This is my last comment to you.
Organized religion has historically been a rationale for tribalism, and ensuing genocide.
But more pernicious are pompous tin pot orators like you, ( the self styled 'Greatest I Am'), who lay claim to 'the truth', whether that 'truth' be given the label 'religious', 'political' or 'national'.
I thought you were arguing elsewhere that we should not think interms of good and evil. Isn't it implicit in this argument that you see theists as tending towards evil?
What the fuck?
Degrees upon degrees of batshittery.
Theorizing souls, here's your opportunity to put your mind to speculate on an undecidable, but I think interesting question.
God, in Its omnipotence, can restart the world at any point.
It can erase all history from reality, and start the creation again. Say It will do that, for whatever reason.
1. What reasons should It have to do so?
2. How will this new world be different from ours?
3. Are the same souls going to be given to the newborns, or completely different ones as in this, our, world?
4. Can you think of a compelling reason why God would never want to restart the world?
5, Can you think of any compelling reasons why God would want to restart the world?
6. Finally, what advice would YOU give God with regards to changing parameters between our world and the newly created new and improved world?
P.s. I am atheist, and I don't pretend to be a theist by posing this question. I mean to create a vigorous and lively mental exercise by this thread, I don't mean to create strife and animosity. In fact, I am prepared to stay clear away from further posting in this thread of mine, and let the imagination of others fly!
You believe that because you believe you are not free.
This gives a rough estimate of 270 million killed by jihad.
That is demonisation, which is just the kind of thing that those who you're accusing engage in.
I find your analysis unconvincing and shallow.
There are good reasons for criticising the manipulation of belief, but you're not making a case; you're basically stating a single idea over and over again.
You're not showing any understanding of the meaning of gnosticism, other than a platitude about gnosis being knowledge.
I could say more, but I sense you're here to talk rather than to listen, so I'll desist.
Good points of course.
It is my experience that religious preachers and proselytizers are here to reinforce their own 'rationalities'. Its another aspect of the incestuous relationship between 'word magic' and 'religious belief' which inevitably involves repetition. Shallow 'questions' like this one are mere vehicles for those self reinforcement exercises.
It seems you're already confused, without the need for belief. Is "good" good for you, for your family and friends, for your fellow countrymen, for all humans, or for all living things in God's universe? Without this qualification (context), "good" means nothing. The same applies to "evil", of course. :chin:
The "information" is actually freely available. There are entire books written on the subject.
Also: The style of your post suggests you're suffering from a mental illness. Please consider getting professional help!
I believe that the ability to empathize with others, will bring suffering on that person.
Suffering is a negative emotion. The old and new testament said the Messiah would be a man of suffering.
Some Hindus, most Marxist-Leninists (as in Cambodia) behave like the OP describes, are they "Abrahamic"? The agnostic atheists like GMBA, are they "Abrahamic"?
Some of us do sometimes do some of what is described, but the argument would have greater force if weakened.
In addition as GMBA points out, emotion sometimes doesn't accompany sin, sometimes precedes it, sometimes follows it.
There are no grounds for saying people should not associate their suffering to its cause (that may be instructional - e.g telling the relatives not to go to Cambodia). This is slyly glossed over with the throwaway word "instead".
The OP is merely telling us it's our fault we are sad. I think I've made it clear what I think of that.
The OP is merely telling me it's my fault I am sad. I think I've made it clear what I think of that.
I don't care how mixed up a character Father Abraham was, I insist on thinking straight and I insist on thinking a lot!
2. So you admit your point was not categorical after all !!!
Admit you have NO IDEA who these people are or why they shouldn’t continue to call themselves by the name of any religion.
3. You sound dismissive of what people go through.
What is wrong with associating trouble to a cause?
I know a cult that blame the sufferer, they are initially plausible but so cynical. You should stop flinging suffering in people's faces I say!
You say that if anyone has emotion it is pathological. You blame them.
You should accept the circumstances of other people's lives (if they are any business of yours) as they are.
