.. no, all this time I thought you were discussing the difference between mind and soul.So all along you actually agree that the mind is immaterial?!!
Did you not notice that I was arguing for precisely that thesis? So why are you telling me I'm wrong, — Bartricks
Can you show me that? I think you probably have misread me, and I would like to clarify my wording.You've just said that the brain can be divided and that the brain can't be divided in the same sentence. — Bartricks
This one:What question? I am finding you extremely difficult to understand. — Bartricks
.. if you just answer that question, it will lead to the next, and so on. I will lead you to see the problem.You say that a brain can be divided by mere fact that if you cut a piece off it, then it has been divided. The physical brain that was once one piece, now exists as two pieces. But, only one of those pieces is still functioning as a living brain .. what has happened to the other piece? — Serving Zion
all extended objects - such as my brain - can be divided — Bartricks
But I would use the word 'mind' to denote the object, whatever it may be, that has conscious states — Bartricks
You still need to understand the nature of God from the Christian perspective. God is spirit. (John 4:24)A second class and immoral solution to a self-created problem.
A human man would do the opposite and step up himself instead of sending a son to die.
Right? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
This shows that you have gone to quite an extent to oppose me. I understand morality as "do unto others as you would have them do to you". So, for example, if you are a parent and you know that the child doesn't understand how dangerous the road is, would you say it is immoral to warn them to not go there?What is bad about following an immoral command to stay stupid and too dumb to even know they were naked. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
How does it happen that you don't see it? 1 Corinthians 13 is a popular definition of love, including:Love is not a genocidal god and to say that Yahweh knows how to love is not demonstrated. The opposite is in fact shown. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That's a strawman fallacy. There is no indication that mankind's evolution would have stopped if they had have not brought forth sin. In fact, believers have faith because of the hope in the truth to the contrary (Genesis 3:22, Revelation 2:7, Romans 8:21, 1 Corinthians 2:9).It certainly does if you can see that little bit of evil as compared to the real evil that would be if man stopped his evolution. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I don't live that way though, and the world wasn't like that to begin with (Genesis 2:16, Genesis 13:8-9, Matthew 5:38-48). That way is the way of the world that we become when we choose to do and defend sin (Genesis 3:19, John 8:44, James 1:14-15, 2 Peter 2:1-3, Matthew 12:43-45).We must compete to survive and thrive and that competition is the cause of all human against human evil. It creates a victim or loser to the competition. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Well, it is simply my vocabulary :) :up:It's what it all boils down to. — Amity
Tone changed, that's for sure! (Much as yours did to me after my response to your first post).The tone changed when he viewed me as a potential 'new friend' — Amity
By nature they tend to believe what their book says and then try to rationalise it, instead of examining whether they understand it well, and then whether it seems true and insightful. They tend to be irrational in such prejudice, and equally ignorant in dismissing the books of other book people if they think their identity is not aligned. You can find people of that character in all religions and the same character in non-religious people too. I say it is idolatry because they do not follow the truth. It is prejudice, predisposed ignorance.Which group of people do have in mind when you talk of 'book-idolising' ? — Amity
I say it is intellectual dishonesty, because in order to believe what we read without wrestling it, when the belief is wrong, one needs to suppress the spirit of truth that internally is pleading for us to question the belief. For example, it happens a lot, when a Christian is new they might ask a question that no one in their church can answer. So they just don't understand. Then, somebody might suggest that it is better to believe it than to doubt the Word of God. So they would concede because they don't want the church to think that they don't believe the Word of God. It's a type of emotional blackmail, but there's other examples too. When someone believes that homosexuality is sin because the bible says so, but they don't understand why, that's what they are doing. Prejudiced beliefs. Parrots. It is intellectually dishonest because in their greed to believe, they need to suppress that question within that says "why?". Then, in order to justify their belief when that question comes from outside them, they need to generate an answer.What do you mean by 'intellectual dishonesty'. Please give an example. — Amity
Book people believe that the book is the authoritative declaration of God, and that salvation depends upon obedience to what God says. So it naturally seems like betrayal and forfeiture of that salvation if they begin arguing with what they suppose God has said in the book.Why would you believe that there is a fear of loss of salvation ? — Amity
It goes with the territory, that the type of book idolizing person I described necessarily believes that the book is the authoritative teaching of God.Why would you think that they might believe in any kind of God character, even if He is interpreted as being rational and capable of being reasoned with ? — Amity
What I offer as honest discussion you dismiss as "calculated". — Fooloso4
You seem to have not thought any of this through since you keep changing position. — Fooloso4
