1) What we call immorality are practices by others which we aren’t able to understand in terms that allow us to justify them according to our own values. As a result, we blame them for our own puzzlement.
2) Cultural history takes the form of a slow development of interpersonal understanding such that we progressively improve our ability to make sense of the motivations of others in ways that don’t require our condemning them, precisely because we see their limitations as having to do with social understanding rather than arbitrary malicious intent. Advances in the social sciences in tandem with philosophy and the arts contribute to this development. — Joshs
So, you are saying that goodness comes from God and we know this because the Bible tells us it's so?
I think the more likely explanation is that we evolved something called biological altruism. — Questioner
It's likely borrowed from Paul writing in Romans where he says even of ignorant gentiles that morality is "written on their hearts".
— Tom Storm
No, as a people of oral traditions, their history and moral codes, ideas of justice, etc. were engraved on their hearts long before the Europeans came along. They did not need to "borrow" the phrase from the Europeans. — Questioner
But still depends on an external source for empathy - a god - and empathy is not that but something we developed as we evolved as a social species. — Questioner
I recall a quote from an 18th century Indigenous person - who said to a colonizer - "You white folk need a Big Book to tell you what is right, but what is right is engraved upon my heart." — Questioner
Empathy came first, religion followed.
But religion got itself all tied up with all kinds of hypocrisies. And, humans just got smarter, and reject fairy tales as fact. — Questioner
we need to remind those who give us news that their job requires them to investigate the stories, vet them, and then tell us the whole story without bias. — Athena
I think learning to accept and live with the elusive nature of the self/subject/'I' is a fundamental life lesson. — Wayfarer
But according to Hegel and phenomenology , subjective consciousness is not contingent. This may sound confusing, but it’s a matter of of the difference between thinking about subjectivity in terms of a fixed set of conditions of possibility (Kant) vs as a site of interaction with the world in which schemes of intelligibility undergo historical change (Hegel) . — Joshs
My points were from my experience of observing the church members when attending the churches in my teens. — Corvus
I read the opposite stories - Please have a read on the life of A. J. Ayer his final days. — Corvus
Building community sounds like recruiting the disciples and converting folks. but in different wordings. — Corvus
If we agree that religions aim to achieve converting the ordinary folks in the streets into their cults and sectors giving false promise and illusion for afterlife — Corvus
We need to think about what religions try to achieve. If we agree that religions aim to achieve converting the ordinary folks in the streets into their cults and sectors giving false promise and illusion for afterlife and reincarnation, then they have been successful, because there are many believers in the teachings. — Corvus
And sooner or later, the non-belivers and agnostics tend to turn to religions when they get older. — Corvus
No, that's Steiner in 1979. The black notebooks just put an end to any possibility of apology. — frank
Well, it's just that most of us would be filled with horror at the thought of lighting a golden retriever on fire. — frank
One of Heidegger's biographers accused him of sadism due to his easy attitude toward violence and even genocide. — frank
If someone is happy with the concept of humans being tortured eternally, maybe there's some sadism to it? — frank
There is certainly a power to collective belief. — Janus
Life as we know it is in the realm of partial truths. — frank
The US Military isn't there yet. — ssu
I haven't seen a movie in a theater in about 20 years. I really don't think they make them as well as they used to — T Clark
Yes, I kinda ran out of steam. You may also be an old coot like me. — T Clark
What is encouraging is that the Daily Mail reports this planning is resisted by the joint chiefs of staff as an illegal order. — ssu
What's absent, amongst other things, is the usual, somewhat naive view that truth is about practicality, that the utility of a sentence is what renders it true, or that there are no true sentences, only more useful ones. — Banno
Well... we see things, and talk about them and so on - we interact with them and with each other. What place there is for private mental phenomenon in all this is at the very least questionable. — Banno
"The Iron Dream" by Norman Spinrad. A book within a book. Adolf Hitler's putsch fails so he escapes and comes to the US and becomes a science fiction writer. In the inner book--"Lord of the Swastika"--he puts all his crazed racial fantasies into words instead of death. Clever but sort of a one-joke routine. — T Clark
But at any rate, noumena in the Kantian sense is not a compromise of any kind, but rather an example of understanding coloring outside its own rule-bound lines. — Mww
You say I think Kant is dogmatic, and I do because Kant, having said we can say nothing about the in itself, inconsistently and illegitimately denies that the in itself is temporal, spatial or differentiated in any way, which is the same as to say it is either nothing at all or amorphous. He would be right to say that we cannot be sure as to what the spatiotemporal status of the in itself else, and that by very definition. — Janus
Noumenon and thing-in-itself are both objects of thought, neither are appearances to sensibility, therefore neither are knowable through discursive cognition (A260/B315);
Noumena are not knowable because they have no intuition, they have no intuition because, as an object of thought, there is nothing to give to sensibility to intuit in any time;
The thing in itself is unknowable because it has no intuition, it has no intuition because as an object of thought, the thing-in-itself is not given to sensibility to intuit at any time, but there is a change of state through one time, wherein the thing-in-itself as conception becomes the thing of existence, and that is what appears;
That thing-in-self, upon being subjected to sensibility as an appearance hence no longer in itself, then becomes experience, its representation resides in consciousness, therefore does not revert back to being in itself when not perceived, but we can still think of it as it was when it was a thing-in-itself, only now it is thought as a thing in general. Discursive thought from conception becomes transcendental thought from an idea. — Mww
I haven’t done a carful analysis of the economy of down under though. — Mikie
How about this: if you don't stand against the immoral, you are immoral. — Hanover
. We know what governance under Buckley conservatives is like, because it is played out history now. — BenMcLean
