How do we know that what you're calling God is not a being among other beings of the same kind? — praxis
It’s necessary to use language to talk about things regardless if we’ve experienced them ourselves. — praxis
We can have knowledge of things beyond our experience with language... — praxis
but unless there’s some other realm that we may somehow have access to, everything, including numbers, which you say do not exist as ordinary objects do, is derived from worldly experience. — praxis
That's not really what I'm saying. What impressed me when I was given the Eastern books that I mentioned - Watts, Suzuki, etc, very popular in the 1960s and 70s - was that there was something in them that simply *wasn't* found in religion, as such. — Wayfarer
But I still believe there is a fundamental distinction between the 'believe-and-be-saved' attitude (which is especially characteristic in Protestantism) and the 'experiential realisation' approach which you find in both Eastern and also 'new age' movements. — Wayfarer
I expect so, but do you expect it to ever convince anybody to change their view, other than the occasional rare exception?
You sound, from the rest of your post, like a deeply religious person. Are you that way because you were convinced by dry philosophical arguments such as this, or because of personal experience and feelings, or that you were brought up to believe what you do? — andrewk
God and other supernatural experiences are a special case, by definition, since the word "supernatural" means precisely something beyond the objects of empirical cognition. — Mariner
The Parmenidean poem that you mentioned talked about two realities, which to me sounded similar if not identical to the ‘two truth’ in Eastern philosophy. Maybe Wayfarer can offer his opinion on that. — praxis
Being does not arise, since it exists. Non-being does not arise, since it does not exist. Being and non-being [together] do not arise, due to [their] dissimilarity. Consequently they neither endure or vanish.
How could what is perish? How could it have come to be? For if it came into being, it is not; nor is it, if ever it is going to be. Thus coming into being is extinguished, and destruction unknown. (B 8.20–22)
I'm wary of this "Being" malarky. Can't say I've ever had any need of this obscure concept. — S
Whatever happened to objectivity? — VagabondSpectre
the perceived conflict between faith (church) and reason (science) [...] the 'conflict thesis' (conflict between science and religion) — Wayfarer
There is no certainty for us. — Pattern-chaser
when the pressure is on, your body will be certain — All sight
Isn't this eschewing of certainty just a form of virtue signaling? — All sight
all I know for certain is that I'd best not know anything — All sight
I gave clear rebuke... — All sight
...of its self-defeating nature, and also reasons why it isn't true. — All sight
The perceived conflict between faith (church) and reason (science) [...] the 'conflict thesis' (conflict between science and religion)
— Wayfarer
Personally, I have never seen a problem or a conflict between the two. To me, they are complementary. I know that others, who look at things differently, do have issues, but I don't.
Seek out a way of looking at things - a perspective - that embraces both. It makes things much easier. — Pattern-chaser
But in a great deal of modern philosophy, there is an assumed conflict between faith and reason... — Wayfarer
Seek out a way of looking at things - a perspective - that embraces both. — Pattern-chaser
Absence of evidence can be, and in some cases is, evidence of absence. — S
The Parmenidean poem that you mentioned talked about two realities, which to me sounded similar if not identical to the ‘two truth’ in Eastern philosophy — praxis
I’m curious if it makes sense to you to distinguish something supernatural or beyond objects of empirical cognition as being in one or the other of these realities. It doesn’t appear reasonable to believe that “something” exists in the Parmenidean One. — praxis
What do you mean? — Blue Lux
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