At first, it didn't seem to have anything particularly new for me, so I wasn't really compelled to comment on it. But as you can see, I did refer to the Charlie Brown example a few times, and that evolved into an understanding that some rhetorical questions in fact are not valid (because the speaker's expected conclusion contains an element of fallacy). So it is good that I can report to you now, that you may be encouraged to know that you have brought forth one of the most valuable facts I have at the present time.What did you think of the content regarding 'the rhetorical question' ? Did it lead to an improved understanding? — Amity
No, humble service to me!Humble service to who are what? God? The truth? — Fooloso4
No you read me wrong. You asked if a carefully constructed rhetorical question might help, to which I advised you to not be so calculative but rather let the truth manifest it's own conviction.What I offer as honest discussion you dismiss as "calculated". — Fooloso4
Did you read the background to that observation? It shows that a rhetorical question is only effective if the answer to the question supports the speaker's point. In order for a rhetorical question to be effective, any valid answer given to the question must be consistent with the single conclusion that the speaker is drawing by putting the question in the given context. Therefore, it is robust.Why must a truly rhetorical question must lead to a single robust conclusion? — Fooloso4
It is too early for me to know. I think that my answer to it has a potential to challenge the "single robust conclusion" that you were expecting to find, that is "it doesn't" (which is yet possible, if you can lead me to see it).Is this a rhetorical question? — Fooloso4
Hmmm, it looks to me that you have answered the question. If a hearer doesn't agree that the speaker's conclusion is necessarily true for the question, then the speaker's point has become discredited. Therefore it fails to be a robust statement, and is a failure in communication so far as a speaker's objective is to effectively convey knowledge.What is the apodictic connection between a truly rhetorical question and the questioner's expectation? It may be that the "single robust conclusion" one who is asked the question might reach is that the questioner is misguided, and it is likely that this will not agree with the questioner's expectation. — Fooloso4
Yes, they appear to be rhetorical questions. I have already conceded that rhetorical questions are not slang, and are in fact valid constructs of language (albeit, they do carry risk by inviting a reply, even if they might ultimately be found robust after investigation).
In Genesis 3 God asks Adam and Eve a series of questions: “Where are you?”, “Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten from the tree that I commanded you not to eat from?”, “What is this you have done?” (3:9-13)
Are these rhetorical questions, iow, "slang"? — Fooloso4
Not at all. In fact, a rhetorical question is not a misuse of language at all, because even if the answer is given, it produces the intended statement:Was God misusing language? — Fooloso4
a well-presented rhetorical question can have more impact than a plain statement — Serving Zion
No, and the purpose appears to be bringing conviction to them for their ignorance of those things.
Was God ignorant of where they are and what they did? — Fooloso4
It is true to say that they might have given any number of answers, but it also is true to say that there was a single robust conclusion regardless of the answer they might give:Note their responses do not lead to a single robust conclusion. — Fooloso4
I would advise to not take such a calculated approach, rather in humble service, allow the truth to manifest by purely honest discussion. James has observed that the "earthly, sensual, demonic wisdom is selfish and full of jealousy, but the wisdom that is from above is pure, peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy, impartial, not hypocritical". But yeah, you can see an evolution of thought through this thread that demonstrates a tendency to cut loose the wrong when the right comes to light.Seeking out what is right and knowing what is right are not the same. What you cling to may not be right even though such doubt may compel you to cling to it even more. Is it possible a well phrased rhetorical question will help loosen your grip? Or is that the thing you want most to guard against? — Fooloso4
I don't believe I was wrong to assume so. It was the obvious explanation for why you would object to the action of referencing rather than asking for an explanation.You wrongly assumed I did not Google the reference. — Amity
True enough, yet I do understand the internal pressures that impede us from going where others desire to lead us. I have years of experience in these matters. Even when I provide links, there are some people who, being prejudiced against the value of scripture, will simply not click it. For your information, I once was a person who, despite others copy/pasting right into the page for me, would not even look at it - with as much skill as I am able to read a newspaper without seeing the advertisements. So it equips me with experience to understand how such behaviours, regrettable though they may be, in fact can and do occur.It takes no real effort, even if there is not a natural interest. — Amity
Speculative reasoning. Let me know if you need more information to help with that.Or perhaps this was a 'wrong assumption' which was intentionally placed and carefully played. — Amity
You have a predisposition to oppose the use of scripture, because you think it is "preachy" and that appears to be a despicable practice in your opinion.What 'internal pressures' did you think you understood as being a block to any effort ? — Amity
Alright. Well, as I said, make of it what you will. I had remembered that scripture because it shows God invites reasoning and that is contrary to the spirit that produces views such as what I was addressing on Sunday, and that interprets questions as having rhetorical value without first answering the question. I thought you might rather benefit by that perspective.It is easy to find Isaiah 1:18 or any scriptural reference. Not so easy to see the relevance here. — Amity
