Christianity

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Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Harry Baird wrote:
I don't see how the intricately complex and interdependent design that we see all around and within us could have its source in an unintelligent, unintentional agency.
The love and care we have for the design all around and within us is sourced in our psychology which is turn is natural not supernatural. It's natural to personify the source of the design, as we have these strong feelings and need to express them.

Intelligence is a complex. It's not even a spectrum. It's a big lot of intersecting attributes , an image that would need a 3D model to do it justice.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Belinda wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 8:16 pm Harry Baird wrote:
I don't see how the intricately complex and interdependent design that we see all around and within us could have its source in an unintelligent, unintentional agency.
The love and care we have for the design all around and within us is sourced in our psychology which is turn is natural not supernatural. It's natural to personify the source of the design, as we have these strong feelings and need to express them.
Be that as it may, it doesn't help me to understand how an unintelligent, unintentional... I don't know what to call it now, since you claim it's not personal, so "agency" is no longer applicable... but anyhow, I still don't see how, lacking intelligence and intent, it could be the source of the intricately complex and interdependent design that we see all around and within us.
Belinda wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 8:16 pm Intelligence is a complex. It's not even a spectrum. It's a big lot of intersecting attributes , an image that would need a 3D model to do it justice.
OK, but, again, I'm not really sure where this gets us in terms of explaining design.
Dubious
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

seeds wrote: Mon Oct 10, 2022 3:10 amI call it as I see it.
I’d rather examine before I accept. I could still be wrong but at least I wouldn’t have succumbed to any prior belief prejudices.
Dubious wrote: Sat Oct 08, 2022 8:02 pm Consciousness cannot push atoms around - certainly not by your example!
seeds wrote: Mon Oct 10, 2022 3:10 amOf course it can.

Wiggle your toes, and then realize that that's an instance of the "fluid-like" essence of your mind and consciousness extending down from your brain and "saturating" the ubiquitous network of your body's nervous system in such a way that not only provides you with your general awareness of your body from head-to-toe,...
No idea what a "fluid-like essence of your mind and consciousness" is supposed to be. We know the neurological process by which one wiggles one's toes. Calling it a "fluid like essence", explains nothing. Perhaps you’re trying to describe the sensations of what an activated nervous system feels like in operation which doesn’t in any way describe the physical processes by which it happens.
seeds wrote: Mon Oct 10, 2022 3:10 amSo then, when that self-aware aspect of your inner being (your "I Am-ness") exercises a personal "desire" to willfully move your arm in order to bring that bottle of beer up to your mouth with the goal of acquiring a pleasant "feeling" buzz, you suggest that that's basically not much different than "instinct, triggering nerve impulses"?
Whether instinct or intent, the physical brain initiates the processes by which it happens. In effect, your brain is the controlling agent in any movement your body makes.
seeds wrote: Mon Oct 10, 2022 3:10 amOkay, then how about when a lucid dreamer willfully (and consciously) chooses (desires) to transform her dreams from an experience of shopping in a city mall to that of lying on the beach of a beautiful tropical island, again, is that also just "instinct, triggering nerve impulses"?
I think you will admit that moving one’s arm (for whatever reason) is not the same as lucid dreaming. These are two separate domains not to be conflated. One thing they have in common...the will to move one’s arm and the will to reorder one’s dreams – for those so capable – are both brain centered. You’ll never escape the physicality of the brain as the commanding instrument in whatever you do, think about or imagine.
seeds wrote: Mon Oct 10, 2022 3:10 amIt never ceases to amaze me how skeptics such as yourself rigidly assume that just because you personally have never experienced a reason for believing that God exists, it therefore unequivocally means (or proves) that no one else - in all of history - has ever had such an experience.
This is a truly absurd statement! How could I or anyone ever claim that no one ever had a deeply mystical, godlike experience? No amount of skepticism could ever presume such since even skeptics are as capable as anyone of yielding to those kind of feelings. The difference is in accepting it for what it is and not projecting or reifying it into some delimited definition of reality. I consider that a kind of subterfuge or even sacrilege, a degradation of the mind’s ability to create such experiences made manifest in their effect without reference to anything external.
seeds wrote: Mon Oct 10, 2022 3:10 amAnd furthermore, I don't know how many times I've brought this up in other threads, but if you weren't so closed-minded about this stuff you would realize that science (quantum science) seems to be suggesting (to the metaphysician) that universal matter appears to be constructed from a "mind-like" substance that is capable of becoming absolutely anything "imaginable" (just like the substance that forms our thoughts and dreams).

