I only said I was a theist. A thousand times — Hanover
After he stopped laughing he said that all three are dimensions of God which provide us with different levels of spirituality. Jesus provides redemption and everlasting life and a model of sacrifice; the holy spirit allows us to relate to God's message and communicates it to us; and God is the ineffable creator from which all emanates - including intelligibility, the true, good and beautiful. — Tom Storm
So why not just be a secular humanist, who have a similar goal of creating a better existence for humans on Earth.It's about bringing heaven to earth. And I speak metaphorically, as I describe no physical, tangible heaven. If this sounds like I'm trying to change your mind, I'm not. I couldn't care any less about your soul. I'm just pointing out that your criticisms are simplistic and applicable only to those belief systems you think exist. — Hanover
From an exchange we had months ago, when you declared yourself a theist.Why did you think that? — Hanover
I have serious doubts that an actual Jesus existed, but, to the extent they both died similarly, they both died similarly.
Wow! But I thought you considered yourself a Christian? The clue is in the name!
I assume my assumption on this has been incorrect. So is your theism a personal belief in a god rather than a religious following?
Are you familiar with Joseph Atwill's 'Caesars Messiah' or James Valliant and Warren Fahey's 'Creating Christ?' — Hanover
We have to intellectually understand the benefits and reality of symbiosis before we can put that in our lives. — Athena
Except not jungle-dwelling human societies did live that way. What's recorded in history is conflict between civilizations, which all had a strongly united internal structure - though the co-operation was usually coerced to some extent by an elite. — Vera Mont
What the hell have groupings of elephants, crows, dolphins or cheetahs got to do with that point?
— universeness
The FACT that humans didn't DISCOVER co-operation. And are not particularly good at it in large numbers. — Vera Mont
So out of a planet of 8 billion self-aware, sentient, conscious humans, you have concluded that the utter vastness of the universe with more planets, than there are grains of sand on Earth, can only handle 1% of that (around, 80 million, which is around the current pop of Germany).Human would be able create a better society is 99% of of us were not here. — Vera Mont
There are such wonders in just accepting things as they are and no one seems to even talk in those terms anywhere.
It is also risky to focus the mind's eye on some grand purpose or meaning beyond everything because it loses track of the ball. It makes people apathetic about caring about the things that are right in front of them. Like trying to solve the problems in this world that threaten this world and the well-being of its inhabitants. If people stopped dreaming about some grander purpose, we might just find that we have a purpose in caring for what we can care for, for the sake of us and the world we live in. — Christoffer
Under jungle rules, young females are considered property and part of 'to the victor, the spoils, rule.'
— universeness
In what species? Not elephants, crows, dolphins or or cheetahs. The norm in many human situations today, of course - not so much spoils as commodities. — Vera Mont
What are you typing about? What does that point have to do with my point that some human beings have to stop living their lives and affecting the lives of others so negatively, because, THEY choose to behave like we STILL, ALL, have to live under 'jungle rules.'I don't think our species is in competition, for the credit of which species discovered co-operation!
— universeness
Haven't you noticed the armed conflicts that took out a few million people? Or the ones that are currently taking out hundreds of thousands and might end the whole sheBANG if it gets out of hand? — Vera Mont
Are you suggesting that humans would be able to create a better society, if we lived like insect species such as ants? I value human co-operation over human war but I don't think we are going to create a better future for the human race by emulating ant society or any other insect or animal society I am familiar with.for the credit of which species discovered co-operation!
— universeness
You take credit for something ants perfected 150,000,000 million years ago, and we still haven't managed to get our heads around how it's supposed to work?