I think you're making too much out of this, — T Clark
I'd rephrase that then, to be more generally accurate. A question is, by nature, asking for assistance to find an answer. In the example you gave of Shakespeare, "How do I love thee?", he is searching to understand something, and though not inviting the response of the one whom he is addressing, it fits well with observations about @fresco's idea:A question, you say, is by nautre and invitation for the other person to speak. Well, not always. — Coben
From the pov of 'the committee nature of self', such questions are aspects of internal dialogue. — fresco
he is sharing an insight into the nature of deliberations — Serving Zion
Yes, I have a subtle sense of humour ;)Well, on the scale of stupidity, from Kanye to Einstein, I would give it a stupidity rating of... oh, wait, that was a rhetorical question. I see what you did there. — S
That is exactly why I said Bravo!You make wrong assumptions. Bravo ! — Amity
It is when you say "It's cool that it sounds like a question, but it's not.", that you appear to be saying that though being framed as a question, the expectation is that it does not invite the hearer to respond. That is a most common use of rhetorical questions.I don't know where you found anything in my post that says you can't challenge the use of rhetorical questions. — Coben
Yes, that is the problem, essentially. A civilised dialogue provides turns for each party to speak. A question is, by nature, an invitation for the other party to speak. But a rhetorical question does not intend to provide that invitation, because as you have said, it is not a question, it is a statement.If you think disagreement means you the other person thinks you can't challenge a belief or opinion they have, you are going to feel that people are trying to control you all the time. — Coben
Evidently! :ok: That is why I say that rhetorical questions are risky, if the speaker's intention is to preach rather than to teach.However, it is not always straightforward - depending on who is asked and where the answers come from. — Amity
Bravo! (I shall take on board to at least generate a link in future, if it cannot be quoted. I understand the internal pressures that prevent one going to that effort when they have not a natural interest).Referencing scripture as a response - how helpful is that ? — Amity
Ok, nevermind what that sounds like then. Make of it what you will :)Sounds somewhat preachy. — Amity
Yes, at this time, that is true. I only remember the topic at large.So - are you saying you can't remember the point ? — Amity
I am sorry, it just is not possible to furnish those details to you. It really does evade me at this time.While it is not necessary to explain, it might help to put your question in context.
What were the differences between you in 'handling the scripture as intended' ? — Amity
Rich words! .. I certainly did not intend to do that. I chose to respond only to what was necessary.However, all of this is a distraction from the rest of my post. — Amity
It has already been covered in prior material on this thread.What did you think of the content regarding 'the rhetorical question' ? — Amity
Do you understand why you are asking this question?Did it lead to an improved understanding? — Amity
Yes, I did say it in passing, but also yes I did have a particular point to make (that was quite a bit larger). She had quoted the scripture and I said "that's not just a rhetorical question, you know" .. so I was saying that she was not handling the scripture as it is intended, by using a question that invites an answer as though it should not be "reasoned with" (Isaiah 1:18). But while I could remember the details of the conversation yesterday, today it has slipped my mind. I just trust that if it becomes necessary to explain, those details will come back to me, because it is certainly in there but there seems to be something blocking it :)Are you sure you said it 'in passing' ? It sounds like you had a point to make about a particular passage but didn't want to, or couldn't, spend too much time on it. Can you remember the piece ? — Amity
Charlie Brown rhetorically: ' Who's to say what is right and wrong here?'
Lucy responds: 'I will'. — Amity
Well, it is only a part of language that happens to be in discussion here today. There are more important considerations to functional communication, than the proper use of language.Languge is for us and we get to use it how we collectively like and even, often, how we individually like. It's cool that it sounds like a question, but it's not. That is making the point in a different way that via statements, since it is, essentially a statemen in question form. There is no one to give us a ticket for breaking a supposed rule. We get to play with the forms we have created and it's great we do. If some guy kept trying rhetorical questions and did them clearly, but no one understood, well, that would be too bad. But we generally do understand and so it's fine. It's our language. — Coben
I had to Google "committee nature of self" and then I realised that he is sharing an insight into the nature of deliberations, so it immediately made better sense to read that he was referring to my question as "such questions" because I really am "thinking out loud" .. but then I saw how it could just as well be said of those who use the rhetorical question. So it made me think, I found it to be true, and I liked it too :)I don't know what "the committee nature of self" is, — T Clark
That idea seems pretty accurate, but in order that the question delivers rhetoric and doesn't tempt the hearer to oppose the speaker, it relies upon the hearer agreeing with the speaker's own answer.I like the idea of a rhetorical question being one the speaker is suggesting listeners ask themselves. — T Clark