Christianity

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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 4:56 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 2:45 pm Man's natural state, like yours, is to hate, ridicule and despise God Himself...calling down righteous judgment on his own head.
What this amounts to -- with the like yours -- is a curse.
It's man cursing himself, if that's the case. He has no need of remaining in that state, and an alternative has been freely provided. But the decision of man will stand...because even God will not take away from you the right to choose. You're going to spend eternity somewhere; where it will be, you will decide.

So if anybody's going to "curse" you, it will be you.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 8:17 pmYou don't care if you are alienated from God, it seems. You seem to want to "do it your way," to parrot Sinatra.
Or this? 😎
seeds
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Re: Christianity

Post by seeds »

Lacewing wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 5:49 pm
seeds wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 4:04 pm And lastly, seeing how Lacewing is not going to answer my question of...
"...what "PROOF" would you need to see in order to convince you of the veracity of those claims?"
...then how about you answer it?
_______
Oh, sorry seeds... I didn't know you were asking me that question specifically, as my post was just a play on what was going on at the time between various people. As for myself, I don't think I need or seek proof of such claims in order to make good use of this life/experience. Rather, I pay attention and notice what 'fits' (even if I haven't thought of it before) -- and it seems that things are naturally proven/demonstrated in the proper time if they are true....
Thank you, Lacewing, for your (as always) intelligent and well-reasoned response.

However, you did raise the issue of how everyone has laid their cards out on the table, yet, no one has provided any "proof" of their claims.

To which I have constantly insisted that any irrefutable proof of especially what I am claiming...

(i.e., a guaranteed "perfect" afterlife for everyone, no matter what)

...could completely decimate the system that made our coming into being possible.

And as a simple demonstration of what I mean, I recently, in an alternate thread, presented to the forum member, iambiguous, the following thought experiment...
  • If science discovered direct (and irrefutable) proof that your life (your mind and consciousness) will continue on after death in a new and wondrous form, and in a higher and a more desirable context of reality,...

    ...and that all you had to do to enter this higher context of reality was to "open a door" and step across the threshold...

    Image

    (i.e., find a quick and painless way of inducing death - with death being the metaphorical "doorway" to the higher context of reality)

    ...what would you do?

    Would you stay here and needlessly endure the pains and sufferings of this lower context of reality until death eventually finds you anyway...

    ...or...

    ...would you simply walk through the doorway right now and enter into the, again, "scientifically verified" (as in absolutely guaranteed) higher context of reality where you (and everyone you know and love) will live forever in a new and wondrous form (indeed, the same form as God)?
...To which iambiguous (after some initial insults and grumbling) responded with a completely honest and rational answer...
Sure, if scientists discovered this door...I'd ask them for more details regarding this "higher more desirable context of reality" and, if I liked what I heard, I'd walk through the door.
And that, Lacewing, is what I am suggesting that humans would have done right from the very start if they had absolute proof of what I am claiming. Which, in turn, would have emptied the planet of the means (human bodies) by which new human souls are awakened into existence.

In other words, you and I and all of the rest of the approximately 8 billion humans presently alive on earth would have never been born.

Now I know and respect the fact that you're a fan of focusing on making the best of our present situation and see no point in formulating our lives here on earth based on speculative (mostly whacky) visions of the afterlife.

However, again, it was you who complained about there being no "proof" of our claims, of which I am simply trying to offer a plausible reason for why humanity cannot be allowed to have any proof.

Intuitive glimpses and intimations, yes, but absolute proof, no.
_______
Gary Childress
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Re: Christianity

Post by Gary Childress »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 2:39 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 4:40 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 2:08 am So let's list the things you think should cause people to doubt the Bible...Christmas, other ancient books, the creation, the flood, etc....the speed of light...science... :shock:

They're not at all problems actually.
The rest of the forum seems to understand my views and beliefs...
They maybe need to think again, if that's the case. For as I have been saying, to cite your skepticism of something like the flood is not a reason to disregard the entire Bible. All it means is that you've found one thing that you don't believe. Not much hangs on the flood narrative, and nothing on the existence of ancient books, and the speed of light isn't even mentioned in the Bible.

Now, if it were creation, which you also cite, you might have something substantial: if there's no God to create the earth, then there's no God to speak. However, there's more than enough evidence for creation...in fact, there are proofs that are so conclusive that only an obdurate mind can refuse them, such as those derived from causality and mathematics. So creation is a different issue. But the flood?

The only thing that you need to remember from that is simply this: it says that God judges the wicked. And do you think He won't?

