Last call. — tim wood
By talking to them, by listening to them, by reading about them and the writing they themselves do, by studying religion in an academic setting and by way of personal experience. — DingoJones
Not sure where we are missing each other here...secular concerns are mortal concerns. Do you understand what I mean by that? Some believers view this world as a pale shadow of what awaits them after they/we leave this world, this world only exists as a stepping stone to whats truly important, being with god forever in paradise. — DingoJones
You asked me to explain existence, hence yours and my quotes:
Me: We are talking about the existence of something. In this case, in human terms, it would be the human being called Jesus. Using your words, what does knowledge have to do with existence?
You: I asked you what you know, and you have answered with what you believe. That both is and is not an answer. As to knowledge it is nothing, but given the context it also says that you don't know.
Me: As I've said over in the Lounge, existentially, one does not know the true nature of their own existence, and so why should this be any different (?).
Now if you want to speculate metaphysically, you're more than welcome to elucidate there.
Me: What I meant was explaining your own existence metaphysically. In other words, your conscious existence.
Make any sense now...and so, what would be the distinction between the two explanation's of the man called Jesus who had a conscious existence, and your own conscious existence? Or, in the case of the cosmological God, if space and time are a mystery, how should one go about explaining it? Isn't space and time a theory? — 3017amen
People assume all day long. Instead, makes it hard for any thoughtful person to with reason claim that they know everything about feeling or awareness.For one he is saying that the very nature of feeling or awareness makes it very hard for us to assume that we know everything about feeling or awareness. — tilda-psychist
Same. I'm going to take your claim to authority with a slight pinch of salt if I'm honest. — Kenosha Kid
Right, so personal concerns then. — Kenosha Kid
Can you say that I am not God? — Punshhh
The part you bolded is meant as something important for everyone, not just themselves. Its a greater good, the greatest good, to many believers. — DingoJones
Religion is contra-philosophy because it starts with givens that aren't, which (imo) honest philosophy, at the least, tries to bracket and quarantine. — tim wood
This is where we hit our first problem, I can't define God because I am not up to the task, but I still might know God, or have met God. So the question could now become;I would have to know what you mean by God, and probably also try to make clear what I understand by the term.
This would not be a requirement. I might have a spark of the spirit of God in me, which is God just like a drop of water is the same as the ocean it came from. Or to put it another way, I don't have to be able to create a world at will to be God. I might be unaware that I am God and unable to use my powers. Or I might be God in a way in which I bare witness, but don't act, for example.No. I am confident you are not a supernatural being able to defy natural law.
But this confines the God in me to human discourse. The God in me might be life itself and the act of creation is the progression of life. But this might be totally unknown to humanity in the domain of intellectual knowledge, although it could well be known in some other unarticulated living way.Yes, in that whatever idea of God anyone has, just is God, and they're God, greater or lesser, in having it. Whether any individual idea is any good another topic.
This is probably at the root of the difference between us. I have pursued an interest in other ways of knowing things about nature. Precisely because I had come up against the limitations of human reason and the scope and results of the human intellect in addressing the issue (this is not to diminish the discoveries of science). Regarding intelligibility there have been aural and linguistic traditions developed specifically to render religious experiences intelligible. Such traditions are concerned with conveying understanding of such experience and accepting the reality of it into the self. This does not include rational analysis of what is being conveyed. Or the requirement for the intellect to know the experience through the power of the intellect to rationally understand what is to be conveyed.I operate on the rule that we cannot know what we cannot know, and that which is unknowable, cannot be known. That leaves what we can know, and what can be known. Which is to say that the road to any knowledge and understanding of God starts, travels, and ends in reason - if it is to be intelligible. And if it is to be intelligible, must be reasonable.
I'm not sure of what you are saying here, but it sounds reasonable to me.In this, the idea of God - which I say is all there ever is, and that far from inconsequential - is akin to number.
In this, the idea of God - which I say is all there ever is, and that far from inconsequential - is akin to number.
I'm not sure of what you are saying here, but it sounds reasonable to me. — Punshhh
So to me you are still being fallacious, using different premises to reach a different conclusion and acting as though there is something wrong with the believers conclusion because it doesnt follow from your premiss. Of course it doesnt, you’ve replaced their non-secular premises with your secular one. Can you answer that criticism specifically? — DingoJones
Is that any different than any other topic? — DingoJones
I'm not sure many people get especially riled up about e.g. the ontological status of universals. — Enai De A Lukal
Like Macbeth, Western man made an evil decision, which has become the efficient and final cause of other evil decisions. Have we forgotten our encounter with the witches on the heath? It occurred in the late fourteenth century, and what the witches said to the protagonist of this drama was that man could realize himself more fully if he would only abandon his belief in the existence of transcendentals. The powers of darkness were working subtly, as always, and they couched this proposition in the seemingly innocent form of an attack upon universals. The defeat of logical realism in the great medieval debate was the crucial event in the history of Western culture; from this flowed those acts which issue now in modern decadence.
Any Blavatsky Mews
— Punshhh
Nope, that’s not a familiar name to me.
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