Christianity

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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harry Baird wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:10 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:02 pm In Northern Pakistan, a woman is savagely raped for the reason that some other man in her family did something insulting to somebody in somebody else's family. (This is real-world stuff, of course.) In the West, we'd say "She didn't deserve it." In her culture, they'd say, "Her family deserved to be humiliated in return; and she's a member of that family. Honour was restored, and justice was done."
The obvious problem for you, here, of course, is that the answer you expect us to arrive at - that this is outrageously unjust
Is that the conclusion you do come to? Fine.

How do you prove you're right, and the people in Northern Pakistan are wrong?
seeds
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Re: Christianity

Post by seeds »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:52 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:33 pmAnd what is the argument by which you establish that justice is so special that it needs this arbitrary supernatural element?
It is not so much an 'argument' as it is an entire conceptual system. But if it were an *argument* it would be predicated on the assertion that god created the world and placed man in it and, of course and in the ultimate sense, controls the destiny of his creation.

The notion of 'justice', at least in the Biblical sense and in the stories that were presented through it, originated as a corrective to the punishment that god meted out to those two naughty ones who did not obey....

...Within the Hebrew and Christian story, of course, the notion of *justice* is fundamental. It is actually the core of the entire story.
Everyone keeps getting lured into playing Mr. Con's game of trying to get you to focus on his strawman...

(which is the "definition" of justice and the identification of the "source" from which justice is derived)

...instead of the absurdity of the insane (and circular) irony of Jesus condemning you to eternal torture for the crime of not allowing him to "save" you from his own arbitrary (capricious and personal) decision to torture you for, again, not allowing him to save you from his decision to torture you...🤪

Wow, that's dizzying to spell-out.

Furthermore, Mr. Con keeps ignoring how any of this applies to all of the humans (especially the infants and children) who have lived and died on this planet over the last million years, who never even heard of Christianity.

I mean, just imagine all of the isolated tribes of humans who lived and died in the jungles of Africa or the Amazon over the centuries.

However, that's nothing compared to the billions of humans who, by the sheer random fate of when and where they were born on earth, were indoctrinated into different religions.

For some reason, Mr. Con cannot seem to get it into his thick skull that if it is God's own system of creation that caused a human to be born into the arms (and society) of a Muslim parent...

(or a Hindu parent, or a Buddhist parent, or an atheist parent, etc., etc.)

...as opposed to a Christian parent, then God certainly isn't going to punish that person for not following the doctrines and dictates of Christianity due to being the victim of the very system that God, himself (herself/itself) created.
_______
Gary Childress
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Re: Christianity

Post by Gary Childress »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:02 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 5:57 pm If a person has been wrongly hurt,
Wait. "Wrongly"? Justify the use of that term, in the case you wish to point out.
Just going off my own experience, why did I have to lose 30 years (and counting) of my life to anti-psychotics and anti-depressants (which don't work except to dull the mind BTW)? My life is comparative shit because of mental illness and the meds doctors had to prescribe me in order to overcome paranoia and delusions, something beyond my control. Do you think it's right for me to have gone and continue to go through that?
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:11 pm Harry [...] you transparently attempt to rewrite what you call "my" claims (rather than, say, quoting me)
I did quote you, dickhead, so that anybody can confirm that my reassertion of your claim was accurate. Feel free to point out how you think it isn't, if, in fact, you can.

Again, though (which, of course, you snipped): all of this nonsense to avoid explicitly affirming that on your belief system, it is "loving" and "just" to punish a person with eternal, unimaginable torment for finite transgressions. Hooboy. The hoops you jump through! But we can all see why.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:11 pm
Harry Baird wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:10 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:02 pm In Northern Pakistan, a woman is savagely raped for the reason that some other man in her family did something insulting to somebody in somebody else's family. (This is real-world stuff, of course.) In the West, we'd say "She didn't deserve it." In her culture, they'd say, "Her family deserved to be humiliated in return; and she's a member of that family. Honour was restored, and justice was done."
The obvious problem for you, here, of course, is that the answer you expect us to arrive at - that this is outrageously unjust
Is that the conclusion you do come to? Fine.

