Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Dec 23, 2024 2:46 pm
BigMike wrote: ↑Mon Dec 23, 2024 9:45 am
Do you not feel even the slightest pang of shame when you consider the toll this orthodoxy has taken on our species? The sheer weight of lives lost, minds silenced, progress delayed? For centuries, brilliant thinkers and innovators lived in fear—fear of heresy, fear of death, fear of being burned alive for daring to say, “I think the world might work differently than you say it does.” Galileo? Silenced. Hypatia? Murdered. Bruno? Burned. And for what? To defend an orthodoxy that demanded submission over understanding.
BigMike, let’s take a deep dive into the swamp and mud-infested quagmire of these wild & whirling assertions you belch-forth here.
If you now examine your OP in the light of this paragraph and the post it came from, you will be able to distinguish your
actual purpose and intention and, as well, be better able to understand why some (myself obviously) see you as driven by specific and active ideological imperatives. For this reason, when bringing up Huxley and
Brave New World, one must ponder what BigMike’s University would teach and how the educational conditioning vat would operate in a process of intellectual reconditioning. And what curriculum the State’s educational program would adopt to educate the New Man.
You are dealing in hot-button emotionalized anti-religion tropes that are very susceptible to over-heated rhetoric. However, you and many who are pulled by seductive rhetorical gravity into such an adamant and inflexible position as yours is, lose your ground in understanding and appreciating “reality” in a fair historical sense and — note this — become ideologues of the anti-religion position. What this means (and what I have discovered in my own researches) is that you develop a contrived, exaggerated and rather historically revisionist view of the influence of religion (and theological principles) in intellectual culture and describe it (as you do) in sheerly negative terms.
The problem with the entirety of your position is that it is intellectually tendentious in a very ideologically-driven sense. But when one encounters more balanced and better-prepared historians and intellects, one is introduced to a better-reasoned perspective about the positive and creative influence of theology in Occidental culture. For example the historian Christopher Dawson. Or James J. Walsh’s
The Thirteenth Greatest of Centuries. Or such philosophers as Etienne Gilson in
The Unity of Philosophical Experience.
The picture presented through these historical works will offer you a contravening picture to your rhetorical extremism. The truth of the matter is that religion (and specifically Catholicism and Christian theology) in Occidental culture has had so many different levels of influence that when one grasps this, one’s overall and general picture
changes.
What I think “we” are dealing with here is far more complex and challenging than meets the heated rhetor’s eyes. I read you as a Hyper-Liberal ideologue with a bizarre Scientistic perceptual platform. In many ways you will find your analogues on this forum and in ‘modern philosophy’. Flash, Dubious, Accelafine, Promethean and a dozen others are expositors of these radically anti-Christian postures. And they too (in my opinion) operate from an over-heated rhetorical base that clouds their capacity to see clearly and fairly.
Like you they are
driven in their perspectives. I understand this to be a fault. My view is that we must stand back and view all of this from some distance in order to arrive at more judicious perspectives.
My view of you is that you are a convoluted intellect invested in convoluting ideological positions. But this “you” is not solely a singular person but a driven and even a determined perspective which has been cobbled together for a range of purposes and “infects” people.
The real meaning here (what might be taken away from this conversation) in my view has to do with intellectual contamination by that which I define as “overheated”,
extremist and tendentious. These infect our present and all of us, in one degree or another.
(If you think that Red Guard clip exaggerates the potential ramifications of ideological extremism then think again. We are living through such a time.)
Alexis, your verbose critique is heavy on speculative rhetoric and light on substance, but let’s cut through it. You accuse me of being driven by an “ideologically overheated” position, suggesting that my critique of religious orthodoxy somehow lacks nuance or historical balance. Yet, while you’re busy accusing me of extremism, you entirely dodge the central issue: the harm caused by contradictions embedded in faith-based reasoning and their implications for intellectual trustworthiness.
If you’re so concerned with “balanced” perspectives, answer this straightforward question: is
ex contradictione quodlibet false? Or do you accept that from a single contradiction, anything—
anything—can be justified, including the most heinous acts imaginable? Religious orthodoxy, particularly in its most dogmatic forms, is riddled with contradictions. It insists on immutable truths while consistently reshaping itself to fit changing social norms. It claims divine authority while contradicting observable reality. And from these contradictions, we see centuries of suffering justified—wars, inquisitions, witch hunts, forced conversions. These aren’t just historical footnotes; they’re the direct results of a framework that prioritizes faith over reason, dogma over evidence.
Let’s bring this to the present. If contradictions in religious reasoning allow for “anything,” what safeguards do we have against their abuse? What stops someone from using the very same faith-based contradictions to justify oppression, violence, or denial of progress? This isn’t some “overheated” hypothetical; it’s a pattern repeated throughout history, and it persists in more subtle forms today—anti-science rhetoric, bigotry cloaked as tradition, and resistance to social progress.
You seem more invested in critiquing the tone of my argument than addressing its substance. So let’s focus: do you deny that contradictions in faith-based reasoning undermine intellectual integrity and can justify any conclusion, no matter how dangerous or destructive? If you accept this, then the harm done by religious orthodoxy isn’t just a relic of the past; it’s an ongoing threat. If you deny it, then explain how
ex contradictione quodlibet doesn’t apply to the contradictions embedded in religious dogma.
We’re not talking about hypothetical dangers here. The intellectual contamination you accuse me of describing is real, and its effects are measurable. If you want to claim otherwise, do so directly. But spare me the rhetorical hand-waving about “overheated positions” unless you’re prepared to confront the central point: contradictions in religious reasoning aren’t harmless—they’re dangerous.