You said my post had defects, but you don't tell me what they are! — Thorongil
1) Is there any truth in religion?
2) Is any religion true?
The perennialist is someone who answers the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative. — Thorongil
But can't the same be said about you? Can't it also be said that your own commitments with regards to this come out of your politics? I mean I've been asking you for why you think your position is true, and you haven't yet given one single reason. Instead you tell me about a genealogy of you and your family, how you live in a Christian household, etc. but that's not what I'm asking at all :s ...But I think it unnerves the authoritarian personality, because of the difficulty of dealing with multivalence and the apparent contradictions between traditions. They want clear answers, hence their appeal to the One True Faith. I think that comes out in their politics also. — Wayfarer
I'm rather interested to know if you ever considered that truth may be a "one true faith" kind of truth, and if so, why did you rationally - and not emotionally or based on considerations of usefulness - reject that idea? — Agustino
Would you say that you were more like a progressive or a liberal when you were young and have become more socially conservative over time as you aged then? Or did you lean towards social conservative from youth, apart from being "on the left" religiously?Over my teenage years -this is the sixties, remember - there was the whole Woodstock thing, the hippies, Vietnam protests - I participated - and so on. I got high with a little help from my friends. I wasn't the least bit interested in religion, but I sure was interested in enlightenment. I had glimpses of the clear light, I thought, hey there's something here that none of 'the straights' understand. This is why they're, like, f**** up the world with nuclear arms and so on. — Wayfarer
Why do you think Christian history being bloody would preclude Christianity being true? And I'm not even claiming Christianity is true here, for the sakes of this discussion, any other religion in a exclusivist sense could be the true religion. In other words I don't see the relationship between a religion having a bloody history and the religion being false, or not the only (or rather highest expression of) truth.One question I would ask is, if it were, why is Christian history so bloody? — Wayfarer
It's too vague to agree or disagree with. It could be interpreted in a variety of ways. Some of these interpretations I would agree with, others I would disagree."Justice. To be ever ready to admit that another person is something quite different from what we read when he is there (or when we think about him). Or rather, to read in him that he is certainly something different, perhaps something completely different from what we read in him.
Every being cries out silently to be read differently." — Beebert
Yes, I encountered this one before. I agree, Christ is both."It seemed to me certain, and I still think so today, that one can never wrestle enough with God if one does so out of pure regard for the truth. Christ likes us to prefer truth to him because, before being Christ, he is truth. If one turns aside from him to go toward the truth, one will not go far before falling into his arms." — Beebert
You are trying to pretend that I agree with you that nothing follows from perennialism. I'm telling you that your query makes no sense at all. — charleton
"Perenialism" and any other set of -isms are not the sort of thing from which a description or exposition of which "LEADS TO", or has things that follow from — charleton
Now, what follows from perennialism? I answer: nothing. — Thorongil
This is a philosophy forum. There are many Christian theology forums out there. — Wayfarer
Huston Smith, whom I mentioned, was a living refutation of this assertion. He was born of Methodist missionary parents in China, and maintained a lifelong Christian faith, whilst also being educated in, and practicing, Sufism, Advaita Vedanta and Zen Buddhism. — Wayfarer
This doesn't make him a perennialist. It makes him a Methodist who dabbles in other religious practices. In other words, as a Methodist, he believes in the distinctive truth claims of Christianity. — Thorongil
Apart from my last post which he has not addressed, it seems that he has just taken some of his personal impressions to be the truth and that's that, never really thought if it could be otherwise. — Agustino
Would you say that you were more like a progressive or a liberal when you were young and have become more socially conservative over time as you aged then? Or did you lean towards social conservative from youth, apart from being "on the left" religiously? — Agustino
I also asked him several questions that he hasn't responded to at all. — Thorongil
Well, sorry, I didn't mean to be condescending, I just honestly said what you answer sounded like to me...How very condescending. — Wayfarer
Yes but notice that again this isn't what I asked. I asked you if your views - these views that you're telling me about now including the social conservatism - were different when you were young than they are now when you are presumably older? In other words, did you change your views over time, or were you always pretty much holding these views?My political views tend towards what in the US would be democrat with respect to health, education, taxation and financial services regulation, but I am socially conservative. Small-l liberal, would probably be close to the mark. — Wayfarer
My position is that perennialism, irrespective of whether it's true or not, is a fruitless position to hold. That is to say, it has no implications with respect to the life, and its quality, one leads. Before I explain further, let me try and say what I mean by perennialism. Consider the following two questions:
1) Is there any truth in religion?
2) Is any religion true?
The perennialist is someone who answers the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative. Religions glimpse a single truth exclusive to none of them. They each merely point to this truth with words like God, Brahman, Nirvana, Tao, etc. — Thorongil
So if Huston Smith, who wrote a best-selling book called The Religions of Man, which is still taught throughout the University system, is not 'a perennialist', then who is? — Wayfarer
Perhaps there are no 'perennialists', and the entire thread is devoted to attacking a straw man. — Wayfarer
I had thought that the OP was a criticism of the idea that there are universal truths that different religions embody in different ways. If it's not, perhaps you could illustrate your point with respect to who you think represents this purportedly 'meaningless perennialism'. — Wayfarer
I literally just gave you an example. — Thorongil
In any event, you have consistently ignored most of what I have said and asked you, so you're really not in any position to make sarcastic quips. — Thorongil
The point with your criticism of me with regards to pluralism is that you deny the triumph of truth. You don't seem to understand that there is a relationship between truth and authority - in that truth is authoritative. If truth is no longer authoritative, then we end up in a post-truth world, and I think we have actually been in a post-truth world for a very long time - largely because of people like you, I would add. When you irrationally undermine authority and 'triumphalism' then you also undermine truth, for how can truth exist if it is not authoritative? Is it not its authority that guarantees its truth so to speak? Its unavoidableness? It is the authority (its unavoidableness) of the law of gravity that guarantees its truth. — Agustino
So, when I read it, I took it as a criticism of the approach I generally take on the Forum — Wayfarer
But anyway, if you're criticizing a kind of non-committed syncretism, with bits taken from here and there, and no real commitment, then I agree with that — Wayfarer
The question then is as to what one should be committed to. I would say that one should be committed to attempting to follow, to live in accordance with, what one understands and believes to be the most authentic, honest, compassionate, loving impulses that one can find in oneself, and the ideas that best support those. And that does not necessarily mean abandoning an eclectic tendency when it comes to religious/ spiritual ideas or a commitment to any particular religion or to any sect of any religion. — Janus
From the Dhammapada verse on 'Old Age':
147. Behold this body — a painted image, a mass of heaped up sores, infirm, full of hankering — of which nothing is lasting or stable!
148. Fully worn out is this body, a nest of disease, and fragile. This foul mass breaks up, for death is the end of life.
149. These dove-colored bones are like gourds that lie scattered about in autumn. Having seen them, how can one seek delight?
150. This city (body) is built of bones, plastered with flesh and blood; within are decay and death, pride and jealousy.
151. Even gorgeous royal chariots wear out, and indeed this body too wears out. But the Dhamma of the Good does not age; thus the Good make it known to the good.
From the 'Sermon on the Mount':
"Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
The spiritual life is the search for what is beyond birth, death and decay; that is 'what your heart should treasure'. It's no use asking whether anything of that nature exists, from a hypothetical or lounge-chair perspective; you have to engage yourself in the quest for it; that is what it takes to ask the question.
It is a question you ask with your life. — Wayfarer
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