If God dies to give his merits in atonement for sin, that is unrighteous — Gregory
The idea of Jahweh being dependent on humanity for his own development leads to the question: if God is dependent on human beings is God simply a product of the human mind? — Jack Cummins
However, he does go on to query if there is some underlying force involved in the drama between God and humanity as revealed in the drama between Job and Jahweh, by saying, ' the miracle of reflecting consciousness is so great that one cannot help suspecting an element of meaning to be concealed somewhere within all the biological turmoil.' — Jack Cummins
I have also found a quote in 'Answer to Job' which suggests that Jahweh changed as a result of interaction with Job. He argued that Jahweh 'raises himself above his earlier primitive level of consciousness by indirectly acknowledging that Job is morally superior to him and that therefore he has to catch up and become human himself' — Jack Cummins
I'm not sure it matters much who venerates him. The question is: Are Jung's ideas more than one man's subjective experiment? The fact that people get things from Jung does not shift his status. Plenty of dodgy ideas have devotees. The fact that Jung is seen as a scientist who flirted with occult and religious matters makes him a kind of hero amongst the Theosophy set. The fact he wrote about symbolism and dreams and archetypes makes him attractive to a very broad cohort. — Tom Storm
I am thinking that if one wishes to read Jung's understanding of the development of the ideas of God in line with a Christian perspective, he is seeing the difference from the God-image from the Old Testament to that in the New Testament, it would not mean that God is changing. That is consistent with his emphasis on the inner realisation of God, as the God-image. So, as far as I can see, Jung's understanding of God could be seen as reductive, or in line with one's choice to fit with the possibility of a belief in God, if one chose to. He simply doesn't go as far as to say that the image of God points to the existence of God. That is where he limits his perspective to a psychological level. — Jack Cummins
From my reading of Jung, there seems to be a fair amount of ambiguity ranging from that which could be seen as supportive of traditional religious experience and that which is more in line with science. — Jack Cummins
In other words, he was not actually claiming that God exists. He was aware of a force which he felt able to call God but he was unable to say whether this force represented the reality of God beyond his own consciousness. — Jack Cummins
Although the existence of an instinctual pattern in human biology is probable, it seems very difficult to prove the existence of distinct types empirically. For the organ with which we might apprehend them - consciousness - is not only itself a transformation of the original instinctual image, but also is its transformer. It is therefore not surprising that human mind finds itself it impossible to specify precise types for man similar to those we know in the animal kingdom. I must confess that I can see no direct way to solve this problem. And yet I have succeeded, or so I believe, in finding at least an indirect way of approach to the instinctual image. — Translated by R.F.C. Hull. paragraph 399
Do you have a feel for what this means? Does "numinous pervasion" mean experience of the Tao? What does "separate the adept from the Dao as Source" mean? — T Clark
I don’t think they’re necessarily ‘hidden from themselves’. I think it’s that intentionality doesn’t collapse into intended action for them but rather remains wave-like. It isn’t about their own intentions, but about the flow of energy - the distribution of attention and effort as far as their awareness of it extends into the world. Perhaps it isn’t that their intentions are hidden, but that they comprise only one facet of this more complex flow of energy. — Possibility
I am taking time out to read this:
https://terebess.hu/english/handbooks.pdf — Amity
I don't see any way to avoid understanding that the intention of Lao Tzu is as you describe — T Clark
I don't really think he had any intention at all. In order to act without acting you have to intend without intending. — T Clark
Can you cite the passages that call for murder of Jews? That work was clearly a hysterical attempt to unite a nation and many people didn't take everything in it literally. — Gregory
To me equally plain was the significance of physical terrorism toward the individual and toward the masses. Here too was exact calculation of psychological effect.
Terrorism on the job, in the factory , in the meeting hall and at mass demonstrations will always be successful unless equal terrorism opposes it.
Then indeed, the party screams bloody murder, and - old despiser of state authority that it is - yells for help from that quarter, in most cases only to gain its end after all in the general confusion. That is to say, it finds some jackass of a high official who, in the silly hope of making the dreaded enemy perhaps more kindly disposed some day, helps to break down the adversary of this universal pestilence.
The impression of such a success on the great man of both adherents and and antagonists can be be realized only by a man who knows the soul of a people not from books but from life. While its partisans regard it as triumph of right for their cause, the beaten opponent usually despairs of any success for any future resistance.
The better I learned to know the methods of physical terrorism in particular the more did I beg the pardon of the hundreds and thousands who succumbed to it.
That is the thing for which I am most profoundly grateful to that period of suffering; it alone gave me back by my people, and I learned to distinguish the victims from the deceivers. — Hitler, published by Stackpole
Whether race is truly a biological thing or not does not change the history and psychology of it — Gregory
There was certainly some seriously evil malice behind the Holocaust, but this obsession with trying to figure out who was to blame where and when is just not healthy and distracts us from the seeing others evils in proportion — Gregory
Lastly, the majority of Germans didn't even know about the concentration camps until after the war — Gregory
What Husserl is doing here is showing that for each person, their participation in interpersonal activities
and consequentially objective meanings is not simply an paring of you and me to make a we, but a ‘we’ from
each person’s own interpretative vantage. — Joshs
“ Can we be satisfied simply with the notion that human beings are subjects for the world (the world which for consciousness is their world) and at the same time are objects in this world? — Joshs