Vitruvius wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 5:38 am You say you consider the Bible ' the single greatest literary, theological and philosophical work of all time'
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 7:00 amI'm speaking factually.
Vitruvius wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 11:56 amI'm sure you're expressing an honest opinion....
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmNo, factually. What book has sold more copies? What book has proved more influential in human history? What book has shaped not just other books but whole societies? What book has been studied more? What book is ethically superior? The Bible is the world's masterpiece
statistically...by orders of magnitude. Whether one likes it or not changes nothing: it's really nothing to do with opinion.
I'm not going to argue those points, but there are other religions, and other books that are just as significant to very large numbers of people.
It would seem to me, your claim the Bible is the greatest depends largely on its influence, as the central coordinating mechanism of Western civilisation.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmThat's only one of the metrics I listed above, but that's certainly an obvious one.
How very gracious of you!
A faithful member of a Christian community, one might argue, does not have to believe Adam and Eve, for example - is a valid explanation of the origin of life, in order to be a Christian person.
So Adam and Eve is literally true! And anyone who doesn't believe Adam and Eve literally true is not a Christian. Is that what you're saying?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmBut actually, this is one of the few points on which Evolutionism and the Bible are completely in agreement: that there must have been an original mating pair of
homo sapiens. For the Theory of Evolution does not posit that humans developed without sexual reproduction, or that a great mass of pre-humans suddenly made the jump to homo sapiens at the same time. It posits that a mating pair, one more "fit" than others, must be at the bottom of the "tree" of
homo sapiens. So the existence of such a pair is a point on which we have no need to argue. No tenable theory says otherwise.
No, that's not correct at all. Homo sapiens developed from the gradual evolution of earlier forms that were able to interbreed. There was no original pair in evolution. Perhaps you've become confused by the idea of the mitochondrial eve - which is the most recent matrilineal ancestor of all living humans. But she evolved from earlier forms.
If you say you believe Adam and Eve is literally true; you are necessarily saying science is tosh.
As above, tosh!
However, from an evolutionary perspective, I would argue that religions occur in order to unite hunter gatherer tribes
No, I'm not.
Oh? So you're not saying "Evolution intended that religions should organize hunter-gatherer tribes?" Then you're saying what I said: that it was nothing but (for us) a lucky accident it happened at all, if it did.
Again, no - human being wanted to join together, and religion was the means by which they did it. A useful device to overcome tribal hierarchies.
But that's a weak theory anyway. What "stake" (an anthropomorphic idea anyway) would "Evolution" (as if it were some kind of impersonal "intender") have in the collecting of any "tribes"?
You've got more neck than a herd of giraffes. A weak theory? Magic man in the sky has kid with a virgin, and the kid grows up and walks on water - and you're telling me evolution is a weak theory? We are not playing the same game here. I'm playing chess, and you're playing with yourself!
Human beings have intentions.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmSure: but that's not remotely important, in this matter, for the very obvious reason that we're discussing
origins: and unless you want to say "human beings intended their own origin," that objection doesn't really even address the question.
One of those intentions was for tribes to join together
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmOh. So you're not saying it's not Evolution that's "intending" tribes to join together?
Hurrah! At last you get what I'm saying - no need to go back and correct your post in light of this revelation of understanding, just plough on regardless!
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmIt's some human with such foresight already in place (correction: it must be many such in many places, all at the same time) "intended" tribes to join together? One would have to ask, "if that 'intention' were not already in place prior to this development, what made all these visionary humans in different locales come up with exactly the same strategy, but using such wildly different content?
Think of all the basic similarities between cultures that were geographically isolated; art, architecture, agriculture, music, pottery, jewellery, clothing, weapons, and so on, albeit done in culturally distinct ways. These occur because that's how humans relate to their environment. Assuming the idea of God occurs as a consequence of observing apparent design in nature, and wondering; I make spear - who made all this? Who made me? Who made the world? ...is it surprising that geographically isolated humans came up with the idea of God as an authority for law, as way to overcome tribal hierarchy? There's pyramids in Egypt, and also, half a world away in South America. Why? Because they are physical representations of society. It's just how things work.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmAnd if belief in religion was good then, and led to community and survival advantages, is religion not even more important now, since we live in a very fractured, global situation, with so many different "tribes" in play? Are you arguing for some new one-world "religion" now?