How do you prove you're right, and the people in Northern Pakistan are wrong?
It's really quite fascinating how much of a sophist you are.

The point is that you presented this example because you believe that the Northern Pakistan people behave unjustly in this respect, and that we would all agree with you, because we come from the same Judeo-Christian perspective as you - but it is that very same Judeo-Christian perspective that affirms that condemning a person to infinite torment for finite transgressions is unjust.

You're obviously intelligent enough to realise this, so the only explanation is sophistry.
Last edited by Harry Baird on Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

seeds wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:14 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:52 pm
FlashDangerpants wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 2:33 pmAnd what is the argument by which you establish that justice is so special that it needs this arbitrary supernatural element?
It is not so much an 'argument' as it is an entire conceptual system. But if it were an *argument* it would be predicated on the assertion that god created the world and placed man in it and, of course and in the ultimate sense, controls the destiny of his creation.

The notion of 'justice', at least in the Biblical sense and in the stories that were presented through it, originated as a corrective to the punishment that god meted out to those two naughty ones who did not obey....

...Within the Hebrew and Christian story, of course, the notion of *justice* is fundamental. It is actually the core of the entire story.
Everyone keeps getting lured into playing Mr. Con's game of trying to get you to focus on his strawman...

(which is the "definition" of justice and the identification of the "source" from which justice is derived)

...instead of the absurdity of the insane (and circular) irony of Jesus condemning you to eternal torture for the crime of not allowing him to "save" you from his own arbitrary (capricious and personal) decision to torture you for, again, not allowing him to save you from his decision to torture you...🤪

Wow, that's dizzying to spell-out.

Furthermore, Mr. Con keeps ignoring how any of this applies to all of the humans (especially the infants and children) who have lived and died on this planet over the last million years, who never even heard of Christianity.

I mean, just imagine all of the isolated tribes of humans who lived and died in the jungles of Africa or the Amazon over the centuries.

However, that's nothing compared to the billions of humans who, by the sheer random fate of when and where they were born on earth, were indoctrinated into different religions.

For some reason, Mr. Con cannot seem to get it into his thick skull that if it is God's own system of creation that caused a human to be born into the arms (and society) of a Muslim parent...

(or a Hindu parent, or a Buddhist parent, or an atheist parent, etc., etc.)

...as opposed to a Christian parent, then God certainly isn't going to punish that person for not following the doctrines and dictates of Christianity due to being the victim of the very system that God, himself (herself/itself) created.
_______
All perfectly fair, seeds. I am well aware of the game of avoidance and deflection. I regularly repeat the essential point that you reaffirm, despite knowing that it will be to no avail, and will simply be ignored or avoided.
Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Harry Baird wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:02 pm After all, if one only has a right to something when it is promised, then it is only a promise that grants one a right to something. If you maintain that I am misrepresenting you, then you must be claiming that only some promises grant one a right to something, in which case, you need to explain which promises and why. Please do elaborate...
Is anyone surprise that he didn't?
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iambiguous
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Re: Christianity

Post by iambiguous »

Yo, IC!

Seriously, what say you:

iambiguous wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 6:54 pm
henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 6:39 pmIf a man won't recognize in the other what he knows about himself (that he is free, with an inalienable right to his, and no other's, being, freedom, and works); worse, if a man won't even recognize himself as free with a natural right to his life, liberty, and property; then he is incapable of recognizing Natural Law (God). He renders himself animal or meat machine and declares all is permissible.

Note to Immanuel Can:

Does henry's intellectual contraption argument above comport with your own spiritual contraption argument regarding Christianity? Has henry basically taken the words right out of Jesus Christ's mouth in regard to the one and the only manner in which to grasp the definition and the meaning of these words: "a natural right to his life, liberty, and property".

Can you please cite references to Christ here from the New Testament.

