Christianity

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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 2:59 pm
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.
Then there are none. Whatever "is," is 'good,' or 'not evil,' at least. It's all amoral.

But here's the interesting question: what then is "morality"? By logic, it ought not to exist at all, even as a local social delusion. People ought not to imagine a thing like "morality" precisely because reality does not invite them to do so. Rather, the reality, and hence the evolutionarily-promotable and evolutionarily functional belief is belief in reality itself...and hence, the belief that morality does not even exist.

So why do we think it does?
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.

The exist. But do they "function"? How? How does it help human beings to imagine falsehoods? How would it help them to lose touch with reality, fail to behave as evolution requires them to believe in order to evolve (survival of the fittest), and come to believe instead in something completely imaginary, like "love for one's neighbour"?

The traditional answer to this is that morality is "evolutionarily adaptive" because it facilitates group solidarity in some way. But that just raises an additional problem: why would the impersonal, indifferent universe of material things create an illusory belief that turns out to be adaptive to the very reality it denies? That looks very, very odd as an explanation indeed. It would need a lot of explanation...explanation that we cannot offer.
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.

You mean something like the Gaia hypothesis? The idea that "god" is another word for "world," "universe" or "nature"?
So it seems to me that people hold to them out of habit but also out of *desperation*.
So...people believe in a delusion (morality) because it gives them "psychological consequences" that are actually being visited on them by an indifferent universe that they've failed to understand?

But then, the sooner they reject all of that morality, all of that delusion, the better for them: they'll be more aware and more fit for survival, just as Nietzsche said. Or if it's a delusion and they like it, there's no harm in them believing the delusion. Why should we deny people their happy delusions, since the universe has no opinion about the matter.
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'.
The Romans called the Christians "Atheists," because the Romans thought they believed in TOO FEW 'gods'. :shock: One wasn't enough, apparently.
In my own case I do not judge a person who takes the atheistic stance.
You should. It's an irrational position.

If the Atheist holds it "on evidence," then he owes us that evidence. But not only does he not have it, he can't even get it, since the task exceeds human powers by far. So for him to claim he has the necessary evidence simply means he's lying or deluded: he cannot. But if he believes it "without evidence," then he's irrational.
It is quite possible to live very well as an atheist.
Arbitrarily, of course.
It is similarly possible to live wretchedly as a *believer*.
Inconsistently, of course.
...an entire culture has lost its metaphysical grounding...
That never actually happens. It's sometimes threatened briefly, but the threat is always avoided.

They always seize a new, and often even more ideologically wild, alternative, and proceed with business as usual. For example, Postitivism is being lost in the West...and now the West is madly chasing "climate change," socialism, transhumanism and world governance as if these are metaphysical absolutes. Human beings cannot live without metaphysical assumptions: and if they don't have realistic ones, they immediately embrace delusions.

But that, too, needs us to step back and explain. How should that be? How come a creature that was generated purely by chance and time "needs" any metaphysical suppositions? Shouldn't hard-nosed reality be enough?

Apparently not.
Similarly, I observe a person like yourself -- a religious fanatic

One it seems you can't stop talking to. :lol:
...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.
Not at all. I have neither threatened you nor cursed you. I've just told you what is going to come. And an eternity without God is what you are rushing toward, gladly. That's a "Hell" alright. But it's all been your choice, from the get-go. And I have claimed no authority whatsoever to make any of that happen.

But what will come will come. That's just a statement of fact so obvious one can't possibly miss it.
If you have bothered to read anything I have written

I did. But it's so windy.

Why do you take three paragraphs to make a point that ususally ends up being so simple?
...you cannot read. You can't assimilate any idea that does not conform to your idees-fixes.
I can. But I don't find many of the ideas worth "assimilating." They are often either wrong or partly so. Sometimes they're just so wide of the mark they require no reaction at all.

You have a few interesting ideas here, which is why I'm responding now. But I've still had to simply dismiss paragraphs of pure blah.
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.
Here's an example: all you're saying here is, "Believing in reality is better than deluding oneself."

Why didn't you just say that? :shock:
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.
Not always. Sometimes the abandon it. But they always abandon it for another. They never go Nihilist completely, because Nihilism is unliveable.
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.
"Honourable." "Upstanding." You throw these words out there like everybody agrees on what they mean. But they don't. And you throw them out as if they indicate the "right" or "moral" thing to do, which they cannot if, as you say earlier, we live in an amoral universe. So neither people nor the universe accepts your terms as givens.

