"Truths" are also based on time, circumstance, awareness, agenda, payoff, etc. -- all kinds of factors! And yet we think, with our obviously limited perception/ability/awareness, that WE can know ultimate truths?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pm Truths within specific localities are subjective. But the variability only seems to apply within certain limits.
What do you think nature is limited to? What is outside of nature?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pmIf there are moralities in the natural world they are ecological.
For some, saying 'there are no truths', can be a way of acknowledging that human beings can perceive from many moving and variable perspectives (of many qualities) while/yet not needing to claim/see any ultimate truth.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pmTo say 'there are no truths' is a way of arriving at the knowledge that you (the individual) cannot make any true statements except those of material relationships, biology, and chemistry.
There is value and capability and sense throughout all -- much of which, we human beings are oblivious to much of the time as we favor our 'greatest stories'.
Well sure, this is one part of our development. But it would be absurd to think that we having nothing instilled in us already. This is why it's absurd to be told that we must learn about a god that we otherwise have no clue of. We don't need anyone between us and our connectivity with what we're part of and related to. We can see it for ourselves in many different ways. We don't need the convoluted and controlled creations of other human beings -- that's unnatural!Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pm It seems to me that one has to be trained up in being moral and "doing good ... from the perspective of caring about the entire life-community". To arrive at that, to achieve that, requires educational processes. And what is taught (to children, to the young) is not 'science-facts' or hard & cold truths from the world of vicious nature.
I agree that insights and wisdom can be passed around and are valuable regardless of the vehicle through which they are delivered. Naturally, the Bible includes words of wisdom because there is wisdom through humankind. Wisdom can be delivered via many different vehicles. This is what's so beautiful about our naturally divine belonging and connectivity. To pretend that it's not this way -- to pretend that it only comes through one channel -- to pretend that only a certain few will receive it -- is a demonstration of man's distortion and manipulation, and is rather evil if not simply stupid. It is dishonest and greedy.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pmSo a strange problem confronts us: though we see that a great deal in Christian mythology is technically false, and cannot be supported as *truth*, nevertheless the moral and ethical systems that derive from it are indispensable. Except perhaps in some of the details.
Exactly. It's naturally throughout humankind, and is likely limited only by the limits of belief or the ownership/control that humankind places on it.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pmone can turn one's attention to non-Christian cultures where, say, Buddhism is the dominating religious and ethical mode and recognize there very decent moral and ethical admonitions.
Do you think that is outside of nature?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pmTherefore (in my view) it always seems to have to do with connoted metaphysical values that *exist* (are part-and-parcel of things) but require being divined by human intelligence.
Well, I think we humans are part of nature (not better or separate), and we have no clue how much intelligence and cooperation and connection is going on across various channels. Many cultures have understood/seen life (and our place in it) in this way. Perhaps it just depends on how much humankind wants to sense, and how much humankind wants to create.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Nov 13, 2022 8:04 pmAs far as I am aware there is no comparable intelligence in the natural world except of a conditional sort.