We presume you never go through anything yourself!
The accuser is the accused,
No. I'm advocating deletion because you are a hypocrite.
All you do is preach intolerance of mainstream belief systems without which you would have nothing to say.
As I said before, this is one of the few forums which puts up with such trolling activity.
#2Divine Retribution !
#3The question for me, is that following a paragraph like this, 'why only two deletions' ?
No. I'm advocating deletion because you are a hypocrite. All you do is preach intolerance of mainstream belief systems without which you would have nothing to say. As I said before, this is one of the few forums which puts up with such trolling activity.
The question for me, is that following a paragraph like this, 'why only two deletions' ?
God no. This is a refuge from non-censorship, such as in public spaces like YouTube comment sections. If it wasn't, it wouldn't be a philosophy forum—the philosophy would be buried in masses of irrelevant and low-quality crap.
Those a fair criticisms, but it seems to me you have an anti-religious ax to grind.
But to give you some benefit of the doubt, and as your screen name includes 'gnostic', what do you think 'gnosticism' amounts to?
How is it different from 'mere belief'?
Is it a form of valid knowledge, and if so, knowledge of what?
Do you think gnostics have beliefs, or do they have knowledge?
If he plays the automism card, then he ought to be challenged. He is after sympathy and special treatment for himself under the guise of autism. For all he knows, there could be other members of this forum on the autistic spectrum who don't wear it as a special badge and bring it up when challenged as an excuse.
For years I believed Positive and Negative were the main Duality of this world. Recently however, I begun believing Male and Female is the main deeply rooted Duality.
Male and female does NOT necessarily mean Man and Woman in this case. Including Neutral, everything we do or experience falls under one of these three categories.
A Star is the symbol of the Female while a black hole is the male symbo; one is to give in abundance while the other is to take.
F attuned people are friendly and work together with other F people and is the modern style.
M is more about competing with everyone and everything demanding domination, older style.
In other words, what I theorize is a duality where the main point of it is De-evolution and Pro-evolution.
Extreme Male is wanting to be in power in exchange for beauty, some (very few) actually strive to be God or vampire even.
This stems from fearful old style of thinking. Capitalism, being in a less warm welcoming environment in exchange for more currency is also Male thinking.
Female however wants to experience and live with the flow of the universe instead, living a more relaxed beauty modern style of life, which makes more sense and is better.
Believe it or not, around 94% of our world is Female attuned, more than ever before, which is a really good thing.
We have more co operation now than ever before and life keeps (with some ups and downs) going and striving for more beauty in everyone and everything. Thank you.
1. I know lots of Christians who say that other Christians are idolators. What about them and where are their emotions and their sin in this (as if it's any of our business)?
2. If one believes something better than all this, it ceases to be pathological. Your argument has failed because it claimed to be categorical. If you had made it weaker, it would be stronger.
3. Not all pain is caused by ourselves. The majority of it as I can see it, is inflicted on us by other people and by the universe, e.g earthquakes, meteorites.
I am enlightened,
meaning I see the truth,
and on this forum and this thread, I speak the truth,
and you're coming back with pseudo philosophical BS.
How can I be egoic if I am enlightened? If you want to question the veracity of this claim, call me out on a post and let's talk.
Philosophy is a noble pursuit. It's so sad to see that a forum with this name is really just a bunch of men trying to outdo each other. Side stepping incisive statements of truth to try to score a point.
And when Socrates knew that he knew nothing, we get you making this preposterous claim: "life has no intrinsic meaning. I find one can either choose to become something greater than they presently are, or suffer themselves while blaming others. It seems a lot choose the latter, but they don't understand they are doing it." Can you please explain to me how you managed to gain a greater insight than the great Socrates?
This forum is impossible... it's a load of guys trying to be more pedantic than the next.
It's just an ego-fest. And the ego is blinding.
And your closing sentence is completely wrong. It is when you are truly present that you find peace. Not the other way around.
