Like, do people need to accept your specific philosophical ideal in order to be valued as a contributor? Is not even my questioning of certain ideas a contributing factor on a philosophy forum? Sounds a bit weird to imply a lack of contribution in that way? — Christoffer
but I don't know if you yourself realise how embedded you are in the materialist mindset. — Wayfarer
you take for granted a way of seeing the world which I think is inimical to philosophy per se — Wayfarer
in your analysis, it is simply assumed that religion only ever *is* an opiate, a pain-killing illusion. I have devoted considerable time to Buddhist studies, and there is no way you could mistake Buddhist praxis as 'seeking comfort' or 'comforting illusions'. — Wayfarer
the principle involved is obtaining insight into the causes of suffering and cutting it at the root, which (it is said) opens up horizons of being that remain unknown to the regular run of mankind. — Wayfarer
Regarding scientism and nihilism I don't see how you can avoid it with the stance you take. The scientific mindset revolves around reduction to mathematical simples — Wayfarer
But as Nagel eloquently points out in many of his other works, this is at the cost of excluding from consideration the nature of lived experience. — Wayfarer
So it produces a kind of one-dimensional existence — Wayfarer
I've never bought Nietszche's 'death of God'. Time Magazine published a cover story on it which I read aged about 11 or 12. — Wayfarer
What if there really is a dimension to existence which is pointed to, however inadequately, in the various religious traditions of the world? — Wayfarer
Your conviction that it can only be empty words mirrors the certainty of religous dogma to the opposite effect. Religious philosophies are universal across culture and history, and show no sign of fading away, Nietszche's proclamation notwithstanding. — Wayfarer
I see the role of renunciate philosophies as being especially crucial in today's world, because consumption obviously has to be drastically curtailed. — Wayfarer
But what alternative does our culture provide? — Wayfarer
You push these ideas that I'm not doing philosophy, but yet, I am — Christoffer
I can only formulate my world view on what we can actually prove or at least speculate as logical based on facts as we define facts. — Christoffer
What Buddhism is about is still such a process. It starts with the painful questions about our existence and evolves into an exploration of ideas to comfort against that sense of darkness and lack of meaning. — Christoffer
I personally believe that we need to follow science more than illusions and fantasy — Christoffer
What I'm advocating for is to align everything towards an experience that rejects illusions and fantasy but can still reach such comforting results — Christoffer
the fact that religion exist universally across culture and history can easily be explained by analyzing human behavior — Christoffer
I cannot accept ideas and theories when I have knowledge that counters it. — Christoffer
Not you, in particular, but our culture in general. Lloyd Gerson, who is a Platonist scholar, has a book Platonism and Naturalism: the Possibility of Philosophy. It's a pretty specialist text, but his argument is that Philosophy just is platonism, and that if you deny Platonism, there is no conceptual space for philosophy proper. And, he says, Platonism is irreconciliable with naturalism, which is the mainstream view by default.
I think naturalists tend to turn the kinds of dialectical skills that philosophy has inculcated into our culture against philosophy proper. Daniel Dennett is an example. His more radical books, like Darwin's Dangerous Idea, say that evolutionary theory is like a 'universal acid' that dissolves the container that tries to hold it - that 'container' being Western culture, and one of the things being dissolved, philosophy as philosophers have always understood it. — Wayfarer
We generally define facts scientifically, but existential issues are not necessarily tractable to scientific analysis — Wayfarer
Not true. It is not about 'ideas' at all. It is about a hard-won transformative insight. — Wayfarer
So how can you deny the accusation of 'scientism' on the back of statements like this? — Wayfarer
What 'comforting results' are you referring to? If the illusions of religion are put aside, then what constitutes a real solution to the predicaments of human existence, other than comfort and standard of living? — Wayfarer
Which is reductionist, 'explaining away'. I have studied religion through anthropological, sociological and psychological perspectives in comparative religion, but it's not reducible to those categories, even if they provide very useful perspectives. — Wayfarer
All due respect, I don't believe you have 'knowledge that counters it'. What you have is a firm conviction. — Wayfarer
One thing that I've found hints at such solution is the question; why cannot nature and the universe, as it is, be enough? — Christoffer
we have proven evolution to be true, we have proven general relativity. — Christoffer
To formulate a living beyond religious beliefs but retaining aspects that comfort against the dread. — Christoffer
That's the philosophical question, and a deep question. I think the intuition is that at bottom, everything in nature is transient and perishable. I think at bottom there's a deep intuition that there is a flaw or fault or imperfection in nature and in human nature, for which the remedy is not to be found on the same level at which it is perceived. That is expressed in different mythological and metaphorical clothing in different cultures. In Buddhism for example, it is the observation that existence is dukkha, one of those hard-to-translate terms that is usually given as 'distressing' or 'unsatisfactory'. The root of this dukkha runs very deep, and is ultimately related to the inherent tendency of beings to cling to sense-objects as sources of a satisfaction that they can never provide, as they are by nature transient and perishable. Hence the valuing of renunciation and giving up attachments. The ultimate aim of Nirvāṇa or Nibbana is realising the state of deathlessness.
