

"He no longer saw the face of his friend Siddhartha, instead he saw other faces, many, a long sequence, a flowing river of faces, of hundreds, of thousands, which all came and disappeared, and yet all seemed to be there simultaneously, which all constantly changed and renewed themselves, and which were still all Siddhartha. He saw the face of a fish, a carp, with an infinitely painfully opened mouth, the face of a dying fish, with fading eyes—he saw the face of a new-born child, red and full of wrinkles, distorted from crying—he saw the face of a murderer, he saw him plunging a knife into the body of another person—he saw, in the same second, this criminal in bondage, kneeling and his head being chopped off by the executioner with one blow of his sword—he saw the bodies of men and women, naked in positions and cramps of frenzied love—he saw corpses stretched out, motionless, cold, void—he saw the heads of animals, of boars, of crocodiles, of elephants, of bulls, of birds—he saw gods, saw Krishna, saw Agni—he saw all of these figures and faces in a thousand relationships with one another, each one helping the other, loving it, hating it, destroying it, giving re-birth to it, each one was a will to die, a passionately painful confession of transitoriness, and yet none of them died, each one only transformed, was always reborn, received evermore a new face, without any time having passed between the one and the other face—and all of these figures and faces rested, flowed, generated themselves, floated along and merged with each other, and they were all constantly covered by something thin, without individuality of its own, but yet existing, like a thin glass or ice, like a transparent skin, a shell or mold or mask of water, and this mask was smiling, and this mask was Siddhartha’s smiling face, which he, Govinda, in this very same moment touched with his lips. And, Govinda saw it like this, this smile of the mask, this smile of oneness above the flowing forms, this smile of simultaneousness above the thousand births and deaths, this smile of Siddhartha was precisely the same, was precisely of the same kind as the quiet, delicate, impenetrable, perhaps benevolent, perhaps mocking, wise, thousand-fold smile of Gotama, the Buddha, as he had seen it himself with great respect a hundred times. Like this, Govinda knew, the perfected ones are smiling."

Yes, wow! Wonderful. All is one... flowing... beautiful and perfect. And that smile! :) Glorious and divine. Our stories are such intoxicating charades on the stage. We're playing it all out. Feel love for the drunken dance! And know we are one with all.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harry Baird wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 11:09 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 4:04 pm I simple refuse to accept any of the premises you've tried to compel upon me. And, of course, I explained why they were false.
No, you haven't provided any explanation, and everybody here can see that.
I asked you a direct question...
You asked a loaded question, filled with suppositions that weren't true. And I declined to read your script. That's all.

And I told you what was wrong with your script. And you didn't like that. But as I say, it changes nothing that you didn't like it. It doesn't make me accept your wrong assumptions, and it doesn't alter reality in any way.
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Sep 18, 2022 6:55 pm I'm working on an answer. I'm accepting both your question and your answers.
That answer never came.
Right. I tried to give it, by laying the proper assumptive groundwork. You accused me of being too "Socratic" (pretty funny for a philosophy board, actually), and refused to engage. You called it "a game," and then tried to impose your own script.

It's not my fault if you never got your answer. After all, you were not interested in having a conversation.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Sep 21, 2022 12:34 am I told you what was wrong with your script.
It was a question, not a script. And I addressed your four weak protestations. You ignored me.
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Sep 21, 2022 12:34 am It's not my fault if you never got your answer.
It's not about me getting my answer. It's about you utterly failing to respond to an argument, that lays bare and devastates your entire belief system.

Hey, if you're prepared for your core beliefs to be publicly smashed wide open, and yet to pretend that nothing's happened, then that's on you, man. If I were you, I would want to respond assertively and in no uncertain terms to such a potent challenge. But maybe you have no idea how to do that, in which case, the reaction of a genuine philosopher would be, "Huh, interesting. I hadn't considered that before. Maybe I'm wrong at the most fundamental level. Let me acknowledge that and try to work out how to adjust my belief system."

