Right. So then life cannot be reduced to concept, is that correct?We are living. Take us away, there is no-one experiencing well-being. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Why so quick to judge? :)just as you were — TheWillowOfDarkness
Why so quick to judge? :) — Agustino
Well I stated my point clearly - so is it a true statement that "life cannot be reduced to a concept" or is it a false statement?I'd be careful here. Life is frequently a concept. It's a meaning we refer to and reason about all the time. Even living itself is a concept in this sense (I'm talking about it right now).
Life is not a concept. This means something different than "Life cannot be reduced to a concept," and is not mutually exclusive with it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Even an entire life may not be sufficient to know someone :)I'm hardly being quick. Four or so years of your posting is quite a ripe age. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Let's go back to the Kierkegaard quote with which this thread started. If I can bow down before a stone shaped idol, and still pray to the true God, that means that what makes something an idol depends on me - on my interiority - on my hidden inner life. Would you agree? — Agustino
Likewise, someone can bow before the icon of the true God, and pray to an idol - because it's their interiority that makes the object an idol - they are making it an idol. How is this possible? How do they make it an idol? What about them makes it an idol? They pray in untruth ... What is untruth? — Agustino
Yes! It's not the action, but the heart.If I take your meaning here, yes. Christ taught a change of heart. Jews were only getting the rituals, while they failed to live moral lives, which is why idolatry is a sensitive topic because a lot of Christians think it prudent to remove all symbols and such, which is going too far. — Heister Eggcart
Indeed!This goes, again, with Christ's teaching of a turning over of the heart. — Heister Eggcart
The next thing to investigate is how an object, an idea, a person, or anything else can become an idol - what about the relationship of the person with it causes the person to use it as an invisible mirror reflecting their own self back to themselves while hiding the process and making it seem that God is reflected back? What makes the Pharisee blind - spiritually - to his idolatry? And what makes the penitent tax collector worship in truth - authentically? — Agustino
A ring? Good choice!Consider that I give a ring to my wife-to-be. What does that mean?
If you smash it, what have you smashed and what have you not smashed? — Agustino
I'm asking you practically, for you, what does it mean that your life is about love? What makes your life about love? If I look at your life, what in it makes me think "this is about love"? — Agustino
When I have given her the ring, was it just the ring that was given? — Agustino
So if nothing practically makes your life about love, then it really isn't about love at all is it? It's one thing to try and fail, and another not to try at all. So if you did mean that you're trying and failing, what is it that you're doing that means that you're trying? If someone looks at your life from the outside, would they say "this man's life is about love"?Probably nothing practically, I don't know. Rather as a Christian is not a good person, but a sinner, and climbers can often be found at the foot of the mountain rather than the peak. — unenlightened
The ring was a commitment? What is the relationship between the ring and the commitment? When does the ring become by analogy an idol?When I have given a ring, it was a commitment. — unenlightened
No, all that it assumes is that one must have a master in the sense used Biblically. Even if there is no God, one must have a master.You can not serve too masters at once -- you can't serve God and mammon at the same time. But again, that assumes one believes in God. No god, no mammon. — Bitter Crank
Yes, I think you are partly correct. But then, not all idols, as Wayfarer adds, are material - there are also immaterial idols. So what is the commonality between the two? The commonality is clearly in how the person relates to the object, whether this is a physical or a mental object. So why does a person relate to an object such that the object becomes an idol? How does the person make the object into an idol?Idols are easier to commit one's time and eyes to because they're manifested in material. Honesty, loyalty, love, contrition, and so on are all virtues that are beneath the surface. You can't walk into a statue of love like you can a golden cow. — Heister Eggcart
When he [Theagenes] died, a man who had been one of his enemies while he was alive came to the image [memorial statue] of Theagenes every night and flogged the bronze as though he were causing pain to Theagenes himself. The statue finally put an end to this hybris by falling on the man and killing him, but subsequently his children proceeded to prosecute the image for murder. So the Thasians dumped the statue into the sea, following the judgment of Drakon, who, when he wrote laws dealing with homicide for the Athenians, banished every non-living things if any of them, in falling, happened to kill a man. After a time a time, however, when the earth yielded no crops to the Thasians, they send envoys to Delphi, and the god responded by telling them that they should receive back their exiles. But although in obedience to this advice they received them back, they obtained no relief from the famine. Therefore they went a second time to the Pythian priestess, saying that, although they had done what was commanded them, the wrath of the gods was still upon them. Thereupon the Pythia answered them: ‘You leave unremembered your great Theagenes.’ And they say that when they were at their wits’ end as to a means by which thy could rescue the statue of Theagenes, some fisherman, after putting out to sea in search of fish, caught the statue in their net and brought it back to the land. The Thasians set the statue up where it originally stood, and they now have the custom of worshipping him as if he were a god.” (6.11.2-9)
Yes, I think you are partly correct. But then, not all idols, as Wayfarer adds, are material - there are also immaterial idols. So what is the commonality between the two? The commonality is clearly in how the person relates to the object, whether this is a physical or a mental object. So why does a person relate to an object such that the object becomes an idol? How does the person make the object into an idol? — Agustino
So if nothing practically makes your life about love, then it really isn't about love at all is it? — Agustino
When does the ring become by analogy an idol? — Agustino
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