freedom has never, until the last 200 years, been understood as the ability to do whatever you want — Agustino
Yes indeed. I see that you do not want to share your knowledge of the transcendental or of what a transcendental proof would look like. So I will proceed with a definition of transcendental to advance our discussion.
I propose sir, that transcendental is anything that cannot be investigated with physical instruments (meaning instruments of physical sciences - microscopes, etc); anything that knowledge of the structure of the physical world as investigated by physical instruments would not reveal. Is this in accordance with your understanding of transcendental sir? — Agustino
Sir, I take it then that you have a better idea of what proof of the transcendent should consist in. So please go ahead and outline it for me, and please explain how it's suitable to the definition towards which we have both expressed our agreements! :)No what you are arguing for is a shared agreement about beliefs of the transcendental.
Not transcendental truth.
But experiences vary and we do not all agree.
There are different religions for this reason.
Take for example that Muslim transcendental truth of honor killing ones daughter.
Do you agree with that?
Many Muslims report that they experience the truth of this tradition from a transcendental source.
So no I don't agree with your criterion.
Shared agreement does not equal proof. — m-theory
On the other forum :P (does that count as a form of promiscuity?)Agustino, light of my way, love of my heart, where have you been? — Bitter Crank
Sir, I take it then that you have a better idea of what proof of the transcendent should consist in. So please go ahead and outline it for me, and please explain how it's suitable to the definition towards which we have both expressed our agreements! — Agustino
Well sir, if you hold it axiomatically that there is no proof that can be offered, then you have been quite disingenuous in asking me to offer you one no? Because you would outright deny it, by this very axiom. So sir, if you will ever be interested and open to experience of the transcendental, and interested to expand your knowledge about it, then you will have to be willing to discern, given the nature of the transcendental, what would constitute as proof. Until you develop interest in this, it will not be beneficial to you to axiomatically claim there is no proof. Proof is something we decide upon given the essence of the subject, and you have agreed on the essence.I have already made it clear that there is no transcendental proof.
You can claim whatever you want and say it is transcendentally true.
That does not make it true in any way except that you believe it. — m-theory
No - actually they don't. There's social traditions - such as women have to wear the hijab - and then there's VALUES - such as women have to dress DECENTLY. The values are present in all the world's main religions,the same values. The social traditions may be different. Sexual purity and virginity are important values in all religions again - what is to be done in cases of impurity is a social custom and is different. So I think you need to sharpen your understanding of what values are, and differentiate them from social traditions which are founded upon those values. Yes, I think it is wrong to honor kill your daughter - because sexual purity isn't the only value out there, and the moral landscape is hierarchical - some values are more important than others. Social traditions may be critiqued, but only once values are understood.But experiences vary and we do not all agree.
There are different religions for this reason.
Take for example that Muslim transcendental truth of honor killing ones daughter.
Do you agree with that?
Many Muslims report that they experience the truth of this tradition from a transcendental source.
So no I don't agree with your criterion.
Shared agreement does not equal proof. — m-theory
A statement is not trasncendental, no. What the statement refers to may be transcendental. Following a way isn't one of those things. Values, meanings, significance - those things are transcendental. And of course, merely claiming something is transcendentally true doesn't make it so, neither did my proof criterion claim it does make it so. Have you failed to read that it should be possible for any person, if they truly want and are open towards it, to have the same experience and hence find the same value as someone else? - Validate it through their own experience?You seemed to miss the point.
Claiming something is transcendentally true does not make it true.
For example some claim that we must follow the teaching of the prophet Mohammad is a transcendental truth.
Would you agree that it is a transcendental truth?
If you don't agree then you are saying that some people are wrong about what is transcendental truth. — m-theory
No actually they don't disagree. There is no major world religion which claims that sexual partners should be promiscuous or otherwise be unfaithful to one another for example. None. So why do you think different cultures, different religions, in different time frames have always agreed upon this? Chance? No - it's because these values have been perceived to be true for human beings - or at least for MOST human beings.Once again even people that are truly open towards the transcendental disagree about what is true and what is not. — m-theory
Yes, so what? You're not speaking to "people" - you're speaking to me. So why does it matter what they say? That's clearly nonsensical given the definition we both accepted, as I've explained.Again it does not matter that these are actions, what matters is people claim these things are based on transcendental truths. — m-theory
When were the old days? — Bitter Crank
In general there is an odd tendency to see sex as preferably 'free market' in a context where most people despise an unrestrained 'free market.' This is, no surprise, dependent on whether you benefit from the freedom of the market (and let's not kid ourselves, sex is a commodity with a class structure built into it). — The Great Whatever
There is no major world religion which claims that sexual partners should be promiscuous or otherwise be unfaithful to one another for example. None. So why do you think different cultures, different religions, in different time frames have always agreed upon this? Chance? No - it's because these values have been perceived to be true for human beings - or at least for MOST human beings. — Agustino
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