Well, factually speaking I don't know if religion is really any good at directing people's behaviors, either. — Moliere
Also, I'd say there's a difference between a blog of academics -- a social gathering of people in a profession -- and the actual educational process. — Moliere
I wouldn't call the blog in question a social gathering so much, as there is very little back and forth discussion such as we see here. It's more a case of members sharing their latest article and then vanishing. Anyway, the articles taken as a whole (written by many different PhDs) seem to offer at least some window in to the educational process these folks have been exposed to. — Jake
That's still different, though -- a religious education doesn't make priests, and a philosophical education doesn't make philosophers. — Moliere
My apologies, I attempted it. Just that there is an aspect of the human condition they are addressing which requires that one is in some sense already familiar with what is being talked about for it to make any sense at all. — All sight
I'm saying that the set of people who undergo a philosophical education is larger than the set of people who undergo a professional philosophical education. — Moliere
Ah ok, I now get the distinction you are trying to make. I was lumping everyone with a philosophy PhD in to a single pot. I'm still not sure how a "professional philosophy education" differs from something else, but am interested to learn more as your time permits.
In case it's not already blaringly obvious, I don't have any kind of philosophy education, unless you wish to count my attendance at Netflix University. :smile: Point being, I'm viewing academic philosophy from the outside, and don't claim to have a complete view. — Jake
So, ethics are applied, in religion, through commands, etc? Versus philosophy in which no definite ethical command is necessarily made? I.E. the perpetual discussion of any possible ethical imperative, etc? — Noble Dust
First, Christianity is not exclusively about ideology — Jake
This is uncalled-for! It isn't the fault of the Catholic church, or any church, or gym teachers, choir masters or sports coaches - and so on, and on... - that their professions give access to children. — Pattern-chaser
The Pennsylvania investigation showed that there was a longstanding systematic effort by the Church to coverup these crimes and protect the rapists — Jake
The church is not responsible for paedophiles. They are responsible for covering up instead of prevention. — Pattern-chaser
You asked us to "direct your ire at those who deserve it." And that's exactly what I'm doing. — Jake
Some priests raped a LOT of children. — Jake
Some PAEDOPHILES raped a lot of children. — Pattern-chaser
We are in agreement. — Pattern-chaser
St. Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Maimonides, Ibn Arabi, Je Tsongkhapa, Nagarjuna, Laozi and several hundred other notable religious thinkers from many religious traditions all over the world would like to have a word with you :) — gurugeorge
Mainly, I was interested in calling out this discrepancy between philosophizing and the practice of religion? — Posty McPostface
If as Kierkegaard said, "Faith is holding onto uncertainties with passionate conviction," then how is philosophy distinct? — Hanover
Is it not that the faithful simply refuse to admit the uncertainties are uncertain, yet, as the quote suggests, the faithful must recognize at some level their faith is of an uncertainty. — Hanover
In many ways, religion is everything philosophy could hope to be. — Posty McPostface
Finally, religion for the most part, is an example of a philosophy that's poorly done. — Sam26
There are philosophical world views that put forth the contention that and truth is a matter of subjective beliefs. I find this just as appalling. — Sam26
Why is a religion so good at commanding people to behave a certain way... — Posty McPostface
Why is a religion so good at commanding people to behave a certain way — Posty McPostface
Why is a religion so good at commanding people to behave a certain way — Posty McPostface
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.