So, if I were you, I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss the Bishop's theory.
...yes! To the metaphysician certainly but not to a physicist. There is way too much hocus pocus surrounding quantum theory that views like yours are quite ubiquitous. Quantum theory is a description of everything in the universe from a microscopic perspective. It’s true that things can get really weird down there but imagining that the laws of quantum physics would allow for mind-stuff capable of transforming itself into “absolutely anything imaginable” is a stretch beyond what quantum theory really describes.

As for Berkeley he comes across as absurdly solipsistic in believing that everything is mind-dependent. If it isn’t perceived it doesn’t exist in spite of us being an infinitesimal addition within the entire spectrum of existence who have only recently existed on its stage!

Since you’re so impressed with Berkeley, whose philosophy I regard as one of the most immature of all philosophies, it’s best to leave that subject alone.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Returning to your red herring just for interest's sake:
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 2:15 pm Now, who disagrees with you? How about Jurgen Habermas (author of "The Legitimation Crisis")?
I haven't read it. Have you? Based on a quick skim through its Wikipedia page, it has nothing to do with "legitimating justice". The word "justice" doesn't even appear on that page. The book's title instead refers to "a decline in the confidence of administrative functions, institutions, or leadership". The strict translation of its title from the German is "Legitimation Problems in Late Capitalism". It seems to have nothing to do with justice, except perhaps tangentially.
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 2:15 pm What about Hans Blumenberg (author of "The Legitimation of the Modern Age")?
Again, I haven't read it. Have you? Based on the summary on its goodreads page, in it, its author "takes issue with Karl Lowith's well-known thesis that the idea of progress is a secularized version of Christian eschatology, which promises a dramatic intervention that will consummate the history of the world from outside. Instead, Blumenberg argues, the idea of progress always implies a process at work within history, operating through an internal logic that ultimately expresses human choices and is legitimized by human self-assertion, by man's responsibility for his own fate."

Again, it seems to have nothing to do with "legitimating justice", but rather with how the internal logic of progress is legitimised via human self-assertion and responsibility.
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 2:15 pm And in specific, with regard to the difficulties of legitimating "justice" as a concept, what about Rawls, Dworking, Sen or Wolterstorff, each of whom wrote at least one volume trying to deal with the question you say is "a figment of your imagination"?
OK, let's investigate.

Presumably, the John Rawls volume to which you refer is A Theory of Justice. Now, this theorising about the concept of justice is not the same as a concern over whether or not it can be "legitimated" - it presupposes its legitimacy. So, this doesn't help your claim as to the existence of some sort of known philosophical problem with "legitimating justice".

His theory seems very interesting in any case:
Rawls develops what he claims are principles of justice through the use of an artificial device he calls the Original position; in which, everyone decides principles of justice from behind a veil of ignorance. This "veil" is one that essentially blinds people to all facts about themselves so they cannot tailor principles to their own advantage:

"[N]o one knows his place in society, his class position or social status, nor does anyone know his fortune in the distribution of natural assets and abilities, his intelligence, strength, and the like. I shall even assume that the parties do not know their conceptions of the good or their special psychological propensities. The principles of justice are chosen behind a veil of ignorance."

According to Rawls, ignorance of these details about oneself will lead to principles that are fair to all. If an individual does not know how he will end up in his own conceived society, he is likely not going to privilege any one class of people, but rather develop a scheme of justice that treats all fairly. In particular, Rawls claims that those in the Original Position would all adopt a maximin strategy which would maximize the prospects of the least well-off.
Yep, well, fair enough. That theory's perfectly compatible with the dictionary definition of "justice". I'm not seeing anything according to which eternal, unimaginable punishment would qualify as "just" on this theory - quite the opposite, in fact, since Rawls's theory is concerned with maximising the prospects of the least well-off, and, surely, being subject to eternal, unimaginable punishment is pretty darn badly-off!

