Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 27, 2024 11:44 pmGreat. What is it? How did it work, since you doubt the existence of any original mating pair?
We have been over this in the Christianity thread
Lo the many months. Here Immanuel *confuses epistemes*, which is to say he tries to present Adam & Eve of the Biblical tale through employing a term proper to biology and zoology. In his odd way of thinking, which he imagines to be *reasonable* and *debatable*, the Bible tale must necessarily be compatible with scientific view, even if the scientific view thoroughly contradicts the Biblical story. The faith-story must be conserved at all costs and that means that the science-story will be bent to conform to it. All those videos are rehearsals of this effort.
Since Immanuel Can has demonstrated that he is incapable to making any admission that could undermine the Biblical story, and insists that the issue is *up for debate*, he asks that people examine absurd *evidence* (those now-famous apologetic videos) where Christians present strange pseudo-scientific *arguments* to support the foundational belief in Adam & Eve, in The Garden, in an Ark, in the parting of the waters of the Red Sea (et cetera). Thus one is presented with two basic choices. One is to engage with the *arguments* that he
imagines are even possible by reviewing the videos, by reading the faith-based essays, and attempting to refute the faith-assertions in those terms. Immanuel enjoys this *game* and feels it has validity.
The other is to refuse on all levels to engage with the absurd game. (This is my choice). To categorically state that if you really think that God materialized Adam & Eve -- and all creatures, and the entire cosmos -- in the way pictured in Genesis, then you are suffering a mental problem. If you take this tack you will be, eventually, forced to see fanatical religious belief as a type of mental disorder. And if you arrive at that point, I assure you, then all religious belief comes under the gun as it were.
Therefore Immanuel Can, though he wishes to be an apologists for his religious convictions, has only achieved the sheer opposite of what he pretends to desire from his audience: that is, their
conversion. Christianity began as a religion demanding (radical) *conversion*. What Immanuel seems to imagine is that if one did *become a Christian* as he proposes one should, then God Himself would oversee the restructuring of one's erroneous view-structure, and bring it in accord with the *truth*. I.e. Genesis.
So,
conversion in the present age is rather different than it was in the former age (the First Century). You have to convince yourself that, like the White Queen, it is
morally necessary to believe "as many as six impossible things before breakfast". Once you have crossed that barrier then anything is possible. What interests me is this mental-psychological process. Since I know that Immanuel Can cannot be reasoned with, I refuse to engage with his mishegoss. Further, I am left with
no other choice but to label him as *a sick puppy* or *religious fanatic*, but it is really not personal. What I suggest that we all focus on is that there are masses of people who choose, voluntarily, to believe "six impossible things before breakfast", but then those six compound into any number of utterly absurd beliefs. And these people, with these viewpoints,
infect our present. True, the world *infect* is a bit strong yet not misused.
The belief in a divinely manifested couple, dropped into a Garden, and indeed a world
manifested as the Biblical tale has it, is an *episteme* from a former time:
Episteme: The fundamental body of ideas and collective presuppositions that defines the nature and sets the bounds of what is accepted as true knowledge in a given epistemic epoch.
We certainly are in a strange and difficult *twilight* between a fading episteme and a newly emergent one. The better we understand this, the better we will be able to understand a great deal about the world
and also about ourselves. It us a bit arcane, I admit, and those who bother to read what I write will know of my interest in the Seventeenth Century where a revolution in
epistemes is very evident. Our immediate background (400-500 years ago) is in a
Weltanschauung where God, spirits, a angelical celestial overworld, and certainly a demon-ruled underworld, were descriptions of the world and the cosmos
as real and and dominant as our science-view of today.