How come you don't realize this?

You aren't sufficiently interrogating your own assumptions, I fear. You're letting yourself get away with bluffs all the time. And that won't help you make a good theory of life. And reasonably smart people will detect it instantly.

You seem capable: but you seem to have decided to turn off your brain in favour of your civilizational theory. Likewise, you're so against "Hebrew imperialism" you're indifferent to the antisemitism people have repeatedly pointed out to you. You're a strange exhibition of wasted capacity, at the moment...but one hopes the potential for self-evaluation somehow remains.

You could do better if you advanced your theory more tentatively, and if you decided to understand interrogation and inspection rightly, as a cooperative effort to make the theory better. Because you insist on interpreting it as mere hostility, your theory isn't improving at the moment.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 3:24 pm ...or you reject telos as a real possibility in describing the world and the Universe.

Yet this is not the only alternative!
Actually, it is...at least if you are a Materialist. And I've got Nietzsche and Dostoevsky, Hume, Kierkegaard, and a whole bunch of other top thinkers on my side.

But you're a pseudo-Vedantist. So you believe destiny is soul-extinction. Why the universe "wants" that is hard to say: but if the universe 'wants" nothing, then again, there is no telos. And more importantly, there's no particular outcome for us rightly to aim at. The world is, as you say, "amoral."
See? Was that really so very hard!?
Not "hard." Certainly not "sophisticated." Really, not "coherent," either. You don't seem to ask much of your beliefs. Maybe that's why you are so resitant to opening them to questions or inspection.

But definitely not hard.
Gary Childress
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:46 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 3:24 pm ...or you reject telos as a real possibility in describing the world and the Universe.

Yet this is not the only alternative!
Actually, it is...at least if you are a Materialist. And I've got Nietzsche and Dostoevsky, Hume, Kierkegaard, and a whole bunch of other top thinkers on my side.

But you're a pseudo-Vedantist. So you believe destiny is soul-extinction. Why the universe "wants" that is hard to say: but if the universe 'wants" nothing, then again, there is no telos. And more importantly, there's no particular outcome for us rightly to aim at. The world is, as you say, "amoral."
See? Was that really so very hard!?
Not "hard." Certainly not "sophisticated." Really, not "coherent," either. You don't seem to ask much of your beliefs. Maybe that's why you are so resitant to opening them to questions or inspection.

But definitely not hard.
IC. Is the only alternative to Christianity to be in a godless world? Is Christianity the only interpretation of God that there can be?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:59 pm IC. Is the only alternative to Christianity to be in a godless world? Is Christianity the only interpretation of God that there can be?
Well, one can have a fake god if one wants. That's an option. And one can then have the "morality" of Molech, or Baal, or Allah, or Vishnu, or Odin, or Zeus, or Set, or Ahura Mazda, or any other such human imagining one wants...or a whole bunch of them.

But objective morality? That, we can get only one way: by way of the only God who actually exists.
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:37 pm Here's an example: all you're saying here is, "Believing in reality is better than deluding oneself."

Why didn't you just say that? :shock:
What is shocking about saying that believing in reality is better than deluding oneself? What is shocking about that statement to you IC?
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:14 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:59 pm IC. Is the only alternative to Christianity to be in a godless world? Is Christianity the only interpretation of God that there can be?
Well, one can have a fake god if one wants. That's an option. And one can then have the "morality" of Molech, or Baal, or Allah, or Vishnu, or Odin, or Zeus, or Set, or Ahura Mazda, or any other such human imagining one wants...or a whole bunch of them.

But objective morality? That, we can get only one way: by way of the only God who actually exists.
So it's either Yahweh or the highway for you, I take?
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Re: Christianity

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IC. What if we don't know a whole lot about God and the afterlife (if there are such things)? What if we don't know a whole lot about the past, at least as much as we may think? What if the world works a little differently than past interpreters of God's message thought? I mean, maybe I'm wrong and Yahweh is the God that everyone thinks is out there. Of course, if I am wrong, then I'm going to go to hell for no other reason than not believing (according to the beliefs about Yahweh). And that's why I think Yahweh may not be an accurate interpretation of the divine, at least from where I sit.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:14 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:37 pm Here's an example: all you're saying here is, "Believing in reality is better than deluding oneself."