There have been more than 200 mass shootings across the US so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive, which defines a mass shooting as an incident in which four or more people are injured or killed. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-41488081
That's back on May 9, I don't know how many since. — Vera Mont
Under jungle rules, young females are considered property and part of 'to the victor, the spoils, rule.'Stop trashing 'jungle rules' - they worked for 300,000,000 years before we bulldozed the jungles. We didn't discover co-operation; social animals predate us by a wide margin — Vera Mont
It is not just about water but people's struggles for their lives and war! — Athena
Somewhat, but what is more important, is the basic understanding that Planet Earth has plenty of water. The rest is just bad behaviour.Have you looked into distillation efforts around the world? — Athena
Another obvious but absolutely great, vital question. MY HONEST answer is to do EXACTLY what we are doing now, 'keep fighting the good fight to make things better.'What we are doing in this world is so different from the possible reality some of us imagine. How do we deal with this? — Athena
War is the survival of the fittest strategy that was an imperative under jungle rules, but we discovered that it's not the only way to survive. We discovered that co-operation and negotiation, CAN produce better results for all stakeholders. But the nefarious want INSTANT gratification and permanent recognition of their superiority under the traditional jungle rules. We continue to struggle against them and I think we have been gaining ground against them for the past 10,000 years.You wrote of possible civilizations that did live in peace without war and that is only sane. War is complete insanity. — Athena
What are the fundamental beliefs that make our lives good? — Athena
What do we want that future race to know so they have the best chance of manifesting a good life for our planet? — Athena
We need a better belief system. Any idea of how to construct that? — Athena
What is a good bias? This question has not been answered in this thread so far and I don't think it ever will be. — Christoffer
Whatever is left of the human race, after the collapse, will struggle on somehow - how depends partly on which of our glorious enterprises brings on the apocalypse. Probably keep killing one another over the dregs of civilization, until there are few enough that they have no choice but co-operate or die. Then they will make do with what's left, and survive - or not. — Vera Mont
We had a German Shepherd a long time ago, who had four pups. One of them died within the first day. We buried it, but she kept digging it up and bringing it to my mother, asking her to revive it. Saddest damn thing you ever saw! — Vera Mont
Some stories are true! Especially ones we have yet to create!Yeah, I already wrote that story. It's a story. — Vera Mont
The criticism I have to positivism is that philosophy needs a level of exploration to function well and the rigid stance in positivism makes it better suited to just be science instead. — Christoffer
show that 'sapience sans sentience' is the (optimal) shape of things to come. — 180 Proof
The heating of oceans and drying up of lakes-reservoirs are strongly correlated. Not "pessimism", my friend, just facts. :mask: — 180 Proof
Nope. Physics, chemistry, geology, biology and meteorology already did that one, and did it admirably well. Farmers and scientists fucked it up, mostly in the service of financial interests. — Vera Mont
I have repeatedly heard distilling water is very expensive. — Athena
It costs a lot of money to build a plant; more to build the pipeline from the coast to the dry areas, plus operating and maintenance costs. — Vera Mont
Why?Also it would overwhelming to depend on it for farming or keeping a forest alive. — Athena
I already ignore the nonsense that IS christianity and all other religions and theosophism, we just need to get the majority of those in power to do the same, and build a global irrigation system, that fully benefits and assists the planets ecosystem and all flora and fauna on it (including humans).Now if we focused on turning the whole planet into an Eden, we might create an amazing reality, but for some reason that just isn't what Christians attempt to do. Maybe they are afraid of offending God by taking over his work? — Athena
as Athena pointed out, that's used just for humans: the wildlife and native vegetation will die. And that will cause more wildfires, which will destroy a lot of the farms you invested in. — Vera Mont
The sad thing is that history is written by authors who normally come from the conquering side.How much do you know of other civilizations? — Athena
Rationalism and Positivism are two approaches in which positivism requires only that which can be observed and measured in such ways, which excludes things like theoretical physics. The problem with positivism is that science is just as much about precise prediction as it is about verifying through tests. Positivism is actually quite bad at science in that regard since almost all scientific methods rely on predictions that are later tested if possible. A positivist would have a hard time accepting Einstein's equations before anything was verified and they would likely oppose quantum mechanics, even when we have invented technology that relies on observations that haven't been verified as theories yet. — Christoffer
.” That’s not to say that getting away from “mere words” — Jamal
So I'd say, that even from a purely scientific perspective, Spinoza's rationalist approach has more practical use and function than positivism. — Christoffer
I only ever watched a handful of B5 episodes back in the day, maybe 1-2 each season; all I remember is being bored by the characters, derivative space operatic metaplot and the cheezy CGI. From what I've read in recent yeara I don't feel I'd missed much. — 180 Proof
I became a binge drinker and seemed to rely on smoking cigarettes to deal with stress.