Could have been, but for the mistake of adopting an antithetical relationship to science.
Faith is not valid reason.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmThen you don't know what "faith" is, apparently.
I'm a philosopher. Telling me I don't know what faith is just silly. Give me some credit - I've given you plenty.
Constantine I, was the first Christian Roman Emperor. 306-337AD. The Council of Nicaea was 325 AD. It's true that Christianity itself predates this, but until Constantine the official religion of Rome was Sol Invictus.
There were Christians long before Constantine. All Constantine invented was the Roman Catholic entity, and he did it by way of syncretism with the pagan deities of the Roman Tradition in which he personally, and many of his people, already believed. The resulting mishmash was neither Roman nor Christian...nor genuinely "catholic," since that word means "universal." Constantine is a heretical figure in real Christianity.
Reeeeeal Christianity! You've just been waxing lyrical about what a great book the Bible is. It was compiled under Constantine's rule. The pigeon shits on the board again!
the Mulvian Bridge
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmThe battle of Milvian Bridge. Yes. It's uncertain whether or not Constantine ever had that vision, or whether he simply realized he could get farther with unified troops, and calculated the best strategy for his own purposes. Either way, he's no important figure in real Christianity.
Constantine produced the Bible that you think is the greatest book ever written. If it weren't for Constantine - Christianity would be lion shit, we'd still be worshipping Sol Invictus - and probably better off if we were!
I agree humankind is a special animal; that intellectual awareness is qualitatively distinct, and unique and precious.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pmWhoa. Let's stop there, for a second. Think about what you just claimed.
I spent time thinking before I said it.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Oct 05, 2021 3:25 pm You said that human beings are "special," that "intellectual awareness" is distinctive, and that something makes it deserving of the honourifics "unique" and even "precious". But if "intellectual awareness" is only an accidental byproduct of the indifferent process of Evolution, then it's no more than detritus, accidental offscouring, a chance factor, and no more deserving of honourifics than, say, our ability to breathe or eat or excrete, all of which are also said to be accidental products of Evolution.
Evolution isn't accidental; that's a very shallow understanding. It's based on random genetic mutation, that for simplicity sake - either produces a beneficial effect, or the organism dies out. It gets more complicated when you consider that evolution occurs in relation to a physical and chemical environment with definite characteristics. The biological environment is not the sole selection pressure. Heat, cold, radiation, time, space, tolerance of oxygen etc, etc are also selection pressures. Consequently, one could argue that evolution is teleological in relation to the physics and chemistry of the universe; in that the organism must be correct to reality at the physiological, behavioural and intellectual level in order to survive. Only humans are intellectually intelligent - and that makes us special because we needn't walk blindly into our evolutionary fate. We can change the environment to suit ourselves. This is a high level argument you probably won't understand, but - suffice to say, I know what I mean when I say humankind is special.
Darwin's thesis is confirmed by genetics.
You don't seem to understand how science works. Science works by rejecting bad ideas, and adopting better ones. That's why it's true.
Wait, wait, wait...

We HAVE to pause and look at what you just wrote. You wrote, "Science...rejects BAD ideas, etc.." Then you wrote, "That's why IT"S TRUE." Those are completely opposite claims. If science is already "true," then there CAN BE no "bad" ideas in science, and science can't "reject" anything it ever says without thereby admitting it has been "untrue".
Because, I'm talking to you - and the time for false modesty is past. Methodologically, all scientific conclusions are held to be provisional - but you think the man in the sky had a kid a virgin, and the kid could walk on water. So, comparatively, science is true. Secondly, science is no longer blundering about in candlelight. Strict methodological provisionalism is not honest to the state of modern scientific knowledge.
Which is it? Is science self-correcting, as your first sentence says, or not in need at all of any correction, as you second sentence assumes?
Both. Call it paradoxical if you like, but I'd argue that the concept of truth is at fault. It's got so many senses - it's not very useful. Everyone knows what truth is, yet philosophers are still trying to define it. So yes, science is both true, and yet subject to continual improvement. It's like this is a map of London:
This is a better map of London:
Is the first map untrue? See the problem with that claim?