So far, you're batting zero from three, but let's continue to "Dworking".

Do you perhaps mean Ronald Dworkin? You can't even spell his name correctly!

I'm not sure which of his published works you think is concerned with the supposed "problem" of "legitimating justice". Perhaps you can fill us in. More likely, though, you'll simply ignore me here, because it's too awkward for you to respond directly and honestly.

Next up, Sen. Presumably, you mean Amartya Sen, and, presumably, the volume of his to which you refer is The Idea of Justice, which, apparently, "is a critique and revision" of Rawls's book described above. From what I can gather, his idea in this book is that we don't even need a theory of justice, because our innate understanding of it is sufficient. This doesn't at all seem to indicate any sort of "problem" with "legitimating justice" - instead, it seems to more or less explicitly assume the legitimacy of the concept of justice given an essential human knowing.

Another aspect of the book mentioned on that page is the idea in it that "'Public Reason'—i.e., open discussion and rational argument—can enable what Sen calls 'plural grounding', this being an 'overlapping consensus' (in Rawls's terminology) between people of different ideologies or belief or value systems such that people can agree upon comparative evaluations regarding justice without having to agree about all their values and beliefs."

This inclusive view of justice doesn't at all seem to indicate any sort of "problem" with its "legitimacy".

So, you're now batting at zero from four, with one as yet undetermined since we don't know to which volume you referred.

Finally, then, we come to (Nicholas, presumably) Wolterstorff. Again, I'm not sure which of his selected works listed by Wikipedia, or which, perhaps, of some other unlisted work, you think deals with the supposed "problem" of "legitimating justice", so, again, perhaps you can tell us, again pretending I didn't even suggest this and snipping it entirely if it's again too uncomfortable for you to deal with.

There we have it. So far, you've presented no evidence of some supposedly well-recognised philosophical "problem" of "legitimating justice", and the references you've provided as supposed evidence for it don't at all anyway support the idea that eternal torment as punishment could conceivably be considered to be "just".

It appears that I was correct, and that this supposed "problem" truly is a figment of your imagination.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

A philosophical question for you, Immanuel Can:

Given how badly I've wrecked you, have I been unjust?

It's not eternal, unimaginable torment, but you've got to be stinging pretty badly by now.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Harry Baird wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 9:10 am A philosophical question for you, Immanuel Can:

Given how badly I've wrecked you, have I been unjust?

It's not eternal, unimaginable torment, but you've got to be stinging pretty badly by now.
In argument Immanuel is “truly Christian”:

Crucified weekly, swaddled in burial cloth, entombed — yet the stone always rolls back as if moved by a Mysterious Power — and he emerges again as if nothing happened, resurrected & unscathed.

Every week, a Miracle!
Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Harry Baird wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 9:32 pm
Belinda wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 8:16 pm Harry Baird wrote:
I don't see how the intricately complex and interdependent design that we see all around and within us could have its source in an unintelligent, unintentional agency.
The love and care we have for the design all around and within us is sourced in our psychology which is turn is natural not supernatural. It's natural to personify the source of the design, as we have these strong feelings and need to express them.
Be that as it may, it doesn't help me to understand how an unintelligent, unintentional... I don't know what to call it now, since you claim it's not personal, so "agency" is no longer applicable... but anyhow, I still don't see how, lacking intelligence and intent, it could be the source of the intricately complex and interdependent design that we see all around and within us.
Belinda wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 8:16 pm Intelligence is a complex. It's not even a spectrum. It's a big lot of intersecting attributes , an image that would need a 3D model to do it justice.
OK, but, again, I'm not really sure where this gets us in terms of explaining design.
It is surely hard to explain. However Godditit is also hard to explain.
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attofishpi
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Re: Christianity

Post by attofishpi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 2:15 pm I have faith in Christ.
Ok, so I just made up a quote for you...if you disagree with the above quote then please correct me.

