The "Jesus" I like is similar to Dorothy Day, the founder of the Catholic Workers. — Bitter Crank
It is in line with what you say. Of course not everyone agrees with her, but even her critics cannot dismiss her scholarship — Fooloso4
But they go to such great lengths in their efforts to make of Christianity what they want it to be, what they find to be intellectually acceptable, that Jesus, as portrayed in Scripture, seems less and less recognizable. — Ciceronianus
Is the claim here that information in brains can't be replicated in the way that information in MP3s or DNA can because it is more complex? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm not sure if that appeal to complexity gets you very far. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Which is just an example, the bigger issue is why the laws of information science/physics vis-á-vis information would be different in a nervous system. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I wasn't assuming anything on the epistemological front, just listing other common objections to "people are brains," that I feel are less fruitful because they tend to become debates over ontology. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Then the jews get blamed for asking for this nice placid Jesus to be crucified and the Romans try their best to refuse! This is obviously Roman propaganda! — universeness
Josephus Flavius started as a Sicari but got captured by the Romans and turned traitor. — universeness
In Greek, even his name literally translates to Jesus(Saviour) Christ(Messiah), so his name is Saviour messiah. — universeness
It's their religion, they can do with it whatever they want. — baker
Which to me would suggest that if you're a Christian, the logical conclusion is that God created different narratives that work on multiple interlocking levels of allegory to communicate to different people with different personalities and abilities. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Man is an end in himself. Consciousness is self-producing and self-informing. This is what Hume didn't understand in his "Problem of Induction," or so called. The concept of 'circular argumentatin' can be applied to the human mind, no more than what it can be applied to the earth. Nor are humans an argument. We are conscious. The human brain developed and emerged out of the crucible of 3.5 bill years of evolution to provide us with the capacities you are using to read this now. If that is a reduction to you, as opposed to some mind-body mysticism you may be working with, then I don't know what can help you understand. There is NOTHING more complex or advanced in all the known universe than the human brain, and the consciousness it produces. — Garrett Travers
My brain - yours as well - is designed to retrieve data corresponding to reality, with it to build coherent neworks of data that inform rudimentary behaviors and thoughts, then when enough data has been gathered, use those networks of data to formulate concepts that inform future actions and behaviors as a metter of executive function, and using that data we formulate values which inform all data networks gatherd in a feedback loop of information exchange. The human is the definition of explanatory matrix, and the only one we know to ever exist. Ontology, as far as my interests go on the subject, and maybe I'll do some writings tonight, is self-explanatory in all things, one merely needs to know what its functions are. Properties of actions, properties of function, in the case of humans, thoughts, and the relation between them contained therein. — Garrett Travers
A function of the brain? True. But to call it this is to give interpretation that is outside of the interpretative context of pain as such, as it stands before waking experience. We live in a world of possibilities, and among these events as brain functions is just one.I'm going to forgive this kind of statement, as a starter. If it happens anymore I'm going to inundate you with the content of my extensive philosophical training, that is still on-going in professional academia, as well as private, everyday pursuit. As far as suffering qua suffering, you're going to have to be specific about the point of exploration you'd have me analyze, as you could be meaning several things. Because, as it currently stands, we know suffering to be a function of the brain used to reinforce certain types of thoughts, granted it's not entirely clear why certain suffering functions are distributed as they are, but neuroscience is still young. As far as it not being a fact, such a thing is going to have to be qualified. I would take a look at this and get back to me on that fact business: — Garrett Travers
Yes, even change it, or ignore it, as I think they did. — Ciceronianus
So this structure makes the information different from information held in other systems? Is the argument that this change is an emergent phenomena only of nervous systems, or complexity in general?No, more the structure of how data is actually integrated and anaylized, prioritized and distributed, and how that informs both your desires, and your disinterests, which ultimately govern your actions.
the fact is the human brain is not mere matter, but as I described, which is concurrent with cognitive neuroscience today.
There is nothing in the empty void except that which we bring with us.
We have nothing to fear but fear itself. etc, etc.
All the horrible experiences the human race has memorialised since our civilisations began have surely screamed at us their main message:
THERE ARE NO GODS TO HELP YOU! HELP YOURSELVES OR PERISH!
We must accept this and build a fair, global civilisation with economic equality for all or perish as bad stewards of Earth.
Another species will emerge in time on Earth, if we cannot correct the historical
errors, which have led to our currently dangerous predicament. — universeness
But they go to such great lengths in their efforts to make of Christianity what they want it to be, what they find to be intellectually acceptable, that Jesus, as portrayed in Scripture, seems less and less recognizable. — Ciceronianus
I'm with BC. A really good post. Thoughtful and well-written. — T Clark
I'd be surprised if Tacitus used him as a source for his comments about "Christus" — Ciceronianus
I'm not sure about him writing the Gospels and inventing Jesus — Ciceronianus
So this structure makes the information different from information held in other systems? Is the argument that this change is an emergent phenomena only of nervous systems, or complexity in general? — Count Timothy von Icarus
It's a bit aside the point because there are loads of things nervous systems can do that human built devices can't, but having 86 billion neurons doesn't necissarily mean much in terms of nervous systems being unique (and I agree they are unique). The fastest super computer processes about 4,500 times as many computations as a human brain per second. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If various measures of complexity or computational power were directly tied to sentience, we wouldn't have the Hard Problem. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If physical forces aren't the only thing at work in the brain (merely matter), what is it that makes it different? Some sort of Cartesian mind substance? Extra-physical forces? — Count Timothy von Icarus
According to the web, Jesus would have been known in as Yeshua Ben Yussuf; Jesus - son of Joseph; which was a common name when he lived. Christ was not his name, it was the designation he gave himself — T Clark
I'm not an atheist — Noble Dust
Jesus would have been known in as Yeshua Ben Yussuf — T Clark
But this is putting it all in a dismissive narrative about how all is lost and it is just up to us, and so forth. \
The matter gets interesting only when we examine what is there, in the ethical nihilism as a rejection of something. What is rejected, exactly? It is that there is an ethical foundation that lies in the deepest analysis of ethicality itself. What does this come to? One has to look at a given ethical problem, the anatomy of an ethical problem qua problem. This goes to the concrete circumstances of our prohibitions against causing others suffering through the many ways this can be achieved. At root, it is the pain itself, and the joy and pleasure: these rise to the surface of the discussion, for these are these existential foundations of ethics.
The question then is, what is pain? What is pleasure? What is falling in love? Being tortured?
A serious analysis of religion BEGINS here — Astrophel
I'm ashamed to admit I thought, for a very brief but delightful moment, you were referring to "Doris Day." — Ciceronianus
That's because the New Testament was written in Koine Greek and then translated into Latin. Didn't Jesus speak Aramaic? He might have known Koine Greek, but probably not. The oldest version of the OT is in Greek too (a more formal dialect). — Bitter Crank
I understand the majority of what you state here from the individual meanings of the words you use and the context within which you use them but I am not so interested in this type of analysis. It is a very valid analysis I'm sure and certainly belongs on this forum, more than my approach does but I would refer you to members like Garrett Travers or fooloso4 to name but a few, for better feedback on the points you raise, than any that I can offer you. — universeness
Maybe true, but there were many others who also claimed such titles: — universeness
Jesus would have been known in as Yeshua Ben Yussuf
— T Clark
A name not mentioned in the bible at all! — universeness
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