Why didn't you just say that? :shock:
What is shocking about saying that believing in reality is better than deluding oneself?
Nothing. What's shocking is that he didn't say something so easy and obvious to say. He used a whole paragraph to circumlocute the whole thing.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:15 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:14 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:59 pm IC. Is the only alternative to Christianity to be in a godless world? Is Christianity the only interpretation of God that there can be?
Well, one can have a fake god if one wants. That's an option. And one can then have the "morality" of Molech, or Baal, or Allah, or Vishnu, or Odin, or Zeus, or Set, or Ahura Mazda, or any other such human imagining one wants...or a whole bunch of them.

But objective morality? That, we can get only one way: by way of the only God who actually exists.
So it's either Yahweh or the highway for you, I take?
It's God or nothing for all of us. That's reality.

How can a fake god give us objectively-moral precepts?
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 4:46 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 3:24 pm ...or you reject telos as a real possibility in describing the world and the Universe.

Yet this is not the only alternative!
Actually, it is...at least if you are a Materialist. And I've got Nietzsche and Dostoevsky, Hume, Kierkegaard, and a whole bunch of other top thinkers on my side.
But you're a pseudo-Vedantist. So you believe destiny is soul-extinction. Why the universe "wants" that is hard to say: but if the universe 'wants" nothing, then again, there is no telos. And more importantly, there's no particular outcome for us rightly to aim at. The world is, as you say, "amoral."
You avoided taking my entire argument into consideration. You've hacked it into pieces and argue against those pieces. And this is typical of your methods.

This is what I wrote:
AJ wrote: 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).
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:33 pm IC. What if we don't know a whole lot about God and the afterlife (if there are such things)? What if we don't know a whole lot about the past, at least as much as we may think? What if the world works a little differently than past interpreters of God's message thought? I mean, maybe I'm wrong and Yahweh is the God that everyone thinks is out there. Of course, if I am wrong, then I'm going to go to hell for no other reason than not believing (according to the beliefs about Yahweh). And that's why I think Yahweh may not be an accurate interpretation of the divine, at least from where I sit.
You aren't at sea about this, Gary. You know what you need to know. We've been talking for some time now, and I've given you a bunch of the key verses.

If we imagine that one day, when we see God, "I didn't know" would constitute an excuse, it certainly won't in your own case.

You know. God can fairly say to you, "I told you everything you needed to know. You had that long conversation with one of my children by email. He told you all you needed to know in order to be saved."

And for those who knew less, He may ask less: but either way, that won't be your case.

You can know, you do know, you should know...So it's about what you now do with that knowledge. They days of pleading "I didn't know" are over. "God didn't tell me" is no longer your reason for disbelief.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:48 pm You avoided taking my entire argument into consideration.
Most of it was lame and verbose. I picked the diamonds out of the dirtpile, and set the rest back where it belonged.

And I dealt with your alleged "telos" alternative. It's no good for Atheists, and no good for pseudo-Vedantists.

Or did you just avoid reading that?
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:52 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 5:33 pm IC. What if we don't know a whole lot about God and the afterlife (if there are such things)? What if we don't know a whole lot about the past, at least as much as we may think? What if the world works a little differently than past interpreters of God's message thought? I mean, maybe I'm wrong and Yahweh is the God that everyone thinks is out there. Of course, if I am wrong, then I'm going to go to hell for no other reason than not believing (according to the beliefs about Yahweh). And that's why I think Yahweh may not be an accurate interpretation of the divine, at least from where I sit.
You aren't at sea about this, Gary. You know what you need to know. We've been talking for some time now, and I've given you a bunch of the key verses.

If we imagine that one day, when we see God, "I didn't know" would constitute an excuse, it certainly won't in your own case.

You know. God can fairly say to you, "I told you everything you needed to know. You had that long conversation with one of my children by email. He told you all you needed to know in order to be saved."

And for those who knew less, He may ask less: but either way, that won't be your case.

You can know, you do know, you should know...So it's about what you now do with that knowledge. They days of pleading "I didn't know" are over. "God didn't tell me" is no longer your reason for disbelief.
Well, God isn't exactly broadcasting his existence to everyone, including me, therefore I propose that "I don't know" DOES constitute an excuse. You're being fanatical.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

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Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 6:02 pm Well, God isn't exactly broadcasting his existence to everyone, including me...
But I did. And I did it because He told me to. So that's that.
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Re: Christianity

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Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 6:15 pm
Gary Childress wrote: Sat Nov 05, 2022 6:02 pm Well, God isn't exactly broadcasting his existence to everyone, including me...
But I did. And I did it because He told me to. So that's that.
Good grief. :roll:
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