religion is built into our preprogrammed biological firmware, — Tarskian
Quran 30:30
Is it necessarily instilled in us biologically? Or is that a favored interpretation because your's is currently a physicalist view?
Could it have been instilled in each human soul; this innate desire for religion? — ENOAH
Biology is a natural technology — Tarskian
Assuming you don't mean "firmware" literally; sticking to the metaphor, what is the soul? Does it not also code the hardware so that it operated effectively? Is the soul, software? The operating system for the software? — ENOAH
Biology operates through mechanisms and principles that are not designed or created by humans, whereas technology is inherently a product of human creativity and engineering. — Wayfarer
But they’re not designed - not unless you’re defending an intelligent designer. Are you? — Wayfarer
So let’s get clear on what you mean by ‘designed’. Where do you think your idea fits into that overall set of ideas, or does it not? — Wayfarer
John von Neumann's universal constructor is a self-replicating machine in a cellular automaton (CA) environment. It was designed in the 1940s, without the use of a computer. The fundamental details of the machine were published in von Neumann's book Theory of Self-Reproducing Automata, completed in 1966 by Arthur W. Burks after von Neumann's death.[2] It is regarded as foundational for automata theory, complex systems, and artificial life.[3][4] Indeed, Nobel Laureate Sydney Brenner considered Von Neumann's work on self-reproducing automata (together with Turing's work on computing machines) central to biological theory as well, allowing us to "discipline our thoughts about machines, both natural and artificial."
I look at biology as a technology that we mostly fail to reverse engineer, if only, because we do not have access to its design documents. — Tarskian
Whenever a behavior is universal throughout history and throughout the world, it can only be biological. Otherwise, there would be or have been numerous societies in the past and/or throughout the world that did not have it. — Tarskian
There obviously many features of h.sapiens that are biological in origin - practically everything about human physiology and anatomy can be understood through the lens of evolutionary biology. — Wayfarer
But what about the religious experience, in particular, can be understood through that perspective? — Wayfarer
Or admits to having no access via [that uniquely human form of] existence, and so, gets on with the business of existence, knowing (unlike postivists) that it's just business. — ENOAH
So well said! — ENOAH
Do you think he maintained focus on knowing, right through to the end; or, did he silence the knowing, the pride that would follow, and the fear which the former arises to overcome. Did he make the ultimate sactifice; one stripped of all construction, loosened from the (safety) net of becoming; a sacrifice of being?
If the former, "one" remains "I" even in its noblest sacrifice.
If the latter, one truly is the body being and ceasing to be. — ENOAH
WTF? I'm intrigued. Thanks! — ENOAH
You know, that might be a "crack" a glitch in the mechanics where aware-ing might find "it's [organic] self." I've never tried.
But you must agree. Instantly "thoughts" flood the aware-ing, even in its "effort" (which habitually employs thought). — ENOAH
This comes up consistently. Does this answer, if any necessary premises are accepted, address it? Use rock because cup has the added complexity of being a cultural construct.
In nature without language eyes see rock and brain process it bt sending signals to trigger an appropriate feeling, drive, action, if any. The "conversion" of the rock into the object, "the rock" doesn't take place. So that your question, "how rock there brain here" does not even come up.
