I take it to be the initial recognition of the divorce of facts and values that is one of the basic problems of modern philosophy. — Wayfarer
But the Buddha didn't say anything about God. Why? — TheMadFool
1. He found God but didn't want to reveal it
2. He didn't find God but didn't want to reveal it
3. He could neither prove nor disprove God
Allow me the assumption that the Buddha was a good man and thus devoted to the welfare of his followers and all mankind.
It then follows that knowledge of God's existence/nonexistence must be harmful in some way. Did the Buddha anticipate crusades/jihad and the nihilism of atheism?
Which of the 3 options given above do you think best explains Buddha's cryptic silence on the matter? Why? — TheMadFool
You also see it in pop journalism headlines like "science just explained why we all do this!" — Noble Dust
By the way, and not that it's important, I was perusing the Get Creative! topic in the lounge and noticed some of your artistic expressions.I'm one of the practitioners of a personal spiritual practice that you felt the need to alert me to here. I'm not a member of a religion. Correct me if I'm wrong, but you seem to have assumed so simply because I'm not critiquing religion here, and I'm using it in a neutral way as an analogy. — Noble Dust
You (and billions of others) are suffering from a cultural malaise, from the pernicious effects of taking a religious view of science, as others here are saying.
What are you arguing for here? — Noble Dust
You assume nonspiritual or religious ends when that is not necessarily the case at all. And there is overwhelming evidence that people can find their own spiritual "ends," as you call it, even prior to the enlightenment. A quick google search estimates 4,200 religions in the world. Are all these religions illusory except for yours?As to having the freedom to find our own ends, I think it's an illusion. I hear this claim often, but what exactly does it entail? It's usually an appeal to comfort or pleasure, which is a poor, pale comparison to religious or spiritual ends; this is ironic considering how the enlightenment championed this new found freedom. Enlightenment freedom seems inherently materialistic, which undermines the entire concept in my view. — Noble Dust
You claimed:It's possible to live a meaningful life without religion
— praxis
Perhaps your confusion lies here? — Noble Dust
I pointed out that the enlightenment allows us to find our own ends.The enlightenment championing of reason and scientific progress is ultimately what lead to faith in science; the underlying belief manifests itself in technological innovation that's now devoid of the "ends" that the enlightenments growing means originally suggested. — Noble Dust
I repurpose the word religion to illustrate the irrational dependence on rationality and science found in scientistic and even some less severe materialist positions. The goal is to make those folks evaluate their assumptions and underlying beliefs. It's an ironic use of the term for the sake of provocation. The notion that mankind is freed from the religious mindset is bogus, and reusing the word religion seems like an effective way to illustrate this. — Noble Dust
On the Cartesian Anxiety of Our Times and What Faith Can Offer — Nils Loc
St. Augustine well described the human person without God as curvatus in se (turned in on himself). That is what seems to have happened to us as we have retreated into our minds. Through faith God can turn us out again to creation, to truth, to one another, and to Himself. This is the real cure for our Cartesian Anxiety. — Msgr. Charles Pope
It's possible to live a meaningful life without religion. We're free to find our own ends rather than, for example, the afterlife that Christianity offers.Freedom is a state of being. It's another prerequisite for something else. It's possible to live a meaningful life in a state of ignorance; it's possible to live a meaningful life without political freedom or social freedom. — Noble Dust
I apologize for answering a question with a question, but if you don't mind, what does taking a religious view of something mean?I was quoting Wayfarer. Personally I find his phrasing somewhat misleading.
— praxis
How So? Is this what your initial comment in the op referred to? — Noble Dust
What is unclear is how scientism contributes to rationalization.
— praxis
It's a positive feedback loop or a vicious cycle depending on what one's attitude is. Rationalization leads to science and science leads to rationalization. — TheMadFool
The essential benefit of autonomy is freedom, and in this context, freedom from ignorance. To offer an extreme example, there's a 0% chance that I'll be burned at the stake by the government for being a warlock. It isn't just fairies and pixie dust in Weber's "great enchanted garden," demons live there too.We are now enjoying the "ends" that the enlightenment afforded us:
— praxis
Autonomous thinking is a tool, not an end. It's just the first step. What's autonomous thinking for, exactly? It serves no purpose (end) in itself. You have to show exactly why it's better than relying on "guidance from another". Showing why it's better will/would reveal the ends; critical thinking in and of itself reveals no ends. — Noble Dust
I was quoting Wayfarer. Personally I find his phrasing somewhat misleading.And it is unclear what you mean by "faith in science."
