But you seem to have a very rationalistic/Kantian position with regards to morality. — Agustino
I might as well add that this ultra-rationalism with regards to morality is quite a "modern" invention — Agustino
Is God beyond good and evil? — Agustino
[O]ur modern narrative of nature is of an order shaped by immense ages of monstrous violence: mass extinctions, the cruel profligacy of an algorithmic logic that squanders ten thousand lives to fashion a single durable type, an evolutionary process that advances not despite, but because of, disease, warfare, predation, famine, and so on. And the majestic order thus forged? One of elemental caprice, natural calamity, the mercilessness of chance—injustice thrives, disaster befalls the innocent, and children suffer.
Actually I want to clarify that I wasn't agreeing that you are justified in treating as a propositional claim, only that you could not even be justified in daring to mistakenly think it is, unless you believed you had some understanding of the concept. — John
You started out by saying that the "permanent unchanging self" either exists or doesn't; isn't your treating it as a propositional claim based on your understanding of the "concept"? If you understand the concept then you can explain and critique it, no? If not then I don't see how you can justifiably treat it is a propositional claim in the first place. — John
And if not from God, then where does evil come from? — Agustino
As such, God must be beyond logic and illogic - neither logical, nor illogical. — Agustino
So does he want to determine if a path is better than another without walking it? What did Jesus do, did He say "Let me convince you that I am the Truth and the Way and the Life"? Or did He invite people to see for themselves that He is the Way?
Your foundational assumptions are problematic. You presuppose that it is a priori possible to determine which is the best path without taking it, and that's false - it's also something that can be borne out of a fear of taking the wrong path (although you have to balance that with the fear of not taking any path, which is definitely the wrong path to take — Agustino
You may both be interested to read this. — Agustino
So what do you think about the following? — Agustino
What is "an unchanging permanent self"? Surely you need to know what something is, before you can deny it? — John
Matters of interpretation are properly hermeneutic, not epistemic. — John
But I speculate that he would have chosen Christianity because it was his 'native' tradition; the one within which he experienced his spiritual epiphany and was converted. Then he went back to study Buddhism and Advaitism because he is half-Indian, and he saw those as part of his cultural 'roots'. I speculate that he remained a Christian because he did see it as the highest, and philosophically richest, expression of the truth. I say this because Christianity includes notions of radical freedom, personality and a personal relationship with the Divine, that the other traditions (at least the non-Abrahamic) do not. — John
Pannikar was a Jesuit. They are in a class of their own. — Wayfarer
I would say it is not a propositional claim at all, because such claims are proper only in the empirical sphere. Reading it propositionally; what would you say that it is actually claiming? — John
I don't believe it is an "epistemic" matter at all. — John
I would say that Pannikar examines every way that he can think of of thinking about the divine, and that he avows that ultimately, none of them can possibly be adequate.This is speaking from the point of view of pure rationality, though. If the ways of thinking about the divine are understood as being metaphorical, or even more profoundly as examples of mythoi, moments or movements that shape the spirituality of entire cultures; then there can be no question of comparing them in terms of right and wrong; of 'either/or". — John
for me the fatal shortcoming of your "style of popular perennialism" is that it glosses over the intrinsic and irreconcilable differences between religions, and tendentiously interprets sacred scriptures in ways that are alien to their meaning and which seek, ironically, to undermine the very idea of their being one true authority, or any "genuine higher truth". — John
The problem is that you are thinking of 'anatman' as a propositional claim — John
It is a matter of interpretation, though. — John
they do not — John
You say, without having read it. I can assure you, his book is by no means the output of a lazy person. I didn't finish it, but only because I don't have that much interest in the subject, really. I only have so much to unscramble why Western thinking has culminated in nihilism. As for you, every single source I recommend on this forum, you seem to take pleasure in scorning. Beats me why. — Wayfarer
You are thinking of this in unhelpful 'black and white' terms; it's either "universalism" or "mutually exclusive truth claims". This kind of 'propositional' approach to religions will never open them up for you, and nor will it open you up for them. — John
Also, what makes you think Beebert needs your advice about whether he or she should read the book? — John
The reason I referred to the Gillespie book, is that it analyses the significance of nominalism in the overthrow of scholastic metaphysics, and the many implications of that. The crucial point was that the nominalist vision of God was such that God was not even constrained by logic - He could completely subvert logic if he so choose. God is utterly omnipotent, omniscient, and completely unknowable.
Whereas, in the Scholastic philosophy, God was in some sense rational, even if also beyond rationality. (I might not be putting that well, but it's an argument that Gillespie takes an entire book to develop and it is a very complex issue.) — Wayfarer
Another book I have partially completed about a similar topic is Brad S Gregory's 'The Unintended Reformation' — Wayfarer
If the truth isn't communicable, then what is Christ's message? If the truth can't be communicated, even by God, then...? — Heister Eggcart
I don't think capital T Truth is capable of being exhaustively expressed as a certainty through the use of language. I also don't think it can be expressed in any other way, either. — Heister Eggcart
If you take away verbal communication, do you really think that the complexities of, let's say in this case Christian theology, could be expressed in an accessible, understandable, and intelligible way? — Heister Eggcart
I don't think God would even think so, seeing as he sent a man in Jesus to the world in order to speak the good news, with every Christian afterward also speaking that very same good news. — Heister Eggcart
My point is that if it's logically impossible for there to exist some agent before that agent's existence, then it is equally illogical to suggest that some agent exists after said agent's existence already ceases to be. If you retort with, "one has no knowledge of whether or not one's agent ceases to exist after death!" Well, neither do you have knowledge of whether "you" had agency, or being, before you existed, either, as such can't be verified either. Yet, it would seem that agency after, but not before, is somehow more plausible, why? — Heister Eggcart
Faith is dependent on will & personal experience & revelation — Agustino
I'm not sure I would affirm such a cataphatic statement about God — Agustino
that presupposes for example that God has a nature, just like created things do — Agustino
The categories of thought that apply to the phenomenon don't apply to the noumenon... — Agustino
Sure but that's because God is the standard of good itself. — Agustino
Vastly more progress has been made since then than the rest of history. — daldai
Your notions of right and wrong are first of all corrupted by original sin, so you do not see very clearly. — Agustino
Let me ask you - is God free? — Agustino
No as in God wouldn't do wrong. What is wrong for you to do isn't necessarily wrong for God to do — Agustino
Nope. — Agustino
The more truth you know, the less meaning your life has. — daldai
Well, that might have been true 2,400 years ago but with all the knowledge science has given us I now claim to know everything - in the wide sense of course. What I mean is that I can now close my eyes and see, generally, how everything fits together from a tiny fraction of a second after the big bang right up to now and, even in this age of specialization, I know I can't be the only one - that really would be absurd. — daldai
Nope. Creator has different rights than creatures. — Agustino