In world of human mind, eyes see rock, a conversion into language autonomously takes place, drives feelings actions, are displaced/determined by those constructions. Now eyes "see" "rock — ENOAH
Husserl's transcendental contradictorily involves the Ego. It is, by definition, not elevated. — ENOAH
For me it is simpler. The elevated reality where humans are concerned, belongs to being [that organic being]. All else is talk. — ENOAH
I don't think it possible to go back to business, — Constance
something there originally that made their thinking compelling. — Constance
thin line between existential enlightenment and schizoid personality, — Constance
One direction the OP takes us is toward the self, the ontology of the self. This is value-in-being. — Constance
With all due humility and modesty, we are applying western analysis to the concept of no-self; not to the level of technical precision you might prefer, but still; despite phenomenology, mahayana is permeat.I have argued that the notion of "no self" is not taken up very analytically in the East. — Constance
Heidegger called gelassenheit, his meditative thinking that does not dogmatically seize hold of the world but yields to its possibilities of disclosure. — Constance
Oh yah. That's perfect!It is our own finitude that is somehow lost, but lost IN that very finitude — Constance
It is only by disclosing transcendental intersubjectivity (even if only in its protomodal form) that constitutive regressive questions, which in every instance
proceed from the construct of acceptedness which is "the phenomenon of the world," achieve the rank that makes possible adequate understanding of the intersubjective world as the correlate of a transcendentally communicating constitution — Constance
Ok, right. Reduction, as in, can I put it this way, "trace signifiers down to the root in "nature" for the first signifier"?Fink is no mystic. He is a very rigorous intellectual, but his thoughts attempt to find where in the already given world transcendental impositions have their ground — Constance
No disagreement here! I totally agree. Just as, and I say this in support of your point, not as a "tit for tat"All of the "metaphysics" in the ancient Eastern texts are reducible to phenomenology, whether it is in Pali or Sanskrit. How can I say this so emphatically? — Constance
I totally agree again. I'm no Derrida scholar, but having actually enjoyed reading Grammatology (enjoyed as cf to Hegel or Lacan) same has built Foundations in my mind.one has to read Derrida: — Constance
Consider that I am the scientist that is asking the simple question about a relation between two objects, a brain and a fence post. One has to isolate the condition and study it as it appears, and nothing else. — Constance
The answer to this question is that everything we experience is interpretatively received. The "good" as Wittgenstein called it does not wear its interpretation on its sleeve in the entanglements of familiar affairs.
Such is the problem of the "simplicity" of analysis-free living. — Constance
I thoughts on the whole matter of religion is varied and widespread. Could you perhaps give me a summation what has happened over the 9 pages as I am late to the party.
I think it could be best to start by looking at differing cosmological perspectives both now and historically, then extrapolating further back into prehistory.
I think Mircea Eliade did some stellar scholarship on religions and religiosity in general. — I like sushi
Do you believe we need language to think? As in this here written language? — I like sushi
It is trivially easy to deprave and degenerate humans away from their innate biological firmware. There is a lot of power to be had in doing so.
Therefore, the need eventually arose for religious scripture to appear which contains a copy in human language of the biologically preprogrammed rules that humans should not break and that government should never overrule. That is why during his investiture ceremony the new king was always forced to kneel to religion in order to be crowned. He had to acknowledge the supremacy of God's law.
If there are no tensions or even conflict between the political overlord and religion, then it is not a true religion. The more the political overlord complains about a particular religion, the more it is doing its main job, which is to constrain the political overlord, and therefore the more truthful it is. If religion is never an impediment to the expansion of state power, then it is a false religion. — Tarskian
But religion is certainly not about this. It is about ethics. What is ethics? — Constance
What are sound ethics? — Tarskian
One may experience something so alien to common sense and deeply profound that it requires metaphysics to give an account of it, but to make the claim that the world as it is in all its mundanity itself possesses the basis for religious possibility, this is the idea here; that in the common lies the uncommon metaethical foundation for ethics and religion. — Constance
Here, I want to show that this other world really is this one. — Constance
So here is a question that lies at the center of the idea of the OP: what if ethics were apodictic, like logic? This is what you could call an apriori question, looking into the essence of what is there in the world and determining what must be the case given what is the case. Logic reveals apodicticity, or an emphatic or unyielding nature. Entirely intellectually coercive. I claim that ethics has this at its core. — Constance
Of course, this is right. It ALWAYS depends on the flexibility of the words we are using. When you start the car in the morning, are you "thinking" about starting the car, or is it just rote action? But you certainly CAN think about it. I think when a person enters an environment of familiarity, like a classroom or someone's kitchen, there is, implicit in all one sees, the discursive possibility that lies "at the ready," as when one asks me suddenly, doesn't that chef's knife look like what you have at home? I see it, and language is there, "ready to hand". For us, not cows and goats, but for us, there is language everywhere and in everything. — Constance
If we one day reach trans-humanism — SpaceDweller
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