I consider the idea that our culture’s quest for interstellar travel is really the sublimated longing for immortality. — Wayfarer
It's pretty much what the word means.I wasn’t aware progress was a journey. Is that how you see it? — Tom Storm
Why not??If we hold women's rights or gay rights up as progressive issues we support, I don't think the next question should be, 'But where will that lead us?'
Qidquid agis, prudenter agas et respice finem. — baker
This gets to an interesting question: by progress do we mean the metrics that technocrats tend to use: self reported well being, income, educational attainment, crime rates, etc. or do we mean subscribing to a specific set of beliefs and policy positions? Further, we might ask, is democratic participation a good in and of itself, even if it leads to regressive policies, or is democratic process only a means to progress? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Hence, it is a blend in terms of influence. While churches may tend towards regression in political views, you're also far more likely to see women speaking than in academic settings. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Just to take one of your examples; isn't gun control simply a means to an end, fewer murders and assaults? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I consider the idea that our culture’s quest for interstellar travel is really the sublimated longing for immortality. Having substituted material progress for spiritual liberation, only by ‘slipping the surely bonds of earth’ is freedom to be found (pace Elon Musk’s desire to populate Mars). — Wayfarer
For me progress is like morality. We might base it on presuppositions around notions of the flourishing or wellbeing of conscious creatures (as I do) but not everyone will agree on values. If you wish to defend, (for instance) that dictatorship is better than democracy then let's hear the argument.
How many churches will let trans women speak?
Based a wealth of research in the social sciences, religious attendance seems to boost the metrics we use to measure flourishing. And religious attendance also seems to boost a number of prosocial behaviors, like volunteering and charitable giving. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Does religion perpetuate and promote a regressive worldview? — Art48
This then being an utterly different goal-directed drive: one oriented at becoming selfless, this in contrast to the, well, selfish drive to hold on to the cherished aspects of one’s own empirically known self eternally. — javra
As a side note, there is some good evidence that refugee settlement works better in rural areas (Kentucky, Bosnians, Maine, Somalians), despite these places being more insular and conservative. It's an interesting phenomena. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In short, I don't happen to find anything particularly "progressive" or "positive" about a society that results in true Nuclear holocaust where the entire planet becomes incapable of sustaining life, even if we do get to watch it all on our little iPhones or smartwatches before we succumb to radiation sickness — Outlander
In short, I don't happen to find anything particularly "progressive" or "positive" about a society that results in true Nuclear holocaust where the entire planet becomes incapable of sustaining life, even if we do get to watch it all on our little iPhones or smartwatches before we succumb to radiation sickness. Do you? I'd much prefer the steady, predictable, and nuanced old world society where, sure things were simple - if not outright grueling at times - but at least humanity lived on whilst retaining the social communication skills that allowed society to progress in the first place. Wouldn't you? Seems like a reasonable opinion to hold but to each their own.. — Outlander
There are some truly remarkable works in philosophy of religion (especially Christianity). One of my current favorites is William Lane Craig, who is best know for his popularization of the Kalam cosmological argument, writes on the question "What is the bare minimum we need to believe in Christianity?" This does not mean that we discard what is improbable, rather, we should interpret it in a way that is meaningful and in alignment with necessary doctrines. — T4YLOR
Have you spent any time on WLC's forum? You might find WLC's arguments don't stand up so well. — wonderer1
The Bible itself is a compilation of many books, from many author, in many periods of time and with many genres — T4YLOR
and what God reveals is what should be sought after. — T4YLOR
I’d love to hear your thought on how his arguments don’t hold up! — T4YLOR
You keep bringing this up. To no avail.The problem here is the old; how do we demonstrate that there are gods and how do we know what gods reveal? — Tom Storm
That's like saying, "I totally refuse to obtain a degree in X, but I still feel entitled to get a job for which a degree in X is necessary."On this the believers only have subjective interpretations.
But not whern it comes to religion/spirituality. This is where most people demand that no qualification is necessary or no qualification should be necessary. What one currently has should suffice to get a definitive judgment on a religious/spiritual matter. Period. — baker
This is where most people demand that no qualification is necessary or no qualification should be necessary. What one currently has should suffice to get a definitive judgment on a religious/spiritual matter. Period. — baker
Nevertheless, the secular community contains numerous members who were once devout. They found their way out. — Tom Storm
Of course. If their initial "faith" didn't have much to do with the foundational texts of their proposed religion/spirituality to begin with, of course they will more likely experience those texts as alienating. (There are, of course, also those who buy a Bible and place it on a prominent spot in their home, and never read it.)What is interesting however are the amount of formerly religious people who lose their faith when they begin reading the Bible or Koran in earnest. — Tom Storm
Well, how silly of the church hierarchy to assume that the "believers" actually should know why they're there ...I've met quite a few former ministers, priests, and believers who came to atheism simply by asking the question, why do I believe in this?
Going through the motions with religious/spiritual belief is actually a phenomenon that is criticized in religion/spirituality. — baker
They were probaly never insiders, never "in it" to begin with. I used to make a point of reading people's exit stories from religion/spirituality. And in all cases I have seen, they had a poor knowledge of the religion/spirituality of which they claim to have been members of. So many former Catholics with such a shoddy knowledge of Catholic doctrine — baker
?Going through the motions with religious/spiritual belief is actually a phenomenon that is criticized in religion/spirituality.
— baker
Of course. But when has spirituality been a factor in the mass support of religions? — Tom Storm
It's the truth.I also think that saying to an apostate, 'you were never a true Muslim or Christian' is an obvious and often false accusation religions use to defend their own weaknesses.
I think the distinction between religion and spirituality is mostly spurios, so I usually use a joint term. — baker
I also think that saying to an apostate, 'you were never a true Muslim or Christian' is an obvious and often false accusation religions use to defend their own weaknesses.
It's the truth. — baker
Not to mention a no true Scotsman fallacy. — wonderer1
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