In the Christian mythos, the unsatisfactoriness of existences is put down to the Fall, which is signified by the 'fruit of the knowledge of Good and Evil'. I take that to be a symbolic representation of self-consciousness, the burden of our reflexive intelligence. Through faith in Christ, the believer overcomes the sense of separateness and anxiety and the fear of death, by the realisation of the individual union or oneness with the divine (although this is highly attenuated in popular religions many of which have become corrupted in my view). — Wayfarer
I think at bottom there's a deep intuition that there is a flaw or fault or imperfection in nature and in human nature — Wayfarer
Of course. Inside the Catholic Church, there was dissent over Galileo's censure. Whilst the conservatives were keen to see him condemned, there were progressives who believed the entire effort was misconceived. The Church is concerned with 'how to go to Heaven, not how the Heavens go', was their mantra. They lost the argument (much to the discredit of the Church.) Likewise after the publication of the Origin of Species, whilst some conservatives were quick to anathematize it, there were many within the Church who saw no inherent conflict between evolution and divine creation. It wasn't until the American fundementalists came along that it really blew up. But for those who never believed the literal truth of creation myth, the fact that they are *not* literally true is not the devasting blow against religion that Richard Dawkins seems to think. Origen and Augustine used to ridicule the literal reading of Scripture in the 1st and 4th centuries AD respectively. — Wayfarer
so we're now looking to science for moral guidance, which is a mistake, as science is only quantitative and objective. — Wayfarer
the religious person holds onto their faith, try to keep it solid and unchanging, consistent and unbroken but keep feeling doubt due to the world around them, from other perspectives giving them other answers, other stories that they cannot prove are more or less true than their own convictions, and their confusion rising into anger, horror and depression. — Christoffer
I think a genuine religious path charts a way altogether beyond dread, not that that is necessarily an easy path to tread — Wayfarer
As I said in the post you're responding to
I think a genuine religious path charts a way altogether beyond dread, not that that is necessarily an easy path to tread
— Wayfarer
But plainly we're not going to agree on that. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer, I actually agree with you on your criticism of reductionism, not sure if you picked up on that. I'm a materialist, but there is a special case here. Mind can drive matter... no doubt. — Mark Nyquist
Can mind drive matter or are we simply another type of matter driving matter in perfect accordance with entropic processes? On a large enough scale, does not the complexity of the entire human race only just become another set of a system based on universal principles forming complex outcomes? — Christoffer
'm an atheist but more sympathetic to religion than you. I don't quite know why. — mcdoodle
I've been studying philosophy academically in later life, and I confess, after lots more reading, that the notions of qualia and emergence feel dodgy. They come over like vague and sometimes slippery notions that are struggling to explain what happens beyond the limits of materially-based rational enquiry. — mcdoodle
I'm not sure what you mean by them feeling dodgy? — Christoffer
...religious belief skew and distorts an honest perspective of reality, especially collective reality. And so by that distortion the individual will always have trouble navigating reality as it truly is and will always end up in either internal or external conflict with others in a collective society. In order to find harmony, religious belief needs to be excluded. — Christoffer
In order to find harmony, religious belief needs to be excluded. But in doing so we lose the parts of religion that is of tremendous importance to our mental health and social bonding. The practices we have in rituals, mythological storytelling and exploration needs to somehow be reworked into a context of non-religious belief, which requires a new paradigm of how to live life. — Christoffer
Where, more generally, do the ideas of 'harmony' and the 'collective' derive from, and why can't there be equal dialogue about them between the religious and irreligious? — mcdoodle
Of course. Inside the Catholic Church, there was dissent over Galileo's censure. Whilst the conservatives were keen to see him condemned, there were progressives who believed the entire effort was misconceived. The Church is concerned with 'how to go to Heaven, not how the Heavens go', was their mantra. They lost the argument (much to the discredit of the Church.) Likewise after the publication of the Origin of Species, whilst some conservatives were quick to anathematize it, there were many within the Church who saw no inherent conflict between evolution and divine creation. It wasn't until the American fundementalists came along that it really blew up. But for those who never believed the literal truth of creation myth, the fact that they are *not* literally true is not the devasting blow against religion that Richard Dawkins seems to think. Origen and Augustine used to ridicule the literal reading of Scripture in the 1st and 4th centuries AD respectively. — Wayfarer
But for those who never believed the literal truth of creation myth, the fact that they are *not* literally true is not the devasting blow against religion that Richard Dawkins seems to think — Wayfarer
Creation stories in Hinduism
What accounts of the origins of the universe are found in Hinduism?
