What about the question, 'is the Universe an intentional creation, or is it the product of unconscious processes?' Who is an 'expert' on that question? — Wayfarer
You get the point. — BrainGlitche
I think that what is interesting here is that you actually agree with Dawkins, you just do not seem to realise it. — 'Πετροκότσυφας"
According to the first mode [of the four species of being], things accessible to the senses and the intellect are said to exist, whereas anything which, ‘through the excellence of its nature’ (per excellentiam suae naturae), transcends our faculties are said not to exist. According to this classification, God, because of his transcendence is said not to exist. He is ‘nothingness through excellence’ (nihil per excellentiam).
The second mode of being and non-being is seen in the ‘orders and differences of created natures’ (I.444a), whereby, if one level of nature is said to exist, those orders above or below it are said not to exist:
For an affirmation concerning the lower (order) is a negation concerning the higher, and so too a negation concerning the lower (order) is an affirmation concerning the higher. (Periphyseon, I.444a)
According to this mode, the affirmation of man is the negation of angel and vice versa (affirmatio enim hominis negatio est angeli, negatio vero hominis affirmatio est angeli, I.444b). This mode illustrates Eriugena's original way of dissolving the traditional Neoplatonic hierarchy of being into a dialectic of affirmation and negation: to assert one level is to deny the others.
This work explores, and expands Aristotelian concepts such as matter, form, potential, actual, the four types of causation. Without a prior understanding of how Aristotle developed these concepts himself, the work would prove to be a very difficult read....it seems you'd have thrown down a Summa Theologica... — Heister Eggcart
I'll add that many of the modern theologians that I've read are just poor writers. They'll use terminology with established meanings, yet ruin it with poor writing. — Heister Eggcart
It is uncontroversially true that the content of the vast majority of reported religious experiences from people throughout history and across the world is a function of their historical and social context. No coincidence that Moses got the Ten Commandments from Yahweh rather than Lord Krishna or Osiris or Jesus or Athena or Uranus or Ishtar or Bigfoot or the wee faeries ... — Brainglitch
Note that I never said that what people report as religious experiences is "nothing more than functions of the cultures i which they occur." But it is clear that people draw on content from their own context to explain their experiences. And if we are to take them at their word, then their experiences would justify us in believing in whatever supernatural beings they report encountering. Or, we can accept that they had some kind of powerful experience, but understand their interpretations of them as dependent on their particular historical and social context.
This work explores, and expands Aristotelian concepts such as matter, form, potential, actual, the four types of causation. Without a prior understanding of how Aristotle developed these concepts himself, the work would prove to be a very difficult read.
It's a real shame to see deep conceptual structures completely ruined, laid to waste, simply through misuse of words. Words of philosophical significance enter the mainstream, and pick up common meaning. Then the philosophical concepts which these words originally signified are completely hidden, lost behind those who use the words in the haphazard way. The ruin is caused by those who are insisting that the words have no meaning deeper than the common meaning, and are not tied to any deeper, foundational conceptual structures. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you mean, the point of that post, I'm afraid I don't. What I am saying is that to explain religion in historical or sociological terms, rather than its own terms, is reductionist. It is of course true that Christians will describe the Divinity in terms of the Biblical tradition, and Hindus in line with the Vedas; that I regard as a manifestation of what can be called 'archetypal psychology' (pace Jung and Mircea Eliade) — Wayfarer
I've never read any Kierkegaard (except for the occasional quotation referenced in secondary sources), so I can't comment on that. Though I should point out that I've actually thrown very few books, and only threw away one book out of disgust, to the best of my recollection (the less said about that, the better...I will say only that it was a New Agey-type book which I bought on a whim years ago, and turned out to be one of the worst things I'd ever read).With proper philosophy, perhaps, but it seems you'd have thrown down a Summa Theologica or, let's say more contemporarily, any of the more religious works by Kierkegaard. — Heister Eggcart
The New Agey book wasn't particularly philosophical, so don't worry. Beyond that, the less said about it, the better (though I will say that, beyond the ideas and purported phenomena being discussed, the writing style itself was absolutely atrocious, which added to my disgust).Oh go on, A, what was it....? — Wayfarer
Yes, I've read the one by Albert. I haven't even read the Krauss book (as I pointed out), much less endorsed it. No doubt I could find laudatory reviews, as well. My point about his book A Universe from Nothing was only the sort of theistic arguments he was attempting to rebut (prime mover-style arguments, in this case). Whether he rebutted them successfully is immaterial here.Incidentally apropos of your comment on Krauss some pages back, herewith two critical reviews, one from a physicist, one from a philosophical theologian.
But the thing is that even the great theologians of theistic traditions understand causality, agency, love etc in this way and it is when their interpretation of scripture is not reconcilable with such understandings that they try to revise their understanding. That's why their writings exist, that's what they try to accomplish. — Πετροκότσυφας
as if Dawkins and the New Atheists are the only manifestation of the Enlightenment…
A good analogy would be a certain kind of opponent of post-modernism, specifically the one who never bothered to read and try to understand any of it. It's the same issue, it's a dead matter to them.
I take issue with such arbitrary groupings
I, who ascribe to a neo-platonic hierarchy, can very well act more like you who who share a flat physicalist ontology with Dawkins.