Would you kill a man if this man was about to attack and possibly kill your wife or child?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 7:34 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 6:27 pm What god do you believe in, then?
Why are you interested?
Because if you believe in "a god," but not the God, the God of the Bible, I'd be interested in knowing who that is.
Immanuel wrote: There's no accusation, because there's no substance.
Actually it is.
"It is?" "It is" what? :shock:
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harry Baird wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 7:55 pm There are two separate questions here. The first is, "What does 'justice' mean?" The second is, "What is the origin/source/grounding/justification/'legitimation' of justice as a concept?"
It only the second question that matters. Because non-existent things still have definitions, so the having of a definition will not show that your "justice" concept refers to anything real.

What you need to show is that your "justice" concept has substance, and that it relates to some property of the universe you have a reason to expect.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harry Baird wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 8:27 am It appears that I was correct, and that this supposed "problem" truly is a figment of your imagination.
No, you're wrong.

Both Habermas and Bumenberg make the point that you can't justifiably assert a thing without legitimating it. That's true of everything from political projects to moral claims to value judgments, to institutions, to eras of ideology, and so on.

Rawls, Sen, Dworkin, and Wolterstorff all specifically debate what "justice" might mean, and what might legitimate it.

So you're just wrong: and that's what you get from Wiki summaries.

If you want to debate the content of the books, I have them all here. Go ahead.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

attofishpi wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 12:44 pm Would you kill a man if this man was about to attack and possibly kill your wife or child?
I'm not seeing the relevance of what we're talking about here...are you trying to start a new point, or did you have the idea that it would somehow relate to Harry's "justice" concept?
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attofishpi
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Re: Christianity

Post by attofishpi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 4:46 pm
attofishpi wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 12:44 pm Would you kill a man if this man was about to attack and possibly kill your wife or child?
I'm not seeing the relevance of what we're talking about here...are you trying to start a new point, or did you have the idea that it would somehow relate to Harry's "justice" concept?
Ok. Sorry to attempt a different tack, but please do attempt to tack without cowardice.

Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 2:15 pm I have faith in Christ.
Ok, so I just made up a quote for you...if you disagree with the above quote then please correct me.

Would you kill a man if this man was about to attack and possibly kill your wife or child?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

attofishpi wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 4:51 pm ...please do attempt to tack without cowardice.
Wow. So flattering. You really know how to get your discussion partner on your side. :lol:
Immanuel Can wrote: Tue Oct 11, 2022 2:15 pm I have faith in Christ.
Ok, so I just made up a quote for you...
Yes. You did.

Why did you feel you wanted to do that? Have I not been clear enough on what I believe? Or did you feel you needed me to say something your way, so you could make a point?
Would you kill a man if this man was about to attack and possibly kill your wife or child?
Well, let me just answer that with Scripture:

“Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and oppressed.” (Ps. 82:3)

Is it necessary to kill somebody to defend the weak? Maybe sometimes it is. Maybe at others, you can just disable him, or maybe even just prevent him from what he has in mind. Having not been in that situation, it's not for me to say what would be necessary. But the right thing to do is to defend those who cannot defend themselves. That's Biblical.
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attofishpi
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Re: Christianity

Post by attofishpi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 5:19 pm
attofishpi wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 4:51 pm ...please do attempt to tack without cowardice.
Wow. So flattering. You really know how to get your discussion partner on your side. :lol:
I just know what a despicable coward U actually R ...not worth.Y of Christ (perhaps)


IC wrote:
attofishpi wrote: Wed Oct 12, 2022 4:51 pmWould you kill a man if this man was about to attack and possibly kill your wife or child?
Well, let me just answer that with Scripture:

“Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and oppressed.” (Ps. 82:3)

Is it necessary to kill somebody to defend the weak? Maybe sometimes it is. Maybe at others, you can just disable him, or maybe even just prevent him from what he has in mind. Having not been in that situation, it's not for me to say what would be necessary. But the right thing to do is to defend those who cannot defend themselves. That's Biblical.
LMAO that U actually think this life you have...indeed everyones life...is their 1st incarnation of life within which to be judged..

Oh ye so short of sight.

How fair would that be of God?

Do U NOW under_stand the concept of original sin?
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