But these things may have also been counterproductive. I can't judge to what extent but now I don't do either thing and am the least unhappy I have been as an adult. — Andrew4Handel
I agree.I think you can be wrong that life is meaningless or hopeless and therapists should ideally be able to challenge one's thoughts gently. — Andrew4Handel
There is no question, that life can be damn bleak at times and utter despair seems all that is on offer. BUT even in my darkest moments I have experienced, if I just manage to wait a moment or so, 'something inside my head,' offers another 'moment,' a moment of 'less' despair, a flicker that perhaps I could survive. Over time and with a little encouragement, that becomes the reason I always have survived.But you can also be right that life is bleak and has intractable problems but we need to develop coping mechanisms and not punish ourselves I suppose. — Andrew4Handel
Of course I want to.... But I don't have those binoculars that let me mistake wishes for horses. — Vera Mont

Anyway, I don't think of it as a contribution so much as an excuse to skive off work. — Vera Mont
That is from Percile's funeral speech during Athens's war with Sparta. Lincoln repeated it during the civil war. But as many love to point out, Athens had slavery and immigrants did not have citizenship rights and women did not have political power, yet Athens was a democracy, as the US was a democracy when it had slavery and women could not vote. So there is an ideal and a less-than-perfect reality?
And we have a problem coming to an agreement on what that ideal is. — Athena
I don't refute your sources or what they say, I am just complaining, that what they called democratic, stretches the valid use of the label a little to far for me.My information came from the book "Pericles Of Athens And The Birth Of Democracy" by Donald Kagan. — Athena
What do you think was the alternative to not defending Athens from the Persian invasions? It is not being a slave to defend against an invasion. The Athens that became the role model for democracy would not have existed if they had not successfully defended against the Persians. Unlike religion, a democracy is always evolving. This is a good thing and it can be a bad thing because change can result in problems. Change makes things unstable. Forgetting what culture has to do with democracy leaves our democracy undefended. — Athena
If you are going to demand something, it should be education and preparing the young to be good citizens. Without that education, they will not be "democracy as governance of, for and by the people".
We should demand education for democracy and replace the autocratic model of Industry with the democratic model. — Athena
At this time of life, that doesn't amount to much: feed stray cats, grow tomatoes, reduce my carbon footprint and write books.
And fcs, stop blowing on me! — Vera Mont
So total defeat is not ensured. A person CAN defend against 'existential depression,' and experience 'good moments?' Is it possible to increase the number of 'good moments?'changed some of my perspectives and gave me tools to fight. — Andrew4Handel
I suppose because I still have a tiny spark of optimism left: I still have some dim flicker of hope that if we acknowledge the truth of our times, we might still be avert the worst outcomes. It is, admittedly, a very, very small spark. — Vera Mont
On the contrary, I think truth and love played thee most significant role, from the standpoint of the slaves in revolt. Love of freedom, love of justice. The truth (to them at the time) that death is better than slavery, or the truth that risking their own lives to fight against slavery was the right cause to choose.Victories of the way of love and truth is what I questioned, and your response was a bunch of terribly destructive wars, in which neither love nor truth played any significant role. — Vera Mont
All wars are won and lost through anger, violence, hate and weapons. Whether they get bigger and smaller over time doesn't seem to affect the means employed in fighting them. — Vera Mont
Level or impact of atrocity is sometimes a numbers game Vera, you know that.What difference does it how many slaves Rome had ? — Vera Mont
Ecclesiastes 1:9 "What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun." — Vera Mont
That way you can pick out all the cherries from the present and prove to your own satisfaction that they are better cherries than the coconuts of the past were. (and vice versa, as required) — Vera Mont
That's your interpretation of the points I am making to connect the ancient servile wars and the revolutionary wars, civil wars and 2 world wars since? You think my main goal was to impose human emotions such as 'affection' and human traits such as honesty on to weapons that kill people?Affectionate bombs, guillotines and spears; honest land-mines, mustard gas and man-traps won those wars? News to me — Vera Mont
10 million more people were in modern slavery in 2021 compared to 2016 global estimates.