But as you like...conversation's always an option. If you don't want to talk about it, you don't have to. Best wishes.
As I've stated repeatedly, I don't reject/disregard the whole Bible. Why do you keep saying I do? There are good things in it too. There's also some wisdom there.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Gary Childress wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 8:57 pm As I've stated repeatedly, I don't reject/disregard the whole Bible. Why do you keep saying I do? There are good things in it too. There's also some wisdom there.
Gary, if I'm wrong, tell me.

You say you reject elements of the Bible including God as Creator. But you accept "Love your neighbour."

That makes no sense. Sure, you could decide arbitrarily that you wanted to "love your neighbour," but you'd have to stop short of thinking it was an objectively "good" thing for you to decide to do. It would simply have to be another choice you're making, and one you may well have made even though nothing makes it objectively more "right" than, say, stealing from your neighbour, or just ignoring him.

But why would neighbour love be compulsory, if there's no God? Who is there to tell you that you have an objective obligation to your neighbour?
Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:07 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 8:57 pm As I've stated repeatedly, I don't reject/disregard the whole Bible. Why do you keep saying I do? There are good things in it too. There's also some wisdom there.
Gary, if I'm wrong, tell me.

You say you reject elements of the Bible including God as Creator. But you accept "Love your neighbour."

That makes no sense. Sure, you could decide arbitrarily that you wanted to "love your neighbour," but you'd have to stop short of thinking it was an objectively "good" thing for you to decide to do. It would simply have to be another choice you're making, and one you may well have made even though nothing makes it objectively more "right" than, say, stealing from your neighbour, or just ignoring him.

But why would neighbour love be compulsory, if there's no God? Who is there to tell you that you have an objective obligation to your neighbour?
Excuse me for butting in but I just read this in Romans 2 (Paul) :
2 Now we know that God’s judgment against those who do such things is based on truth

If God exists then His moral laws are as valid as his natural laws.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Belinda wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:54 pm If God exists then His moral laws are as valid as his natural laws.
Well, both are then objective. But one has to do with morality, obviously, and the other...

But we should clarify. When we use the term "natural law" (outside of ethics), it usually refers not to an actual "law," except by way of metaphor. What we call a natural "law" is actually merely a physical regularity. It has no actual "legal" feature. One doesn't become a bad person or "lawbreaker" if one "violates the law of gravity," by taking up a hot air balloon.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 8:17 pmTo prevent that, God Himself has undergone the judgment we have been calling for, and offers us complete forgiveness without cost.
AJ: Here is an example of being able only to speak from within his own tradition... it is not the sole truth and it is not the exclusive truth.
Immanuel: See what God says about that. If you're right, He'll back you. If not...
You induce curious realizations in me and, as you are aware, I simply communicate what these are. It might seen vain or a waste of time (or worse, boring -- but this can't be helped) that I continue to respond to you, but I do it only because at each juncture you have bolstered my understanding.

What a difficult thing it is, or must be, to finally get to the other side of the belief that Jesus of Nazareth 'died for our sins'. I admit that if one were raised in the belief that this is an 'absolute fact' that it would be very hard to surmount it. But you have taught me, quite quite without meaning to or intending to, that the idea of it is simply a very powerful tool of psychological coercion. It is an extension of those priestly constructs I have been writing about. And let's suppose that a god, similar to the god you describe, really does exist (and is aware of this exchange between us). I believe that that god would see through your tactics. And I also believe that such a god would look at different things in a person, and in all people, in order to assess their worth and value.

So it seems to me that such a god as I describe would indeed 'back me' to use your silly phrasing. That god would not condemn me though and that is a more important point.

What you do is to say "It is not me telling you this but god disapproves of what you do and say with extreme vehemence -- and you will suffer for it!" And this I reject. I reject it absolutely.

Essentially, and as it turns out, it is not Christianity and some of its core assertions that I have surmounted with your unwitting help but those of Judaism. The real control mechanism is found there in its original form.
Immanuel: You mistake truth for a popularity contest. It's not. It's the truth...not always popular, but still the truth.
Be that as it may I will assert, therefore, that you are not telling the truth. Based on many months of conversation with you that is my major realization: you do not know what *the truth* really is.

So what is the truth?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:07 pm But you accept "Love your neighbour."

That makes no sense.
Excuse the butting in: of course it makes sense! If I understand Gary correctly it is the good sense in extending human concern from one's immediate circle toward one's 'neighbor' (also one's 'kinsmen') that is objectively a good choice.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 12:53 am It might seen vain or a waste of time (or worse, boring
Well, I just skip the bits where you talk, and talk, and talk, and essentially say nothing.