You said that science has nothing to do with faith. Setting aside, for a moment, that misdefinition of faith, do you mean scientists never believe in theories that later need to be corrected or rejected? What do you do with the flat-earth theory, or the four humours of the body, or the monkey-to-man theories? Are you now going to declare them all "true" simply because, at one time, some sort of "science" said they were true?
Right, but they are ways of describing a consistent reality, and science now has developed fundamentals of explanation - like, for example the laws of thermodynamics, the periodic table of chemical elements, the neo Darwinian synthesis. They are indisputably true.
I would think not. I would think you would probablty opt now to say, "Okay, science isn't always true; it's just correctable." And then maybe your next claim would be that "religion" is not, so that makes it inferior...Am I on the right track?
No.
You're a straw man, pitching at windmills with that monkey to man chart thing.
That would be "tilting" at windmills, of course.
Well worth saying!
No, not at all. I neither invented the monkey-to-man theory, nor proclaimed it "science." Others did that. I just remind us of the error of the mistaken and the outright charlatans that did it. For I have noted that people who have a blind faith in whatever goes by the name of "science," however hokey and temporary such a theory might be, have a horribly short memory for the ways in which science (real science) has had to correct itself in the past. It seems like such believers in the infallibility of science never remember how the real historical course of science went. And I suspect it's because it shakes their faith that just trotting out the word "science" will save them from having to think. They don't want to understand science; they just want an object of worship under that name, one that frees them from having to ask questions far too painful for them to contemplate.
Which God is it you worship?
Aker – A god of the earth and the east and west horizons of the Underworld[2]
Amun – A creator god, patron deity of the city of Thebes, and the preeminent deity in Egypt during the New Kingdom[3]
Anhur – A god of war and hunting[4][5]
Aten – Sun disk deity who became the focus of the monolatrous or monotheistic Atenist belief system in the reign of Akhenaten[6]
Atum – A creator god and solar deity, first god of the Ennead[7]
Bennu – A solar and creator deity, depicted as a bird[8]
Geb – An earth god and member of the Ennead[9]
Hapi – Personification of the Nile flood[10]
Horus – A major god, usually shown as a falcon or as a human child, linked with the sky, the sun, kingship, protection, and healing. Often said to be the son of Osiris and Isis.[11]
Khepri – A solar creator god, often treated as the morning form of Ra and represented by a scarab beetle[12]
Khnum (Khnemu) – A ram god, the patron deity of Elephantine, who was said to control the Nile flood and give life to gods and humans[13]
Khonsu – A moon god, son of Amun and Mut[14]
Maahes – A lion god, son of Bastet[15]
Montu – A god of war and the sun, worshipped at Thebes[16]
Nefertum – God of the lotus blossom from which the sun god rose at the beginning of time. Son of Ptah and Sekhmet.[17]
Nemty – Falcon god, worshipped in Middle Egypt,[18] who appears in myth as a ferryman for greater gods[19]
Neper – A god of grain[20]
Osiris – god of death and resurrection who rules the underworld and enlivens vegetation, the sun god, and deceased souls[21]
Ptah – A creator deity and god of craftsmen, the patron god of Memphis[22]
Ra – The sun god
Set – An ambivalent god, characterized by violence, chaos, and strength, connected with the desert. Mythological murderer of Osiris and enemy of Horus, but also a supporter of the king.[23]
Shu – Embodiment of wind or air, a member of the Ennead[24]
Sobek – Crocodile god, worshipped in the Faiyum and at Kom Ombo[25]
Sopdu – A god of the sky and of Egypt's eastern border regions[26]
Thoth – A moon god, and a god of writing and scribes, and patron deity of Hermopolis[27]
Wadj-wer – Personification of the Mediterranean sea or lakes of the Nile Delta[28]
That's just the male Egyptian gods - there's very long lists for each of these:
Ancient Egyptian deities
Mesopotamian deities
Ancient Greek deities
Ancient Meitei deities
Ancient Roman deities
Norse deities
Hindu deities
Hindu gods
Devi
Japanese deities
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_ ... %20rows%20
But they were all wrong, and you are right?
And science is wrong because it created a pop culture depiction of evolution.