If Colin saw God like I have seen my hand, then his laughing off atheists is understandable. If Colin did see God in this way, I'd ask he show me. — Hanover
As a a devout non-atheist, I find the whole certainty thing about God's non-existence as troubling as the certainty espoused by the theists. It's obvious that there is a universe and its obvious we don't know how or why it got here. Some bow down in humility to this fact and some boast that they know our existence is all just meaningless coincidence. I'd say both need to just admit they have no inkling of the answer. — Hanover
Whether it's an example of a "No True Scotsman" fallacy or what, I don't know, but you can't just deny those religionists who say things you don't like, and then claim that Dawkins et al are philosophically naive for grappling with their arguments. — Arkady
To me this shows that we usually try to be specific in the process of "othering" or when we feel that we are put in a group we don't think we belong - not through the process of understanding. That's in essence the difference between polemics and scholarship. — Πετροκότσυφας
You can look up Berkeley's "De Motu", around the 30th paragraph. — Πετροκότσυφας
...the fact that every event must have a cause necessitates the existence of an uncaused Prime Mover of pure actuality. — darthbarracuda
Indeed, infinite regresses and spontaneous creation acts do not seem to make sense, so it is conceptually necessary to postulate the existence of something that is not affected by the normal cause and effect we see every day. — darthbarracuda
So within our metaphysical framework, we seem to be required to postulate the existence of a Prime Mover, or God. Otherwise we must provide a different framework, or show how God is not necessary in our original framework. — darthbarracuda
Additionally, God is typically not seen as "complex", but rather necessarily "simple". The Neo-Platonists and their neighbors taught that complexity cannot explain complexity. Simplicity is what does all the explanatory work, for all complex structures can be reduced to their components. — darthbarracuda
I think the theist can persuasively argue that a complex system entails a complex designer, but I don't see how it follows that a designer cannot create a system more complex than himself. — Hanover
It is entirely legitimate to explain anything in whatever way such explanation provides insight.
The OP assertion can be expressed as "I experienced God, therefore God exists."
It is this that I've challenged. — Brainglitch
If it's legitimate to propose that people's reports of their alleged religious experiences are not really about the particular supernatural beings and events they say they are, but rather are evidence of some kind of "underlying truth, a philosophia perennis, of which the various specific traditions are instances." then why is it not legitimate to simply observe that the actual content they report is a function fo their social and historical context?I agree with you that the OP doesn't constitute any kind of argument. That was actually the first thing I said in this thread. But subsequently it has provided the opportunity to write about a subject of interest, so here we are.
In respect of the 'plastic divinity' - nice expression, by the way! - it's simply that if one were to accept the claims of all of those who say 'ours alone is the truth', then it is very easy to argue that if they all say that, then they all cancel each other out, there is no truth to be had - which is another common Dawkins style of argument.
So I am referring to the idea of an underlying truth, a philosophia perennis, of which the various specific traditions are instances. I know that claim is contestable, but in a pluralistic society I prefer it to the alternative. — Wayfarer
That is simply false. — Sapientia
That argument doesn't support your claim. It only supports a weaker revised version which mirrors your use of "it seems to make sense". Although that reduces to the even weaker "it seems to make sense to some people, but not others". — Sapientia
Easy. Infinite regress or a first cause without the inappropriate labels of "Prime Mover" or "God". — Sapientia
You might be right, but I find that doubtful, and you'll need more than a reference to the Neo-Platonists and "their neighbours" to back up your claim that this is typical. — Sapientia
If it's legitimate to propose that people's reports of their alleged religious experiences are not really about the particular supernatural beings and events they say they are, but rather are evidence of some kind of "underlying truth, a philosophia perennis, of which the various specific traditions are instances." then why is it not legitimate to simply observe that the actual content they report is a function fo their social and historical context? — BrainGlitch
Because it is reductionistic, i.e. provides an explanation in terms other than those in which the reports are presented. — Wayfarer
But when science is applied to subjects where it has no jurisdiction is precisely when it morphs into 'scientism'. And that is no more so than when it is applied to subjects rather than objects. And please spare the faithful the 'angry thunder god' hypothesis, it is patronising in the extreme. Certainly there are religious superstitions, but to equate religion and supersition is the essence of scientism. — Wayfarer
If there are observable phenomena (the assertions people make about their experiences), and empirical data (the content of their explanations), then it is entirely within the "jurisdiction" of science to propose explanations. — Brainglitch
Your point?What 'science' deals with that? How do you go about it 'scientifically'? I mentioned before, although apparently I need not have bothered, that I have studied these exact questions through comparative relgion and anthropology, which in regards to this subject, are pretty close to what could be called scientific. — Wayfarer
But again, if you're claiming that the variety of religious experiences 'really are' able to be understood through sociological, cultural, psychological, or other such perspectives, then you're implicitly rejecting the idea that there is any valid object of religious cognition.
So - are you?
What I claim is that there are various ways of looking at, ways of understanding and explaining the phenomena at issue, and it is perfectly legitimate to do this from perspectives outside the perspective "from within"--which you privelege as the only legitimate one. — Brainglitch
Whereas what they say they're about is the disclosure of the eternal, which in my view is definitely out of scope for naturalism. — Wayfarer
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