So I just move on.
So it seems to me that such a god as I describe would indeed 'back me'
We'll see.
What you do is to say "It is not me telling you this but god disapproves of what you do and say with extreme vehemence -- and you will suffer for it!"
No, that's you imagining what you think you want me to have said. But I promise you, those words are found nowhere in my previous messages. However, I know you knew that, and that you decided to put it your own way in spite of that fact.

You're going to have to respond to your own idea. It's not mine.
Immanuel: You mistake truth for a popularity contest. It's not. It's the truth...not always popular, but still the truth.
Be that as it may...

Yep, that's how it is.
So what is the truth?
See John 14:6.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 12:59 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:07 pm But you accept "Love your neighbour."

That makes no sense.
Excuse the butting in: of course it makes sense! If I understand Gary correctly it is the good sense in extending human concern from one's immediate circle toward one's 'neighbor' (also one's 'kinsmen') that is objectively a good choice.
But according to Gary, it can't be a morally required choice.

It might be a strategically 'good' choice for a purpose he has, or a prudentially 'good' choice because it will get him something he wants. It might be a 'socially favoured' choice, if his society happens to affirm it at the time. But then, it's not morally good. Nothing is, then.

So, as I said, he might choose to do it for some reason he personally has; what he can no longer say is that following it makes him any more "good" or "moral" than somebody who does the opposite. If his personal reasons run against it, he's no better or worse for violating it totally.

In a Godless world, there is no objective basis for morals. Ask Dostoevsky...or if you don't like him, read Nietzsche. The two couldn't have been more diametrically opposed in ideology, but both said it is true.

And it is. You can realize it is, if you think carefully. It might be put like this.

The cosmos is an accident (meaning a "happening" without intention or telos).
Accidents have no opinions -- about morals or anything else.
Therefore, the cosmos has no moral opinions.
Belinda
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 11:40 pm
Belinda wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:54 pm If God exists then His moral laws are as valid as his natural laws.
Well, both are then objective. But one has to do with morality, obviously, and the other...

But we should clarify. When we use the term "natural law" (outside of ethics), it usually refers not to an actual "law," except by way of metaphor. What we call a natural "law" is actually merely a physical regularity. It has no actual "legal" feature. One doesn't become a bad person or "lawbreaker" if one "violates the law of gravity," by taking up a hot air balloon.
I agree 'natural law' is "physical regularity" and David Hume himself would endorse that.
The deity usually called God is not a creator only of what we call the material world but a giver of moral laws, as we agree.

The difference between us is you see the moral law transferred directly from God to man via JC. Whereas I see the moral law being transmitted via nature (biology if you will). Nature includes Jesus , Isaiah, Socrates , and others including obscure others. From my point of view God is an extraneous hypothesis added on to nature. From your point of view God is essential.

From a pragmatic point of view God is necessary for social control. The disadvantage is that supreme authority of moral law has been corrupted by bad men and will be again. Look at the Ayatollahs of Iran who claim to be men of God. Look at our Conservative MPs who tug their forelocks to God in the great cathedral and then try to deter immigrants any way they can.

From a psychological point of view faith in divine Providence makes one contented, even happy. The question is raised 'Should I aspire to truth or feel contented?'
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Belinda wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:44 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 11:40 pm
Belinda wrote: Fri Nov 04, 2022 9:54 pm If God exists then His moral laws are as valid as his natural laws.
Well, both are then objective. But one has to do with morality, obviously, and the other...

But we should clarify. When we use the term "natural law" (outside of ethics), it usually refers not to an actual "law," except by way of metaphor. What we call a natural "law" is actually merely a physical regularity. It has no actual "legal" feature. One doesn't become a bad person or "lawbreaker" if one "violates the law of gravity," by taking up a hot air balloon.
I agree 'natural law' is "physical regularity" and David Hume himself would endorse that.
Oh, when David Hume says "natural law" he's referring to what's called the moral "natural law," not the physical "natural laws."

It's confusing, because we use the term "natural law" two completely different ways. In Virtue Ethics Theory (to which Hume was alluding) it is believed that people can "read" moral conclusions from the natural world around them. That's what Hume rejected. But in science, "natural law" doesn't refer to anything moral. It just refers to principles of gravitation, thermodynamics, hydrodynamics, etc.
The deity usually called God is not a creator only of what we call the material world but a giver of moral laws, as we agree.
Both sides of the debate concede He's the only one who could do that. That's where Nietzsche and Dostoevsky agreed, for example.
The difference between us is you see the moral law transferred directly from God to man via JC. Whereas I see the moral law being transmitted via nature (biology if you will).