In Hinduism the universe is millions of years old. In line with the Hindu belief in
reincarnation
, the universe we live in is not the first or indeed the last universe.
For Hindus the universe was created by Brahma, the creator who made the universe out of himself.
Of course some will see no conflict between evolution and divine creation, but some will do. What is so difficult for me to accept is the pure logical contradiction between the act of divine creation and and all natural creation. Beliefs aside, the practice of reason absolutely demands that such a contradiction be recognized, what you want to do with that later is another matter. — FreeEmotion
Usually, even a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other elements of the world, about the motion and orbit of the stars and even their size and relative positions, about the predictable eclipses of the sun and moon, the cycles of the years and the seasons, about the kinds of animals, shrubs, stones, and so forth, and this knowledge he holds to as being certain from reason and experience.
Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn. The shame is not so much that an ignorant individual is derided, but that people outside the household of faith think our sacred writers held such opinions, and, to the great loss of those for whose salvation we toil, the writers of our Scripture are criticized and rejected as unlearned men. If they find a Christian mistaken in a field which they themselves know well and hear him maintaining his foolish opinions about our books, how are they going to believe those books in matters concerning the resurrection of the dead, the hope of eternal life, and the kingdom of heaven, when they think their pages are full of falsehoods on facts which they themselves have learnt from experience and the light of reason?
Reckless and incompetent expounders of Holy Scripture bring untold trouble and sorrow on their wiser brethren when they are caught in one of their mischievous false opinions and are taken to task by those who are not bound by the authority of our sacred books. For then, to defend their utterly foolish and obviously untrue statements, they will try to call upon Holy Scripture for proof and even recite from memory many passages which they think support their position, although they understand neither what they say nor the things about which they make assertion. — St Augustine, (quoting 1 Tim 1:7, from The Literal Meaning of Genesis).
Excellent question, but I don't think there has to be a 'pure logical contradiction' between creation natural and divine. — Wayfarer
According to the big-bang model, the universe expanded rapidly from a highly compressed primordial state, which resulted in a significant decrease in density and temperature. Soon afterward, the dominance of matter over antimatter (as observed today) may have been established by processes that also predict proton decay. During this stage many types of elementary particles may have been present. After a few seconds, the universe cooled enough to allow the formation of certain nuclei. The theory predicts that definite amounts of hydrogen, helium, and lithium were produced. — Britannica
Why not? How can the existence of the universe from purely natural, non-God causes, be not a contradiction of the creation of the universe from God causes? — FreeEmotion
According to the big-bang model, the universe expanded rapidly from a highly compressed primordial state, which resulted in a significant decrease in density and temperature. Soon afterward, the dominance of matter over antimatter (as observed today) may have been established by processes that also predict proton decay. During this stage many types of elementary particles may have been present. After a few seconds, the universe cooled enough to allow the formation of certain nuclei. The theory predicts that definite amounts of hydrogen, helium, and lithium were produced.
— Britannica
Do you see the word "God" in any of the above description? — FreeEmotion
about the motion and orbit of the stars and even their size and relative positions, about the predictable eclipses of the sun and moon — St Augustine, (quoting 1 Tim 1:7, from The Literal Meaning of Genesis).
Galileo's championing of Copernican heliocentrism (Earth rotating daily and revolving around the Sun) was met with opposition from within the Catholic Church and from some astronomers. The matter was investigated by the Roman Inquisition in 1615, which concluded that heliocentrism was foolish, absurd, and heretical since it contradicted biblical creationism — Wikipedia, Galileo
Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn. — St Augustine, (quoting 1 Tim 1:7, from The Literal Meaning of Genesis).
