Re: Can the Religious Be Trusted?
Posted: Wed Jan 01, 2025 8:01 pm
I'm not particularly opposed to it. The pseduo-religious epiphanies that Mike wants to use it for are plain stupid though.
For the discussion of all things philosophical.
https://canzookia.com/
I'm not particularly opposed to it. The pseduo-religious epiphanies that Mike wants to use it for are plain stupid though.
I think I have but you did not catch it. I am aware that I have a subjective life, and a subjective spiritual life (distinct from a religious affiliation).BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 6:16 pm You’ve crafted a familiar tactic here, one reminiscent of Chris Matthews when he dodged a direct question about believing in virgin births: vague appeals to an overarching conflict without ever engaging with the specifics. You talk about putting the "conflict into relief" as if that absolves you of the responsibility to address the contradictions in your own position. It doesn’t.
If resolving the "discordancies" is such a monumental task, then shouldn’t you at least try to clarify where you stand within it?
Don't you get tired of repeating this lie? The idea of the world arising out of nothing has as much to do with science and determinism as God and the invisible pink unicorn do.seeds wrote: ↑Tue Dec 31, 2024 9:00 pm The fact that from nothingness there could arise such a thing as "system" (implying order), is the miracle.
And it is that miracle that McKenna is alluding to in the quote I provided.
It is a "miracle"...
(again, "...the appearance of all the mass and energy in the universe and all the laws that govern it in a single instant from nothing...”)
I’ll address your points directly. First, about the Chris Matthews interview: I saw it live some 10-15 years ago, and while I found it on YouTube later, it now seems to have disappeared or been buried too deeply. The crux of the matter isn’t the specifics of Matthews’ evasion, but the pattern: when pressed on a contradiction—his Catholic belief in virgin births versus its apparent implausibility—he avoided answering. It mirrors what you’re doing here: invoking the ineffable as a central element of your worldview but dodging the hard questions about its coherence within the framework of reality.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 8:10 pmI think I have but you did not catch it. I am aware that I have a subjective life, and a subjective spiritual life (distinct from a religious affiliation).BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 6:16 pm You’ve crafted a familiar tactic here, one reminiscent of Chris Matthews when he dodged a direct question about believing in virgin births: vague appeals to an overarching conflict without ever engaging with the specifics. You talk about putting the "conflict into relief" as if that absolves you of the responsibility to address the contradictions in your own position. It doesn’t.
If resolving the "discordancies" is such a monumental task, then shouldn’t you at least try to clarify where you stand within it?
The long and the short of it (as it pertains to inner experiences with notable outer effect), and all of this in contrast to the sort of explanatory narratives with which you are deeply involved), that challenge and undermine what you refer to as “faith”, is that I maintain my working understanding of my own connection with what I describe as “ineffable”, and try to keep myself in line with it, while I notice the narrative structures that seek to pull people away from involvement in inner life and possibly “inner growth”.
In the larger sense, how the notion of “God” is resolved for •mankind• as science and technology move into the zones involving the remodeling of man (the reengineering of man c.f. Terrence McKenna), and brain-analysis, is an issue that is above and beyond my own limited strategy.
What did Chris Matthews say and where? I Googled it but found nothing.
Give me a break!Atla wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 8:13 pmDon't you get tired of repeating this lie? The idea of the world arising out of nothing has as much to do with science and determinism as God and the invisible pink unicorn do.seeds wrote: ↑Tue Dec 31, 2024 9:00 pm The fact that from nothingness there could arise such a thing as "system" (implying order), is the miracle.
And it is that miracle that McKenna is alluding to in the quote I provided.
It is a "miracle"...
(again, "...the appearance of all the mass and energy in the universe and all the laws that govern it in a single instant from nothing...”)

Seeds,seeds wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 11:02 pmGive me a break!Atla wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 8:13 pmDon't you get tired of repeating this lie? The idea of the world arising out of nothing has as much to do with science and determinism as God and the invisible pink unicorn do.seeds wrote: ↑Tue Dec 31, 2024 9:00 pm The fact that from nothingness there could arise such a thing as "system" (implying order), is the miracle.
And it is that miracle that McKenna is alluding to in the quote I provided.
