Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 6:19 pm
uwot wrote: ↑Wed Feb 16, 2022 4:13 pmLet me stop you there Gus. No I am not. Quite why you struggle so is a mystery, but I have asserted many times that any story that cannot be proven wrong may be true. I have also made it clear that I like stories and have no axe to grind with anyone who chooses to believe them, but that I reserve my contempt for those who demand I too believe their preferred story. If that really is beyond your comprehension, I shall apologise for for every sleight and henceforth treat you with the pity your cerebral faculties deserve.
Though there are some aspects of your views that you often clarify -- thank you -- I think that I pretty well understand your position. So it is not that I struggle with some sort of *mystery* about what you declare, but rather that I do regard it as a mystery-of-sorts that so many work so hard to undermine the Christian religion. I shall not conceal from you that I see you as one deeply involved in this project. And I shall not conceal from you that I regard this work, and thus your efforts here, as nefarious. So what interests me more than pointing to any individual and making some statement about them, personally, is much more in seeing these activities, and your activities, in a critical light and as I have said *from a certain distance above and looking down*.
What keys me in to your investment in this epic struggle is the calumnious terms you use to describe those who work to defend the metaphysical ground -- all that ground that as you say "cannot be proven wrong" but, of course you really mean "cannot be proven true". My own view is that you are, of course, very wrong that it cannot be 'proven'. It has been proven in the only way that proof functions: in what has been created by the people and the cultures that have held to the metaphysical structure. It is that it requires an eye different from the sort of eye you define through acts of your will to see and understand these things.
The other aspect is that I myself am, like so many, within the grip of a general nihilism. And this is another aspect of what interests me -- the nihilistic culture, the nihilistic attitude, that surrounds us. It is a manifestation of a type of absolutism, a negating absolutism. Those who are so invested in it don't seem able to see their own 'structure'. So as
you are fighting against
me I am also fighting against you while simultaneously fighting inner battles. And that battle is to overcome nihilism.
This also interests me:
"I reserve my contempt for those who demand I too believe their preferred story".
I have a few comments.
One is that I might suggest to you, and anyone who sees and thinks like you, that you would do well to consider the ramifications of the total undermining of what you call the 'story' at the metaphysical core of Christianity. Even if you are not a believer, and even if you cannot believe, it is possible that you might contribute positively to the community that discerns a need to hold to the metaphysics. The reason being is that, for Europe, Christianity has been the substantial building material, and also the binding glue, that made it possible and held it together. So if, as I assert, your *acidic activities* unbind that glue, and if you destabilize at a metaphysical level the very individual himself, I would suggest that you make efforts to better understand the consequences of these actions and your choices in regard to the results.
It really does have to be said that when you (when one) examines the core of, say, the Catholic system-of-belief that one really does find there those who really do think that they are 'reining in the Devil's Kingdom'. They see themselves acting as a controlling and restraining force against a certain wildness in man's will. (This came up strongly as I was reading Bernanos'
Diary of a Country Priest (I also watched the movie made from it -- quite good I thought). And it also is not hard to understand that in so many ways and through so many manifestations the demos seeks to get out from under the constrains always applied around them and against them by the Authority I often refer to (in capitals!)
So in my view we need to examine what is going on here and why it is going on. This is of course where my own 'conservatism' kicks in: it has become clear to me (to
me in any case) that the rebellion against such restraint is a very real but a very problematic topic. And I do of course recognize that by using the word
rebellion that I am linking it to the Divine-Demonic interplay and struggle. Naturally, these terms and what they represent can't have much meaning for you, I mean in any authentic sense. But in my view, and in fact, it is really the crux of what is being debated. Christianity is what it is because of its core definitions and these are metaphysical.
Now the book that I am reading -- by Eugene Rose and on the topic of revolutionary nihilism -- does really make some poignant and conclusive statements about the nature of the time we are in. Anytime I read something I try to enter into it as much as I can (like an actor who takes on the role he plays) but with Rose I am finding that in so much of what he writes I had already come to the outline of the crystallized commentary he puts forth. So here I admit to being involved with the
meaning of Christian metaphysics. I cannot do otherwise. But with that said I can simultaneously make the effort to enter into other people's belief-system and aslo those that oppose Christianity (with a great deal of adamancy).
If that really is beyond your comprehension, I shall apologise for for every sleight and henceforth treat you with the pity your cerebral faculties deserve.
No no no I assure that I get what you are on about quite well indeed. But you'd have to be the sort of idiot you describe, would you not? to actually believe I don't understand you. One of your attributes is your insulting style and I think that if one insults it can and should be done with real Bergeracian
panache; you are far too crude -- but this might be
aesthetic taste after all.
In numerous ways I am also on your side (up to a certain point). A tremendous critique can be soundly launched against many many different manifestations of Christianity. But my view,
opposed to yours, in that it is those Christians who need to reform themselves, and to better inform themselves, but not the core of the metaphysics that should be done away with. I do not have any problem at all with a resolute critical project against the defects of Christians. But it has to be carried out fairly. So all these topics need to be carefully brought out and talked through. It is quite extensive.