I agree we see that differently. But Hume rejected your view. That was, in fact, what he was speaking against. Hume thought that "moral" had nothing to do with "nature" or "biology." He was an Emotivist, meaning he thought that moral precepts were just expressions of how one feels about certain acts.

And both Emotivism and Natural Law Ethics have terminal problems. In the latter case, the problem is that people read out of "biology" or "nature" things that I suspect you would decline to believe...such as that women, being weaker and smaller, are inherently inferior to men, or that blacks are "naturally" inferior to whites.
From your point of view God is essential.
He is, from all points of view...if "moral" is to mean anything objective.
From a pragmatic point of view God is necessary for social control.
"Pragmatic"? Well it's a funny pragmatism that views a deception as "necessary" and plausibly evolutionarily adaptive for social control. Ordinarily, only increasing realism about things is thought to be genuinely adaptive. Delusions are departures from how things are, not adaptations to it.
The disadvantage is that supreme authority of moral law has been corrupted by bad men and will be again.
Yet the abuse of something does not count as reason to refuse its right use.

Psychopaths cut up people with knives. So do surgeons. Should we ban knives? No. The abuse does not invalidate the right use.
From a psychological point of view faith in divine Providence makes one contented, even happy. The question is raised 'Should I aspire to truth or feel contented?'
To truth. Contentment can be mere quietism or even folly, in cases in which contentment is not really an appropriate response to the truth. Sometimes the truth demands action, and even occasions fear and unrest.

But truth always wins.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 3:45 am In a Godless world, there is no objective basis for morals. Ask Dostoevsky...or if you don't like him, read Nietzsche. The two couldn't have been more diametrically opposed in ideology, but both said it is true.

And it is. You can realize it is, if you think carefully. It might be put like this.

The cosmos is an accident (meaning a "happening" without intention or telos). Accidents have no opinions -- about morals or anything else. Therefore, the cosmos has no moral opinions.
Yes, it seems to be true: there is no *objective* basis for morals and moral systems. That is, if the natural world is taken as the model or the example. The world is amoral. Or, if there are morals and ethics they are of the sort that rule and dominate in the natural world. In that world preying upon surrounding creatures is encouraged and every aspect of the *natural mind* is a mind focused on outsmarting other creatures in order to consume them. The predator stays one step ahead of the prey but the predator also exerts a pressure on the prey to become more adept at avoiding predation.

Like it or not, accept it or not, it seems clear to me that these rules very much function in our human world. It is also true that these rules, these realities, are "appalling" to people when they realize what sort of a system they actually live in.

If a 'model of god' or a 'picture of god' were to be created as a reflection of the natural world, and the cosmos, it would not be the sort of god-image that grips your imagination. I think this is the problem that the planet faces in this present, unfolding time-frame. The former 'pictures' are no longer sufficient as explanatory models. The former models are rooted in a radically different time-frame.

So it seems to me that people hold to them out of habit but also out of *desperation*. Desperation has a special inflection in my use of the term. It means clinging to something because letting go of it would result in a 'loss of ground' and would have psychological consequences. So it seems to me that, knowing this, feeling this, people seek to bolster their position through an attempt to strengthen their *belief* in the old systems. It seems to become a process of *denial*. Denial of what they actually know, at an internal level, to be true.

I think that what happens as a result of that inner conflict is that people seem to go in one of two directions: one, toward the strengthening or bolstering of a belief-system that is actually fading away; and two to a position that is defined as 'atheism'. I see both as *strategies* and that word also has a special meaning.

In my own case I do not judge a person who takes the atheistic stance. It is quite possible to live very well as an atheist. It is similarly possible to live wretchedly as a *believer*. In the end (it seems to me) the specific stance or the *declared position* does not matter as much as one would think. However, when an entire culture has lost its metaphysical grounding -- when *the horizon* gets erased and there is nothing to replace it -- then, as we all seem to know, nihilism as a sort of disease looms. So the *loss of faith* is not something without consequences.

Similarly, I observe a person like yourself -- a religious fanatic -- who seems to me to grip *belief* with such intensity that it deforms the intelligence and indeed deforms the personality. What you have in the end, and your argument follows an established pattern that does not vary, is *the curse*. "You'll see" "Just wait" "one of will be right and one of us will be wrong" and of course behind this threat is the imago that you wield of a torturous hell-realm. You say "it's not me!" wielding this imago and yet it really is!