It is a "miracle"...
(again, "...the appearance of all the mass and energy in the universe and all the laws that govern it in a single instant from nothing...”)
Try to pay attention and grasp the point being made.
You cannot have the systematic incremental processes of determinism without first establishing where those systematic processes came from and how they were set in motion on a trajectory that led to a context of order that defies our comprehension.
Indeed, you (and BigMike, among others) are giving off the same air of self-assured smugness that Richard Dawkins exudes as he lauds the workings of evolution, while simultaneously ignoring the fact that this...
...which, again, came "fully stocked" with every possible ingredient and process necessary to awaken billions of unique lifeforms into existence,...
...had to be in place before evolution could even begin.
The point is that if you cannot give a plausible accounting of how these spectacularly complex and ordered (prerequisite) conditions and structures came into existence,...
(other than offering the ridiculous proposition that "gravity" and "thermodynamics" did it)
...then theories such as evolution and determinism...
(which are wholly dependent on the preexistence of those ordered conditions and structures)
...are weak and superficial.
_______
But Seed’s point is tremendously important.BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 02, 2025 12:40 am Determinism is not a claim about the origins of the universe or the ultimate source of the physical laws—it’s a framework for understanding how events unfold within those laws. The origins of those laws, or what might have existed before Planck time, are unknown, and science freely admits as much. But that lack of knowledge doesn’t undermine the deterministic chain of events we can observe and verify within the universe as it exists.
You cannot have the systematic incremental processes of determinism without first establishing where those systematic processes came from and how they were set in motion on a trajectory that led to a context of order that defies our comprehension.
In the course of all of these tit-for-tat contentious exchanges, I think my original beef with you has gotten lost.BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 02, 2025 12:40 amSeeds,seeds wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 11:02 pm The point is that if you cannot give a plausible accounting of how these spectacularly complex and ordered (prerequisite) conditions and structures came into existence,...
(other than offering the ridiculous proposition that "gravity" and "thermodynamics" did it)
...then theories such as evolution and determinism...
(which are wholly dependent on the preexistence of those ordered conditions and structures)
...are weak and superficial.
_______
Determinism is not a claim about the origins of the universe or the ultimate source of the physical laws—it’s a framework for understanding how events unfold within those laws. The origins of those laws, or what might have existed before Planck time, are unknown, and science freely admits as much. But that lack of knowledge doesn’t undermine the deterministic chain of events we can observe and verify within the universe as it exists.
Now I know that the preceding is highly speculative, however, seeing how this is a philosophy forum and not a hard science forum, such speculation is (or at lease, should be) permitted.seeds wrote: ↑Mon Dec 30, 2024 7:28 am ...if I were to concede to you [Dubious] and BigMike that determinism was indeed probably involved in most of the material processes that culminated in the manifestation of the human brain,...
...will you guys at least be open to the "possibility" that the human "I Am-ness" of which the brain has metaphorically "given birth" to,...
...could be an epiphenomenal "something" that,...
...in the spirit of what "strong emergence" allegedly entails,...
...represents something that is "wholly other" than that which it emerged from?
I'm talking about a "self-aware something" that, within the autonomous domain of its own personal mind, possesses the absolute "free will" ability to shape its own personal supply of mental imaging energy into absolutely anything it freely chooses?
Again, you guys can have your determinism up to - but not beyond the point - where the human mind, along with its accompanying "I Am-ness," is, again, metaphorically "born" (strongly emerges) from the quantum fabric of the brain.
Now I know it sounds far-fetched, but what I am speculatively suggesting is that the ontological status of the human mind (relative to the material fabric of the brain) is not unlike what is suggested as being the status of the parallel worlds in the "Many Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics."
In other words, the emergence of the human mind ("I Am-ness"/soul) from the quantum fabric of the brain is like a new parallel universe that "branches" off of this universe in such a way where the inner physics of the mind is no longer connected to (entangled with) the physics of the universe it branched off of.
In which case, our minds thus acquire full autonomy where the inner "agent" has "free will" control over its own inner dimension of reality without effecting or impinging on the physics of other parallel universes.