So much for Immanuel Can as a philosopher. It seems that, instead, he prefers to keep on trading whilst insolvent.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Harry Baird wrote: Mon Sep 19, 2022 7:24 am
Age wrote: Mon Sep 19, 2022 7:16 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Sep 19, 2022 4:46 am And here's the appropriate response: the question's badly framed, on a number of points.
So, 'frame it goodly', or in other words, just FIX the question, to your liking, and then just ANSWER IT.
Yes, that's a very reasonable suggestion. Let's see what IC comes up with.
Less even than diddly-squat, of course, as we all knew in advance would be the case.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

An addendum:
Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Sep 21, 2022 12:34 am
Harry Baird wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 11:09 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Sep 18, 2022 6:55 pm I'm working on an answer. I'm accepting both your question and your answers.
That answer never came.
Right. I tried to give it, by laying the proper assumptive groundwork.
Utter rubbish. Point me to any one of your posts following the one in which you claimed to be "working on an answer" in which you attempted to lay "the proper assumptive groundwork". You'll find that you can't, because you never attempted to do anything like that in any one of them. Instead, you just whinged and complained about the supposed restrictions I was placing on you, foregoing even a continued pretence at "working" on an answer.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 3:57 pmNo Dubious, I think you may be wrong. And I am sure that if I were to know more of your philosophical view, which is grounded in a pretty strict materialism, the logic of your reasoning would make sense, of course, but I am unsure it would really betrue.
Can we ascertain anything to be “true” or can we only try to understand it as we behold it in nature...not by some imaginary mind extension which diminishes the very thing which upholds our existence allowing us to conceive any absurdity as if it were some higher reality!
Dubious wrote: Mon Sep 19, 2022 10:58 pmThe concept of an immortal soul is as inherently ridiculous as the biblical mandate one must believe in Jesus to be saved.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 3:57 pmNo, it does not follow. The notion behind the statement that a man requires salvation has soundness if it is correctly understood. But the notion does involve a sort of 'diagramming' of reality which you, for sure, object to. That is the idea of 'higher intelligences' and all that is connoted by the idea of divinity or God. I do not reject these ideas. But I do not have any problem seeing them through different lenses. But I can certainly accept and respect that you do not see things in these ways.

It is not hard to understand why in your view the idea of 'immortal soul' has become preposterous. But I do not think your position as such has any particular weight or merit. It is (it seems to be) just an opinion that you hold.
It seems contradictory that those with lower intelligence always look to a higher one without really knowing what that intelligence consists of! So to place ourselves within the context of a higher intelligence we pre-imagine scenarios with our considerably truncated one hoping to create a "diagramming" which makes it seem as if some higher power is manifest in us when what we actually are is the outcome of a material process. The "material" has always been miserably denigrated as if there were no real substance comprising it being somehow insignificant with no real power to forge a destiny as we would like to imagine.

But if a 'soul' is posited then in fact the Material must itself be saturated with it due to its processes of metamorphosis in all of its occurrences inherent in everything we see and derive from it. The materialistic is more spiritual than much of the scripture humans have written attempting to separate themselves from it diminishing themselves into absurdity. So we get the Jesus story, one of the most pathetic and least spiritual ever written, "resurrected" by those who were much more intelligent than he himself ever was. A god with a 'demand agenda' is no god at all.

Also, what means 'salvation' if not the divestiture of all what inhibits our ability to think properly in confluence with that which created us. In that sense, salvation is a saga of mostly minor events each grooving itself into a higher state of awareness...something more often thrust upon us through trauma than actual seeking.
Last edited by Dubious on Wed Sep 21, 2022 3:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
Nick_A
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Re: Christianity

Post by Nick_A »

AGE
But using deductive reason can you explain how our conscious ineffable source or the ONE, devolves by emanations from itself to produce every lawful manifestations of itself within itself?

NO one can explain 'that', which is 'ineffable'. This is because 'that', which is 'ineffable', by definition is NOT able to be explained, expressed, nor described with words. However, I can, very easily and very simply explain HOW there are, perceived, manifestations within thee One Source.

And, if, and when, your questions are far more specific, then I am able to answer them far more accurately and correctly, for you.

The 'PROCESS of creation' is just a 'reactive process' and this 'reaction' process results in 'evolution', which is 'what' causes 'creation', itself.
There is a lot to disagree with here. Of course we cannot define the ineffable. But we can contemplate how the ineffable devolves in itself to produce nous and devolves further to produce world soul and soul according to Plotinus. The process of creation is a conscious process sustained through laws.

The point I am making is that there are alternative lines of reason beginning with an ineffable source. For some reason you consider yourself more then human with all the answers. This is what I would like to discuss if you are up to it. What is it that enables you to know you have all the answers when others have the humility to realize they don't.
A human being is a part of the whole called by us universe, a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feeling as something separated from the rest, a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.
Albert Einstein
Do you have the humility to realize that you and I along with the great majority of humanity are in prison or does your ego provide the illusion of escape?
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