If you have bothered to read anything I have written you'd know that I do not regard the idea as flatly false but I do look at it through a different lens. The Christian picture is stark, binary, and in a sense *ruthless*. I believe that it reflects a truth but needs to be better stated. I have written about this extensively. I doubt that you have bothered to read. Also, you cannot read. You can't assimilate any idea that does not conform to your idees-fixes. You distort everything.

Simply put, the world that we create by our actions and attitudes is the world that we will (eventually) have to live in. And we will continue to live in the result of our choices until we opt to change how we act and what we create. That seems to me to be a far more realistic view because we all verify this in our own lives. We see that our actions result in undesirable outcomes and we resolve, if we are able, to change our behavior.

I take Dostoevsky and Nietzsche as harbingers of "real things". That is, of nihilism that results from the falling away of systems of description that no longer match *the world* perceived and understood. In my view though it will not be possible to hunker down into an Old System that is no longer adequate or, to put it differently, it will only work for awhile. Eventually a given person and a person who has, let's say, crossed a certain threshold of awareness, will have to approach the new situation as a mature, thoughtful person. So, I do not see "leaving behind" the Old System as a bad thing necessarily. Though I do recognize that many people cannot handle what this entails. So, I recognize that some people really need the *container* of a belief-system and, as I say, will do all they can as a strategy to protect it, to strengthen as it were the shell.

I have said many times that "I am here for my own purposes". This all has a great deal or relevance and importance for me personally. In my own case what now interests me, or what has risen up in my vision and perspective, is the degree to which we all live in systems of perception that are created and controlled by others for social, political and other reasons.

So, the question that looms -- for me -- is an interesting one. I ask myself "What is the purpose of involvement in a religious practice and observance?" If I am, let's say, naturally inclined toward such, what is it really that I am trying to achieve? Or what would I like to be the result of it?

Frankly, I am right in the midst of concretizing my answer.

What interests me about your perspective -- and I admit that to encounter someone so radically involved in a fanatical perspective as you seem to be has forced me to examine fanaticism as an act of desperation -- is that your object is this thing you call 'salvation': to be freed from the consequences of sin (is how you put it). That is your object. Everything else that follows from that is provisional in a strong sense.

Is my object (my stated *purpose*) different from yours?

I would say that in some sense no, it isn't. But I definitely do not believe that your religious system or your methodology is 'the only way' (as you regularly put it with John 14:6) To hold to such a view is, in my view, to wrap oneself in Hebrew idea imperialism (as I have said so many times). It is not the right way to go.

The only right way is the training of the soul, the training of the person, in those ways that lead to leading an honorable and upstanding life. I mean that when one examines the issue closely there is really no other alternative. You -- a given person -- will either become involved in such a project and live their life in relation to that objective (that purpose) or one will not.

But I do reject the idea, stated by many Evangelicals, of a salvation granted by a supernatural being as if a magic wand were waved that 'saves' one from one's own consequential actions. Or from a corrupt world. Or from *original sin*.

The picture, then, of what a purposeful, upstanding, decent and committed life is -- it really does begin to change.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 3:45 amThe cosmos is an accident (meaning a "happening" without intention or telos). Accidents have no opinions -- about morals or anything else. Therefore, the cosmos has no moral opinions.
The way that you argue, the terms or perhaps the limits of your argument, constrain you in unhealthy and I think untenable ways. I have resolved to help you out of the mess you are in. Pay attention, this is an important matter.

You set up your argument like this: either you believe in the specific god-form and god-description presented through the Christian model (the origin of which is specifically Hebrew). . .

. . . or you reject telos as a real possibility in describing the world and the Universe.

Yet this is not the only alternative! The reason you lock yourself into this limited picture is because of your specific, and self-chosen, religious fanaticism.

I can certainly believe in a Universe and a *manifestation* that has come about because I see reality, and being, and awareness of being, as essentially divine in origin, and not believe in the specifics of the Story that you hold to (and guard like the proverbial junkyard dog).

I can see the world and all manifestation as purposed (i.e. as non-accidental) but define the origin of 'morals' in very different terms than those of your specific religious fanaticism.

I can say "The world and the cosmos has a moral purpose for human beings" while simultaneously rejecting the specific cultural and temporal manifestation (that is, the Hebrew world) of those who conceived of the specific picture to which you are so adamantly wedded.

I can reject "accidentalism" and yet not embrace the specificity of your particular description of a created world (the story presented through Genesis).

See? Was that really so very hard!?
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