First time I hear that Catholics argue that their sacraments come from God: Where do sacraments come from? André KÉRYGME, Curé de Port Saint Nicolas: from Christ and the Church; it is from Christ and his apostle that come the initiative of these gestures and the words that accompany them; the Chruch intends to prolong them faithfully... in a celebration.
I felt like posting a new tread: I got baited: this isn't a philosophy forum.
I was told in a college that philosophy, in the ancient greek way it was practiced, was about philosophers going among the people and freely engaging in discussions with them, about nothing and everything.
My dictionary says: Philosophy:
Domain of culture that consists in a
whole of interogations, reflexions and research having a rational character and led since greek antiquity on the being, causes, values etc. and puting in play, in the
diversity of ways employed and retained answers,
man's relation with the world and his own knowledge.
Whatever you guys are doing here, it's not philosophy.
This forum is all compartimented and with fixed ideas and fixed starting points and clearly like a pop culture (for lack of a better term) media center. Philosophers in principle meet people freely, which is what I'm desperatly
trying to do here and there on the internet, but philosophers don't run the place or host forums, the society is not open enough, this internet thing is like an anglo-saxon militarised and governmentalised jack pot with a negative net result. In college they encouraged philosophy for a better, open society (it's on the obligatoy curriculum in Québec province).
I think I'll just leave, I'm very disapointed that my ideas did not catch interest.
I did propose a biological interpretation of phenomena but I don't know if its a priori or a posteriori. — Gregory
A priori, it's just an interpretation, a proposition. How can you ask such a ridiculous question?