By the way, we have a caste system too, and have burned books at times. I'm not saying those things aren't the wrong way of doing things, however, maybe in Confucianism, it's better to burn books than people.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
By the way, we have a caste system too, and have burned books at times. I'm not saying those things aren't the wrong way of doing things, however, maybe in Confucianism, it's better to burn books than people.
Sorry, Henry, I didn't see your post. I usually respond to posts that show up in my alerts and since you quote differently, they don't show up in my alerts so I miss your posts directed at me a lot.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 10:26 pm Gary, you never respond to me...that's okay...as with AJ, I don't expect or, frankly, want one from you...this post isn't for you...it's a continuation of my post just above...your question is just a jumpin' off point.
Love is a big word. An abused word. We have to narrow it down. In context: loving your neighbor means respectin' him. It means recognizin' him as sumthin' other than a commodity. It doesn't mean you have to like him. associate with him, transact with him, break bread with him, agree with him, or love him. It means, minimally, you ought to leave him be to do as he sees fit.Do you think it's possible to get along in the world without "loving" thy neighbor?
So, no, as a moral being, you can't get along in the world without loving your neighbor.
Of good, you mean? They certainly have.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 10:35 pm OK. But taken as societies, which societies have done the most harm to the world? It seems like the Abrahamic religious societies have done an awful lot.
See above....have they been more violent and awful than Christian societies?
Oh please...let's. Shall we start with their persecution of Christians or of the Uighurs? How about their actions in Tibet? What about their 400 million murdered babies, their Cultural Revolution, or their booming traffic in sex slaves? How about their treatment of Hong Kong and Taiwan? Where shall we start?I mean, look at China.
If you mean the Muslims, maybe. Yes. They have commandments to kill "infidels," actually....the Abrahamic societies seem to be harder on unbelievers.
In the Greek, the word "love" isn't one word: it's at least four: Eros, Agape, Storge and Philia. Each is somewhat different. The Greeks had a more complete vocabulary in that regard than we have in English.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 10:44 pm If love meant respect, then wouldn't the Bible have used the word respect?
That's why it doesn't tell us to do it ourselves, Gary. it tells you instead that the only way it's going to happen is through God's actual help.Instead the Bible gives us an almost impossible task to live up to. That can only be frustrating and frustration breeds anger and everything else or else it can be disheartening and lead to depression.
OK. I'll give you credit where it is due, perhaps you are on to the right thing. I hope so because things are looking pretty bleak in the international political scene right now. One can only hope that Christ's love will win out I guess.
AJ referred to: The Vedantic concept
To be accurate, though this has nothing to do with anything I say, assert or recommend, George Harrison was, I'd say, a bona fide follower of a modern expression of a Hindu religion (Vaishnavism = the religion of Krishna-Vishnu).Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 9:35 pmPseudo-Vedantic. You're no more a Hindu than the Beatles were.
Here, you engage as you often do with a haughty imperiousness. I have made no assertions about anything 'radical' nor 'new'. It is true nonetheless that ideas and concepts from the Eastern philosophies and religions have certainly influenced Occidental thinkers -- Aldous Huxley comes to mind though there are many others.You think you're saying something radical and new. But you're not. You're channelling the old, Westernized pseudo-Hinduism that tries to pick and choose the elements of that worldview it likes, and dump the rest...thus becoming incoherent in the process.
Once again you re-phrase and re-state to serve your own purposes. It is typical underhanded Immanuel Can!It's not just a rejection of Christianity, actually; it's a rejection of Hinduism too. It's just veiled self-worship, half couched in the "culturally appropriated" language of the East. So if you regard (whatever you mean by) "Christianity" as imperialistic, I think you need to take a look in the mirror, and apologize to some Hindus.
So truth is off the table, for you. If Nazi occultims "worked," and "had a purpose," you wouldn't see it as immoral?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:14 pm ...as I now conceive it, religion and religious practice must be defined in terms of its purpose.
Here I "engage" with rationality. Coherence is an attribute of beliefs that make sense with themselves. Your beliefs don't have it, it seems.Here, you engage as you often do with a haughty imperiousness.You think you're saying something radical and new. But you're not. You're channelling the old, Westernized pseudo-Hinduism that tries to pick and choose the elements of that worldview it likes, and dump the rest...thus becoming incoherent in the process.
AJ wrote: Yet in the world of man, a world in which man's psyche is the major element, other possibilities are conceived. Here morality is conceived and defined.
If you wish to bicker over things which really don't matter much you certainly can. I used the verb *to conceive* in the sense of 'come to understand' and 'realize'. And when it is conceived (realized, understood) it is also defined: expressed, translated into communicable terms; applied. .henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 10:12 pmNo. Man doesn't conceive morality; he recognizes moral fact. Yes, nature is red in tooth & claw and man is mired in it. Unlike all other life, though, man can stand up and -- as I say -- recognize he's a moral being. He can do sumthin' else. More accurately: he ought to do sumthin' else.
The word 'ought' comes from a Old English word āgan which means 'to owe'. So he owes it to do something else does make sense to me.he ought to do sumthin' else
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:14 pm ...as I now conceive it, religion and religious practice must be defined in terms of its purpose.
Why must truth and what is true be off the table?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:28 pmSo truth is off the table, for you. If Nazi occultims "worked," and "had a purpose," you wouldn't see it as immoral?
You may assert that you engage rationally but in my experience this is not so. You are an irrationalist you tarts himself up in rationalistic garb.Here I "engage" with rationality. Coherence is an attribute of beliefs that make sense with themselves. Your beliefs don't have it, it seems.
Not sure what the typo occultims is meant to refer to.If Nazi occultims "worked," and "had a purpose," you wouldn't see it as immoral?
Legitimately, I don't see how. Look here, you say: It means to honour, sacrifice for, and seek the best for the person. Embedded in it is the idea you know what the other guy needs. You may. Even if you do, can't see how you're empowered to impose a solution. Offer one, sure. But when told no thanks back off.
What you believe is pragmatism. It has nothing to do with truth. It tries to operate purely on "function."Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:43 pmAlexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:14 pm ...as I now conceive it, religion and religious practice must be defined in terms of its purpose.Why must truth and what is true be off the table?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Nov 05, 2022 11:28 pmSo truth is off the table, for you. If Nazi occultims "worked," and "had a purpose," you wouldn't see it as immoral?
You may assert that you engage rationally but in my experience this is not so.[/quote]Here I "engage" with rationality. Coherence is an attribute of beliefs that make sense with themselves. Your beliefs don't have it, it seems.
For you, it doesn't really matter. Whatever "works," and whatever it "works for" is fine, in pragmatism.Not sure what the typo occultims is meant to refer to.If Nazi occultims "worked," and "had a purpose," you wouldn't see it as immoral?