Also, any progress in convincing henry to accept Jesus Christ as his own personal savior? And, if you fail to, and henry goes to the grave following the dictates of reason and nature stuffed into him at conception by his own Deist God, is his soul still damned to Hell?
Gary Childress
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Re: Christianity

Post by Gary Childress »

I'm sure IC will go to heaven as he should for being a proponent of God. No doubt I'll be headed for hell for being a disbeliever. And to be honest, I don't care. If I had to spend eternity with Yahweh, I think I'd puke. Hopefully, my fate will be oblivion. At least then I won't have to deal with anything like reality.
Gary Childress
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Re: Christianity

Post by Gary Childress »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:11 pm How do you prove you're right, and the people in Northern Pakistan are wrong?
The same way we do now, by arguing with them over it. Now, where is proof of God's existence in all this?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

seeds wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:14 pmEveryone keeps getting lured into playing Mr. Con's game of trying to get you to focus on his strawman...
The way I look at it (and of course I have said this a dozen times) is quite simply that Immanuel is locked into his conceptual system and it has no wiggle room. I intuit that you and I -- and others here -- who do (still) have a conception of divinity do indeed have, and indeed must have, far more *wiggle room*.

So for example I say that if it happens that the soul is immortal, and has a post-this-world existence (I cannot verify this and, it also seems to me, that it is left unverified) then I propose the good sense of, even the necessity for any number of different avenues and ways-and-means by which the Supreme Intelligence helps that soul to *realize* and *understand*. So I have said (I have proposed it as possible) that at the moment of death any given soul, and let's say one with a heavy burden or a debt that must be paid, or a sentence (punishment, consequence) that must be served, could experience in a virtual sort of way entire sequences of events in a dream-realm, that nontheless would be to that individual just as real as this life is, any number of different episodes that would bring that person to a realm of higher understanding. And that, to me, is through learning about the consequences of what we do (and do not do). If we grant to god all-intelligence, and if we see life as (excuse the tacky term) a journey of the soul (into incarnation, into this world, this loka) then it seems that anything is possible.

I cannot tell you how many dreams I have had that were entire episodes through which elaborate circumstances were dealt with. I am of the opinion that we are not (fully) aware of the depth of what goes on inside of us and, sometimes, outside and beyond our conscious awareness. We do not really know our *location* therefore: what sort of life this is, what we are doing here, nor where it tends in the longest of long runs.

To make this assertion is a natural product of the way I see Life operating here and now. When I say *Life* I mean the sphere that we are offered (this space into which we come, this loka to use a Vedic term):
loka, (Sanskrit: “world”) in the cosmography of Hinduism, the universe or any particular division of it. The most common division of the universe is the tri-loka, or three worlds (heaven, earth, atmosphere; later, heaven, world, netherworld), each of which is divided into seven regions. Sometimes 14 worlds are enumerated: 7 above earth and 7 below. The various divisions illustrate the Hindu concept of innumerable hierarchically ordered worlds. Lokas are often associated with particular divinities, a linkage that is also found in Buddhism, with the deities replaced by buddhas or bodhisattvas.
And I also mean the soul's content, and the way the soul or psyche functions within the experienced life (the perception, the grasp, the understanding) of the individual person. The soul must have a wide range of content otherwise the experience of life would not be intelligible. It is I think really the person him or herself which must be the focus of our inquiry because it is within the person that divinity has a seat and to put it another way a purchase (one's hold or position in a perceptual sense). I am fairly certain that this is why, in those ancient systems more of the East than the West, that the entire being, the body included, had to be cultivated and worked with in order for *realization* to occur. So, and I think this is very clear, the presence of a person with a higher realization actually can have the effect of stimulating awareness, awakening, desire for growth, etc., in another person.

Now, in the course of this *conversation* (I am referring to pseudo-conversation with Immanuel) I have been forced to see that the entire conceptual system that he operates under is simply too limited and restrictive. It is not that I think it is absolutely or completely wrong but rather that it is a diagram that limits understanding because, I gather, allegiance to its tenets is demanded. Immanuel cannot, and will not, sacrifice any of the pillars that uphold this restrictive system. Yet it is possible to expand the system, to stretch it, to see it in a wider sense, and not to lose sight of what is valid and valuable in it. The problem, as I have said, is in Hebrew Idea-Imperialism. The core assertion that to be *good* and to be *favored by god* one must make oneself an enemy of different ways of seeing and explaining.

