I’ve already referred to Maimonides. Go read the 13 principles of faith (which were heretical in his time) and see which of those harkens to Ya. — Ennui Elucidator
I don’t think he cares, but maybe he will read about Jewish pluralism in the modern world. Much easier to simply treat “Jews” as a monolith. — Ennui Elucidator
Pluralism, is it? Now, you are putting words into my mouth. I thought we were talking about the conception of God amongst the ancient Israelites and the religious (particularly Orthodox) Jews of today, not about Noah Harari's conception of God... Of course, there are secular Jews, even atheist Jews like Harari, but they lie somewhat outside of the instant discussion, right? I would have thought this tacitly understood. — Michael Zwingli
Israeli historian. :rofl:Harari — Ennui Elucidator
And even atheist Orthodox Jews, but who is counting? — Ennui Elucidator
...using it for the purpose of defining away a substantial sect of Jews... — Ennui Elucidator
...that do not believe the “essence” of their faith is a misattributed god concept. — Ennui Elucidator
I am utterly unfamiliar with that, but upon consideration, can imagine it, and can only imagine the difficulty of that situation. — Michael Zwingli
There is a famous joke about two men, Goldberg and Schwartz, who are walking to synagogue. They are stopped along the way by someone who asks them where they are going. They casually tell the man that they are both on their way to synagogue.
The man responds, “Goldberg, I know why you go to synagogue. You believe in God, and you’re an observant Jew.” Then he adds, “But Schwartz, you don’t believe in God, why are you going?”
Schwartz responds, “Goldberg goes to synagogue to talk to God, and I go to synagogue to talk to Goldberg.”
Pro tip: Buddhism preceded (Pauline) Christianity by five/six centuries at least. The latter could not have "lead to" the former. — 180 Proof
Have you read Buber? — Ennui Elucidator
Harari
— Ennui Elucidator
Israeli historian. — Wheatley
I almost posted the Oven of Akhnai for them, — Ennui Elucidator
. I am simply trying to bring nuance to a conversation... — Ennui Elucidator
There is a famous joke about two men, Goldberg and Schwartz, who are walking to synagogue. They are stopped along the way by someone who asks them where they are going. They casually tell the man that they are both on their way to synagogue.
The man responds, “Goldberg, I know why you go to synagogue. You believe in God, and you’re an observant Jew.” Then he adds, “But Schwartz, you don’t believe in God, why are you going?”
Schwartz responds, “Goldberg goes to synagogue to talk to God, and I go to synagogue to talk to Goldberg.”
The point of the story in this context is that religion is about community at least as much as it is about theology. — Ennui Elucidator
Harari
— Ennui Elucidator
Israeli historian. — Wheatley
Seriously, there's good and bad people from every country, including Israel. — Wheatley
Just mention/call all the anti-Israel people on this forum. lolYep, :ok: It's hard to tell the difference. I thought you had something on him. — TheMadFool
Just ask all the anti-Israel people on this forum. lol
There are a lot of them... — Wheatley
What's so funny? I just started a book (Sapiens) by him. Should I stop? WTF? — TheMadFool
It's hard to disentangle academia from politics, isn't it? — Wheatley
So, would I be correct if I said,
1. Saṁvṛti (provisional truth): about the world as it appears, Maya (illusion) is truth-apt. Kantian phenomenon.
2. Paramārtha (ultimate truth): about the world as it is. Kantian noumenon — TheMadFool
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