The meaning of life is peace, and the only way to attain it is to be present in every moment... every second. You look forward and feel anxiety because you cannot control what isn't real. The past is equally mythical, and yet you look back and feel shame.
You tear yourself to pieces over 2 falsehoods, and in doing so you inhibit your ability to live in the present moment. This is the only place where you can find true peace, and therefore live in accordance with your soul and God.
Every single time you have a wobble, bring yourself back to the now. What are you doing? Where are you standing? Feel the ground under your feet, and the air in your lungs. There is beauty inside a prison cell, and solace within pain.
Be present and you will find peace.
@jamalrob deleted at least one I found. So, you can PM him or he may respond here.
1. You can't demonstrate that everybody that believes in a religion is an idolater (that the head of their house is a liar) just because it is true for some of them. To get me to agree with the latter is easy. However it is not a sufficient condition to extend to significant exceptions. You could say "it is sad that so many . . ." which you can build an argument on, but you have not said this, so we are not able to reflect what might make somebody (of any religion or none) break out of that vicious circle.
2. You need to be challenged about your category of so called "Abrahamic" and "Abrahamists" who have about as much in common as those in the phone book with surname beginning A, i.e the same as if their surnames were across several letters of the alphabet.
Those calling themselves muslim for example don't have Abraham, they have Ibrahim, much of whose life story is different from the other man's.
Then Hebrews use a very cut down version of the concept of Abraham of Christians (assuming you can find any Christians with ideas that overlap at all), but sometimes with other conflicting additions, of all different kinds of meanings and connotations.
So, there is no such category of any meaningfulness.
Furthermore, it isn't clear how your grouping of "A - brahamic / -sts" actually advances any of your arguments. Did you intend to confine your point to those diverse groupings only, and why - because people of all other belief systems (and none) are surely also of interest in the context of your thread title. You have not furnished reasons for the parameters of the information you present.
We are in possession of the perfect, inimitable, unaltered, inerrant and final word of god.
3. I was aware that numerical values were built into the wording of old manuscripts that had to be copied, as a double check on accuracy. The material was mostly passed on orally but at an advanced stage in training, practitioners were inducted into the art of preserving the content in recorded form. For example, Eliezer has value 318 and that occurs near the figure 318. The same was done in early Sanskrit. General literacy among Hebrews dates from the exile.
It might at a pinch be slightly interesting to know a little of how some people have got value out of lettering, in connection with the subject matter, but you have taken a very long time to introduce your two points. You could try harder to see which angle(s) we are interested in.
In philosophy there are a myriad of 'handlings' of knowledge. There are many, many different takes on what knowledge is and how it should be handled and how one achieves knowledge. So which of the various ideas about knowledge in philosophy do you consider a mishandling of knowledge and which philosopher or school is this associated with?
As far as my own epistemology, I notice that I use a number of different methodologies to arrive at what I consider knowledge. It seems to me other people do that also, though they seem to, generally, argue that route X is the only way to knowledge or knowledge is only Y, all the while acting like there are a number of ways to get to knowledge and a number of different kinds of knowledge. So I have no specific approach. I notice a more ad hoc approach in myself. And in general I am satisfied
I am not concerned about philosophy's feelings or honor. I don't know what to say otherwise to someone who raises a number of concerns about knowledge and beliefs that philosophy misleads people about, when in fact the concerns are very carefully looked at within philosophy and are part of basic texts on philosophy, basic articles and essays on epistemology.
From the top down.
What should I say to a person making accusations about philosophy that clearly show that person has not read or has forgotten fairly basic stuff. I don't think I am the only person raising similar concerns in the thread.
You can go boldly forward in part based on assumptions that are false, or you could consider the possibility that you don't know what you are talking about in this particular area. Up to you.
I think what you mean by "logic" here is known irrefutable facts.
Couldn't I say that I don't know anything other than this fact (that I don't know anything (else))? Everything else that we know is based on some assumptions that we believe in. We could go run a bunch of scientific experiments that tell us all sorts of interesting things, but all of that is based on some assumptions.