This defines what Immanuel does here. This is in fact all that he does. Once it is seen it is really quite simple.

Immanuel criticizes other conceptual modes, other 'metaphysical dreams', and must attack and destroy them. I think this is a real mistake. No other one can be left standing when Yahweh/Jesus is the tyrant/overlord. There are alternatives.

I have overcome Immanuel. Immanuel is now not much more than an object of study. Meaning that one has to examine him and try to understand why someone wishes to, or must, live in such a reductive conceptual structure.

To every strawman, a flame . . .
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Gary Childress wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:15 pm ...why did I have to lose 30 years (and counting) of my life to anti-psychotics and anti-depressants (which don't work except to dull the mind BTW)?
That's hard. I know. Not personally, but somebody I knew many years ago went through that. It's bloody awful. Sorry you faced it. She survived, but it was truly horrible.

But of course, if there's no God, there's no "why." To put it crassly, as they say, "Sh.. happens." Imagine you're in an indifferent universe, one created by the merely material processes of the Big Bang plus time plus chance; to what will you apply for the answer, "Why?"

That dooms you to remain forever unanswered. But If God is just, there might be an answer yet to come, and I trust it will.

And it might not even actually be your "fault," as it turns out. There's a real danger in people who think every adversity that comes along must mean God is angry. "Justice" Isn't that simple to read; it's complex, because there's many of us here, and many factors in play; all of them have to be taken into account before we can pronounce with any finality on what "justice" requires. Free will means that people don't just hurt themselves; they can hurt others, too. And sin affects all of creation, not just the bad people. Anybody who thinks the relationship between deserving and suffering is simple and readable hasn't lived long...or hasn't grown up. But that's not us, right?

In the case of my friend, she was molested as a child, but never told, so far as I've been able to find. But the doctors diagnosed her as "manic-depressive" and "bipolar." And she went through hells of malpractice, as they dumped everything onto her to "cure" her "disease." And under all that, she was a truly amazing person.

So it might be that the mismedication you experienced was a product of unethical doctors, and the depression a result of somebody's mistreatment of you. And their justice, like yours, might be still-to-come.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Gary Childress wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:48 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:11 pm How do you prove you're right, and the people in Northern Pakistan are wrong?
The same way we do now, by arguing with them over it.
Let's have your argument: why are they wrong to honour-rape women, when their laws and culture call it "honour"?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel criticizes other conceptual modes, other 'metaphysical dreams', and must attack and destroy them. I think this is a real mistake. No other one can be left standing when Yahweh/Jesus is the tyrant/overlord. There are alternatives.
I mean to say there are alternatives to that limited model.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

iambiguous wrote: Sun Oct 16, 2022 6:38 pm Yo, IC!

Seriously, what say you:

iambiguous wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 6:54 pm
henry quirk wrote: Sat Oct 15, 2022 6:39 pmIf a man won't recognize in the other what he knows about himself (that he is free, with an inalienable right to his, and no other's, being, freedom, and works); worse, if a man won't even recognize himself as free with a natural right to his life, liberty, and property; then he is incapable of recognizing Natural Law (God). He renders himself animal or meat machine and declares all is permissible.

Note to Immanuel Can:

Does henry's intellectual contraption argument above comport with your own spiritual contraption argument regarding Christianity?
:D Hilarously slanted asking, Biggie. I can't answer that question in the bigoted form in which it's raised.

Henry has a "contraption" arugment, you say? So I'm supposed to just swallow an insult to his view, in order to get to answering? And Christianity is a "spiritual contraption argument", you say? So I'm supposed to accept an insult to my own belief system too? :lol:

So you don't really want a serious answer? You want to slide a bigoted statement past me, and have me respond? And, no doubt, accuse me of being "afraid" when I decline?

No such luck. I'll answer your question very forthrightly. But first, let's see you rephrase it like a reasonable and polite human being would do...
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