(Yeah, yeah, I know, poor ol' Hugh Everett and Bryce DeWitt are probably spinning in their graves right now.But you can't say that I'm not trying to incorporate "science" [albeit "pseudo" science] into my argument.
)
What a desperately dishonest God-of-the-gaps argument.seeds wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 11:02 pmGive me a break!Atla wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2025 8:13 pmDon't you get tired of repeating this lie? The idea of the world arising out of nothing has as much to do with science and determinism as God and the invisible pink unicorn do.seeds wrote: ↑Tue Dec 31, 2024 9:00 pm The fact that from nothingness there could arise such a thing as "system" (implying order), is the miracle.
And it is that miracle that McKenna is alluding to in the quote I provided.
It is a "miracle"...
(again, "...the appearance of all the mass and energy in the universe and all the laws that govern it in a single instant from nothing...”)
Try to pay attention and grasp the point being made.
You cannot have the systematic incremental processes of determinism without first establishing where those systematic processes came from and how they were set in motion on a trajectory that led to a context of order that defies our comprehension.
Indeed, you (and BigMike, among others) are giving off the same air of self-assured smugness that Richard Dawkins exudes as he lauds the workings of evolution, while simultaneously ignoring the fact that this...
...which, again, came "fully stocked" with every possible ingredient and process necessary to awaken billions of unique lifeforms into existence,...
...had to be in place before evolution could even begin.
The point is that if you cannot give a plausible accounting of how these spectacularly complex and ordered (prerequisite) conditions and structures came into existence,...
(other than offering the ridiculous proposition that "gravity" and "thermodynamics" did it)
...then theories such as evolution and determinism...
(which are wholly dependent on the preexistence of those ordered conditions and structures)
...are weak and superficial.
_______
I don't see why that view would be more compatible with logic. It is certainly not compatible with the Big Bang of which ΛCDM is the standard model in cosmology. Furthermore, what matters more, is that the ΛCDM model is compatible with observations.
ChatGPT: Does the ΛCDM model suggest a beginning of time and space?
Yes, the ΛCDM model (Lambda Cold Dark Matter model), which is the current standard model of cosmology, suggests a beginning of time and space as we understand them. This beginning is commonly referred to as the Big Bang.
Big Bang Framework:
The ΛCDM model is built on the framework of the Big Bang theory, which describes the universe's expansion from an extremely hot and dense state approximately 13.8 billion years ago.
This implies that the observable universe had a finite beginning in the past, where spacetime, matter, and energy emerged from an initial singularity-like state (a point of infinite density and curvature).
Yeah. Fine. This is banal - that's why we have the principle of charity.
That's a lot of doubt/distrust there. What happened?BigMike wrote: ↑Sun Dec 22, 2024 9:38 am But when it comes to religious individuals, particularly in discussions involving uncomfortable truths—like those grounded in determinism—trust can become a complicated question. For me, and perhaps for others, it sometimes feels as if certain religious people deliberately distort their own beliefs or outright deny what they clearly recognize as logical, deterministic facts. Why? Is it a defense mechanism? A desire to maintain their worldview? Or is it something deeper—an unconscious, perhaps even willful, refusal to confront contradictions between their faith and evidence-based reasoning?
Alexis,Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Thu Jan 02, 2025 1:41 amBut Seed’s point is tremendously important.BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Jan 02, 2025 12:40 am Determinism is not a claim about the origins of the universe or the ultimate source of the physical laws—it’s a framework for understanding how events unfold within those laws. The origins of those laws, or what might have existed before Planck time, are unknown, and science freely admits as much. But that lack of knowledge doesn’t undermine the deterministic chain of events we can observe and verify within the universe as it exists.
You cannot have the systematic incremental processes of determinism without first establishing where those systematic processes came from and how they were set in motion on a trajectory that led to a context of order that defies our comprehension.
Science doesn’t operate on axioms in the philosophical sense. It doesn’t assume truths about the universe; it starts with hypotheses, tests them, and builds theories based on what can be falsified or observed. It’s an inductive process—constantly refining, discarding, and improving its models of reality. It doesn’t claim ultimate certainty or absolute knowledge about the "why" behind the universe’s existence.
That's a reification fallacy. The rest is your usual drivel.