The line between belief and established irrefutable facts is blurry.
I could believe that there is a god that is a purple stegosaurus swimming through the universe, but I think very few people would agree with me and I don't have much evidence to convince them. I could believe gravity pulls things down, and we could spend days or years dropping thousands upon thousands of rocks on the ground until we decide the evidence is strong enough to consider it an irrefutable fact that gravity pulls things down. But, still, those rock dropping observations are based on beliefs. The difference is that the claim of gravity pulls things down is a lot more convincing than that of the purple stegosaurus god.
(Response to the first post, the opening post.)
I believe I am a man. -- what's the virtue in this?
I believe you are a woman. -- there is no virtue in this belief
I believe there is a god. -- no virtue to be found. It's nice if you are a fellow believer or if you are the particular god concerned, but virtue? In the action? I see no virtue. It's no more viruous than tying your shoe or taking out the trash.
I believe there is a proof that renders the statement "belief is not a virtue" true. The proof is finding even just one example when belief is not a virtue. That does not make all beliefs unvirtuous, but shows that some beliefs are not virtuous, while others may be.
Belief is not necessarily a virtue,
Belief is not a virtue,
Unless you are saying you are infallible when deciding 'known A' is true, then it may turn out to have been a belief that was not true.
This whole section shows that you have not read much epistemology. Nothing you say here about the problems of belief, faith, the difference between beliefs that are not knowledge and knowledge is even slightly controversial in philosophy.
You're tilting at windmills.
Now of course you don't have to take on philosophy's use of the terms. But 1) this will cause confusions in philosophy discussions, here for example in a philosophy forum and 2) your final separation of belief and knowledge entails an implicit claim of infallibility.
But I'll leave you to it. It seems to me you are basing your beliefs not on the evidence.
I think that leads to all sorts of confusions. Knowing what not to belief would still require a belief.
Which is why in philosophy, knowledge is considered those beliefs that are supported by strong justification. If you have strong justification for not believing X, then you believe and know that X is not false or not justified.
It would mean you have evaluated evidence and reached a conclusion. And the process you went through to do this is considered well justified.
On the street people often use 'belief' to mean things that are not supported by enough evidence, something like faith. But this leads to absurd things like one does not believe what one knows. One knows it. And since we re fallible what we know today may turn out to have actually been merely a belief. Evidence may come in to change our minds.
Fear of god is the beginning of wisdom.
Is it better to suffer fear, or to understand it?
Is suffering fear necessary for understanding it?
If one finds themselves in a state of fear, how does one overcome it?
Is it better to suffer fear, or to understand it?
Who is using fear to exploit others? How and why?
I'd like to know how you have found those meanings. I find a lot of value in the pictographs (according to this chart), and what I see in this, the one "consuming the lot of seed" - so the satan is a destroyer, the one bringing the end of all chance that life has to grow.
I think of the word as deriving from "fidelity" - which is "replication true to the original". So an infidel is someone who has not replicated the original [faith] accurately. They have distorted the faith, they are corrupting the faith.
Convincing people who "believe" rather than think to anything can be problematic. You may construct your proof only for it to be unreasonably rejected. What's your plan B?
-Mark Twain“When I, a thoughtful and unblessed Presbyterian, examine the Koran, I know that beyond any question every Mohammedan is insane, not in all things, but in religious matters. I cannot prove to him that he is insane, because you never can prove anything to a lunatic — for that is a part of his insanity and the evidence of it.”
I think it's safe to disregard Satan. There is no proof that such a thing exists. The same applies to God.
an expression of being bound in an ongoing state
"Belief" is not a virtue.
You don't need to guard yourself from your emotions. All you need to do is understand them and not let them take control over you. Emotions are like silly children - you need to show them who's the boss.
IMO best way to repel negative emotions is to analyze whether they are justified. If so, take action aimed at resolving the problems that gave rise to those negative emotions. If they are unjustified, just disregard them and focus on other things.
sin is defined as disobedience toward god, or gods.