-Well maybe you meant "a metaphor. Metaphors can be interpret literally or not.It's an analogy, that you are taking literally in order to try and undermine. — unenlightened
-Well in my opinion, the issue lies with the God claim . God claims are not based on objective facts accessible to everyone for evaluation.This is why a philosopher cannot find god; he cannot make a commitment to anything, but must always be weighing and evaluating and reasoning. It's a very good recipe for thinking, but a very poor one for living. — unenlightened
No important reason. I'm accustomed to form and substance as a set. I perceive form and matter as being interchangeable.
It's true substance has a meaning other than matter. It can mean quality.
Do you think quality has form? More generally, do you think abstractions have form? — ucarr
Self-creation of God took time to occur? — ucarr
Time predates God? — ucarr
I would say "God is self-caused" is incoherent because it would mean that God is prior to Himself in time, and that seems to be contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
If God is actual, time must predate God, because any act requires time. — Metaphysician Undercover
My take on that would be that "the philosopher shouldn't seek God until he has access to objective epistemology pointing to the existence and ontology of God(s). — Nickolasgaspar
Possibility needs to be demonstrated, not assumed. The default position(Null hypothesis) is to reject the possibility of a claim until facts can falsify our initial rejection. An example I used in the past was that of Alchemy. Alchemists spent time and resources to turn lead in to gold when our current knowledge informs us that the chemical transmutation of elements impossible. So there is a price to pay when someone thinks that there is nothing to lose when accepting a "deepity". — Nickolasgaspar
"There's a place for" unintelligibility-inexplicability (i.e. "divine mysteries") "in phlosophy" (i.e. the love – pursuit – of 'masterful intellection-explication')? :roll:[T]here's a place for god in philosophy. — Agent Smith
"There's a place for" unintelligibility-inexplicability (i.e. "divine mysteries") "in phlosophy" (i.e. the love – pursuit – of 'masterful intellection-explication')? — 180 Proof
Non sequitur. i agree with Nickolasgaspar and disagree with your reply to him. — 180 Proof
-Well in my opinion, the issue lies with the God claim . — Nickolasgaspar
My song is love unknown,
My Saviour's love for me,
Love to the loveless shown that they might Lovely be. — Samuel Crossman
This is why a philosopher cannot find god; he cannot make a commitment to anything, but must always be weighing and evaluating and reasoning. It's a very good recipe for thinking, but a very poor one for living. — unenlightened
Okay. God is not self-caused. Does God have a cause? — ucarr
Okay. Time predates God. And God created the material universe.
So, time before God was metaphysical and there were no material things?
Okay. God can only act within time.
So, outside of time God cannot exist? — ucarr
Yes, you are in very good company focussing on the facticity or fictionality of "the God claim". That is exactly what I am pointing to myself. As long as your issue is that, you will never understand something like this:
My song is love unknown,
My Saviour's love for me,
Love to the loveless shown that they might Lovely be. — Samuel Crossman — unenlightened
I am focusing or better observing and analyzing the irrationality in humans. — Nickolasgaspar
do you feel hurt or threaten when someone exposes the irrational nature of a claim you subscribe to?? — Nickolasgaspar
Say you call me an idiot; I tend to deny it, and then be afraid that everyone will think I'm an idiot and then blame you for being so rude, and call you an idiot back. All this is a resistance, I don't let the idea in, and so it remains there pricking at me.
But if I simply accept that I am an idiot, there is no problem - it is only the image I had of myself being smart that has taken a knock. — unenlightened
Do you? Or do you not even allow yourself to become conscious of how you have exposed your own irrationality, so quick you are to project it onto me? — unenlightened
this was "unenlightened's" whole argument...You need to believe in order to believe in god. — Nickolasgaspar
And yet in the mouth of (most?) believers these days, "God" is just a three-letter epithet (or crutch) for ego ("why").My argument is that you need to stop believing in yourself in order to believe in God. — unenlightened
Askesis of Desire: For Hadot, famously, the means for the philosophical student to achieve the “complete reversal of our usual ways of looking at things” epitomized by the Sage were a series of spiritual exercises. These exercises encompassed all of those practices still associated with philosophical teaching and study: reading, listening, dialogue, inquiry, and research. However, they also included practices deliberately aimed at addressing the student’s larger way of life, and demanding daily or continuous repetition: practices of attention (prosoche), meditations (meletai), memorizations of dogmata, self-mastery (enkrateia), the therapy of the passions, the remembrance of good things, the accomplishment of duties, and the cultivation of indifference towards indifferent things (Philosophy as a Way of Life 84). Hadot acknowledges his use of the term “spiritual exercises” may create anxieties*, by associating philosophical practices more closely with religious devotion than typically done (Nussbaum 1996, 353-4; Cooper 2010). Hadot’s use of the adjective “spiritual” (or sometimes “existential”) indeed aims to capture how these practices, like devotional practices in the religious traditions (6a), are aimed at generating and reactivating a constant way of living and perceiving in prokopta, despite the distractions, temptations, and difficulties of life. For this reason, they call upon far more than “reason alone.” They also utilize rhetoric and imagination in order “to formulate the rule of life to ourselves in the most striking and concrete way” and aim to actively re-habituate bodily passions, impulses, and desires (as for instance, in Cynic or Stoic practices, abstinence is used to accustom followers to bear cold, heat, hunger, and other privations) (PWL 85). — Pierre Hadot entry IEP
Its just reasoning reflecting on facts :grin:
8hReplyOptions — Nickolasgaspar
Is there? Can you point to objective epistemology that can fuel a philosophical discussion about god or the supernatural in general? — Nickolasgaspar
Make the argument, señor.180 Proof claims philosophy and god are incompatible. I beg to differ. — Agent Smith
No.Religious faith [in god(s)] is the focus."God" is the focus of theology. — 180 Proof
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