Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 am
iambiguous wrote: ↑Sun Jul 28, 2024 12:19 am
Yo, Maia! You're up!!
Yeah, it really doesn't matter if you make up a bunch of stuff about paganism and don't understand the differences between virtue ethics and deontology. Nor does it matter that you repeat the same psychology 101 'analysis' of people with different beliefs than yours. None of that matters, because......well, that's unclear. In any case, none of it matters to you.
We'll need a context, of course.
Oh, dear. You didn't understand the context.
Again, with Maia, the contexts we kept coming back to were abortion, nihilism and sexuality. Now,
if I understood her correctly, she agreed with me that in regard to dasein -- our historical, cultural and uniquely personal experiences -- many of our value judgments pertaining to them are, indeed, rooted existentially.
So, okay, she seemed to concur with that. If her life had unfolded very, very differently, not only might she have accepted abortion as moral and sexual abstinence as irrational, she might even have become a moral nihilist herself!
But not only did that not happen, she seemed to suggest, but it could not have happened. Why? Because once the Goddess was there to guide this Intrinsic Self of hers, she could then feel comforted and consoled that at least
she was doing the Right Thing. Then there are the religionists here who remind us that their own One True Path includes both immortality and salvation. And, in fact, even here different Pagans believe different things.
So [for me] back to not what one believes about religion but what one can demonstrate to others as rational and ethical behavior.
But that didn't happen. Why? Because, again, assuming I understood her own philosophy of life, deep down inside her is this Spiritual, Natural, Intuitive Self, that, through her own understanding of the Goddess and of Nature, "somehow" allows her to transcend dasein and "just know" that abortion is immoral.
But then the part where others within a particular Pagan community accept abortion as moral instead. Why? Because they "just know" that it is deep down inside.
Maia noted that, unlike the manner in which Pagans were portrayed in films like The Wicker Man [the original] and Midsomer, where all of the community members seemed to be in sync with what
true Paganism entails, the Pagan communities she interacts in includes others who might by anywhere at all up and down the moral and political spectrum. But if that's the case how are conflicting goods resolved when everyone is entitled to their own Intrinsic Self?
What's crucial from my frame of mind is distinguishing between those who either are or are not in a Pagan community itself.
How about if Maia [who is posting again at ILP now] chooses one. We can then explore how Pagans of her ilk connect the "spiritual dots" between 1] Nature, 2] the Goddess, and 3] the existential parameters of their own life historically, culturally and experientially. And then how, in turn, moral nihilists of my ilk suggests instead that -- click -- objectivists of her ilk "think up" this Intrinsic Self in order to "transcend" dasein and the fractured and fragmented arguments I make in my signature threads.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 amSo, you think she is a pagan to transcend dasein and YOUR(?) arguments??
Is that what you really believe I am suggesting here? It might actually be quite the opposite. From my frame of mind religions exist in order to allow mere mortals
to believe -- to
believe -- that dasein [and my arguments]
can be transcended.
But until Maia and Pagans come around to their own rendition of Judgment Day, any number of other religionists here are not likely to be impressed.
From my frame of mind, those like Maia basically embody their very own rendition of the "psychology of objectivism".
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 amSo, if someone focuses on your behavior in the thread, they are making it about you. But when you call out someone and psychoanalyze them - individually or a general shot at most people - this isn't making the thread about them. Are you by any chance compelled by determinism to see the hypocrisy?
That's your "iambiguous" here, not mine. Again, it is an entirely subjective assumption on my part. And if others here actually believe that "I" am any less fractured and fragmented about this than I am about conflicting goods and determinism, well, that is largely beyond my control, isn't it?
The main point is not what they believe but that what they believe allows them to sustain one or another comforting and consoling security banket. And, then, with any luck, taking that all the way to the grave.
Unless, of course, they're right. And I'm here in part because I am hoping to find someone like her who might actually prompt me to yank myself up out of the grim philosophical hole I've dug myself down into.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 amWell, then I'd suggest you try experiencing things with other people. The effectiveness of words on a screen in changing people's outlooks is extremely small. And if you can't go out - wheelchair bound - there are ways to learn via doing/participation even via the net.
Of course, there is the satisfaction of telling people their wall of words didn't change your mind as if this is evidence of something.
We've been over this before. There are literally hundreds and hundreds of One True Paths out there...most insisting that moral nihilism has nothing to do philosophically with "the search for wisdom".
Trust me: if someone here is able to convince me that there is but one true path out there -- and especially if they champion immortality and salvation -- I'll do whatever I can to be around them, to believe the same.
I
want to be saved! But no fucking way am I going to go down the lists...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_p ... ideologies
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_s ... philosophy
...and eliminate them all one by one.
How's that going for anyone here?
Let me ask you this:
If you believed that your own existence was essentially meaningless and purposeless, that objective morality is beyond the reach of mere mortals in a No God world and that death = oblivion...?
I WANT MY MIND CHANGED!!!
Instead, in my own rooted existentially in dasein personal opinion, the reactions I get from most moral objectivists reflects instead their concern that my arguments may well end up pulling that objective morality rug right out from under them.
But not you, right?
Maia, however, doesn't appear to embody an "or else" component. Other than her willingness to respond more positively to those who more or less believe their own rendition of the same thing.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 amSo, her willingness to respond more positively to people who have similar ideas is an 'or else' component.
Huh?
Just the opposite. She seems to focus more on a Pagan community that revolves far more around "I" than "we". Okay, but if there are 50 members in that community and all are permitted their own personal relationship with the Goddess and with Nature in regard to conflicting goods...what then?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 amIt seems like you are taking a woman's lack of equal interest in you compared to others as an 'or else'. 'Other than....' Comes off a bit stalkery. (I know, only you should be able threads or posts about other people)
What else can I say here but, "huh?"
Not entirely sure where you are going with this but what does that have to do with anything pertaining to Maia's and my own understanding of nihilism?
Then back to this...
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Aug 23, 2024 11:15 pmThat important distinction, you proposed, between the hard and the soft sciences, in another thread, ought to well include a disctinction between fantasies about the motivations of others being fine in the soft sciences as long as the person occasionally claims they are not an objectivist.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Aug 24, 2024 6:11 amHey, if you don't want to respond to a point someone makes, just be honest and don't respond. What you quoted has nothing to do with the point of mine you quoted. It's not what religious people say that undermines your distinction between the hard and soft sciences. It is what you say.
We are still in two very, very different discussions regarding how we respond to each other here. I often don't recognize myself at all in your posts pertaining to me. And no doubt the other way around.