Creationism
First published Sat Aug 30, 2003; substantive revision Fri Sep 21, 2018
At a broad level, a Creationist is someone who believes in a god who is absolute creator of heaven and earth, out of nothing, by an act of free will. Such a deity is generally thought to be “transcendent” meaning beyond human experience, and constantly involved (‘immanent’) in the creation, ready to intervene as necessary, and without whose constant concern the creation would cease or disappear. Christians, Jews, and Muslims are all Creationists in this sense. Generally they are known as ‘theists,’ distinguishing them from ‘deists,’ that is people who believe that there is a designer who might or might not have created the material on which he (or she or it) is working and who does not interfere once the designing act is finishing. The focus of this discussion is on a narrower sense of Creationism, the sense that one usually finds in popular writings (especially in America today, but expanding world-wide rapidly). Here, Creationism means the taking of the Bible, particularly the early chapters of Genesis, as literally true guides to the history of the universe and to the history of life, including us humans, down here on earth (Numbers 1992). — https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/creationism/
The effects of comfort and standard of living are not to be underestimated. They can make people what some older cultures would consider "shallow" and "vulgar". Some people really, truly, genuinely do not have meaning-of-life problems. For them, eating, drinking, and making merry (even if in moderation) really, truly, genuinely is all the meaning to life there is and all the meaning to life they need. In terms of modern psychology, this is the preferred type of humans. Unfortunately, they cannot teach one how to become that way.If the illusions of religion are put aside, then what constitutes a real solution to the predicaments of human existence, other than comfort and standard of living? — Wayfarer
Bear in mind that within Buddhism, this view that you sketch out above is criticized. In short, by doing certain "Buddhist practices" while being detached from the Buddhist value and belief system, it is argued that one cannot arrive at the same goals as Buddhism proposes.Why would one then need Buddhism as a religion when the praxis of meditation can be detached from it? My point is that there seem to exist an inability to look at many practices in isolation from many different religions. Key point being that the explorations in Buddhist practices do not require the whole religious package of Buddhism. — Christoffer
How on earth could one do that??Just as a prayer in Christianity could be explored without the religious whole.
Indeed, and this is what I'm interested in too.There's very little guidance and philosophies out there about this next step from nihilism toward a sense of meaning and that's what I'm interested in exploring and formulating.
Good for you. I think though there are some unsaids here that are working for you, and that yet need to be verbalized.I truly don't have any beliefs in gods or the supernatural. Yet I feel no nihilism in my bones. I don't act out such nihilism and I instead appreciate and love life. Am I not then a walking contradiction to your point?
I'm sure they are meaningful to those people, but they are not meaningful to me. The problem with the scientific approach is that it seeks to lump everyone into the same category. Just because Dick and Harry had a "profound experience" on LSD, must I do so too, or else think myself defective if I can't?As I've mentioned with LSD, when I've heard people describing their experience and the experience of life after it, that sounds like a profound religious experience, without the need for religious beliefs and fantasies claimed as facts. Why would such induced experience be considered less profound or meaningful to these people?
Look into the experiences, and ignore the people ...Because it's not within the framework of a religion? Or is it just that we've yet to actually looked into such experiences outside of the framework of religious beliefs?
Only religions/spiritualities have the complex metaphysical framework needed to justify and endure a radical curtailing of consumption of material goods. It's not clear that people can change from high-consumption lifestyles to low-consumption lifestyles and consistently persist in them and without feeling deprived or tempted to abandon them, without having a complex metaphysical framework to start from.I see the role of renunciate philosophies as being especially crucial in today's world, because consumption obviously has to be drastically curtailed.
— Wayfarer
I agree, but that doesn't require the baggage of religious beliefs. Why cannot such life-styles and experiences be lived accordingly without having to accept a deity, God, pantheon or made up concepts of existence?
But is that idea of harmony based on some profound insight into the workings of the universe, or is it primarily the result of low technology living at the mercy of nature?e American traditions follow a simple idea of harmony with nature around them. Removing the spiritual and religious claims in their traditions still leaves a practice that embrace our bond to reality and nature for what it is. — Christoffer
Talk about human arrogance!What I see today is this basically appearing in two types. Either a life of religious belief filled with doubt, keeping it hidden from others in order to try and keep it from being exposed to criticism, hidden crosses, hidden shrines, never talking to others about personal faith. Or turning to fundamentalism, shutting out all influences from the surroundings, extremify the bubble, silence anyone or socially excluding anyone who risk installing any kind of doubt, and double down on dogmatic dedication, isolating themselves from the rest of society or join societies in which this fundamentalism is the standard.
How can that hard path not become impossible when the world is constantly infusing doubt on a scale and movement that has never been experienced among religious groups before? — Christoffer
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