— praxis
In that context I was using it to mean scientism; "taking a religious view of science", as you put it. — Noble Dust
The problem being, that science is primarily, or only, concerned with what can be measured or quantified. The 'domain of the qualitative', so to speak, is then regarded as a matter of private belief, tantamount to a matter of opinion. And the consequence of that, is that it obviates the Platonic distinction between 'mere opinion' and 'real knowledge'; in respect of values, we can only have real knowledge of what we can measure (which is the source of the 'is/ought' problem. There is of course more to say but duty calls....) — Wayfarer
We are now enjoying the "ends" that the enlightenment afforded us:The enlightenment championing of reason and scientific progress is ultimately what lead to faith in science; the underlying belief manifests itself in technological innovation that's now devoid of the "ends" that the enlightenments growing means originally suggested. — Noble Dust
Enlightenment is man’s emergence from his self-imposed immaturity. Immaturity is the inability to use one’s understanding without guidance from another. This immaturity is self-imposed when its cause lies not in lack of understanding, but in lack of resolve and courage to use it without guidance from another. Sapere aude! [Dare to know!] Have the courage to use your own understanding! That is the motto of enlightenment.’
- Immanuel Kant, 1784
What was the "ends" prior to the enlightenment?The result is an increasingly mechanized society which doesn't have any telos, any ends for the ever increasing means. — Noble Dust
Are you sure you aren't just making a commentary on people who claim to be spiritual but not religious (Because I agree that would be an accurate description of them). — Reformed Nihilist
The essential distinction is between following and finding your own way, I believe.I'm suggesting that the way that the word is commonly used today, in the "I'm spiritual, but not religious" sort of way, ends up not being as distinct and separate from religion as the utterer is intending. I'm saying that it's analogous to saying "he's not fat, he's full bodied". When you dig into the claim, you find that it's essentially the same thing, just without a connotation that the speaker doesn't like. So although I have them, my point here isn't to make judgments about the value of engaging in spirituality or religion, but just to clarify what, or even if, there is a meaningful distinction between the traditional, religious use of "spiritual" and the more modern, ostensibly secular meaning. — Reformed Nihilist
Can you imagine anyone adhering to a meaningless religion? The only essential thing a religion needs to provide is meaning. If it fails to do that it will die, or never takes hold to begin with.I don't know if Scientificism (the religion of Science-Worship) is a system of meaning. For many it's a system of no-meaning. — Michael Ossipoff
There are of course different branches of science. What does that have to do with it being a religion? How exactly do Scientificists worship?But, either way, it can be said that different Scientificists worship their religion in different ways...that iit has "denominations", if you like. — Michael Ossipoff
That is not at all evident.Evidently, at face-value, daldai's Science-Worship is causing him great angst. — Michael Ossipoff
I suggest you review what daldai has written in this topic.But, when someone's belief is presumably making him unhappy, but he adamantly advocates an unusually extreme, doctrinaire and dogmatic version of it,, and isn't considering letting go of it, will anyone be able to help him? — Michael Ossipoff
This sounds like a sort of pre-rational romanticism. And I think your meaning may be clearer if you use a term like 'rationality' or 'skepticism' rather than truth.I think history, and non-secular cultures today, tell us this [truth and meaning act in opposition]. When societies have religion peoples' lives have meaning. When western culture embraced scientific realism, people's lives lost meaning. — daldai
Searching for meaning in life makes sense to me. Searching for the meaning of life, a singular meaning, seems nonsensical. We are surrounded by and saturated in meaning.Searching for the meaning of life is taking the process of justification beyond the point that it is useful. You could call it the existential justification fallacy. — daldai
You (and billions of others) are suffering from a cultural malaise, from the pernicious effects of taking a religious view of science, as others here are saying. — Wayfarer
hasn't Buddhism always said that everything is impermanent? "This life is like a dewdrop at dawn, a bubble on a stream, a flash of lightning in the dark of night." But Buddhists are not unhappy on that account. — Wayfarer
So, what Beyond Rationality is is a Genius/Buddha. — Dwit
What does "bypass conscious awareness" mean?
They say that placebos even work when you're told that they're placebos, but I don't think that's the whole story. Either there is a paranoid response in which you don't fully believe that, or you're only told it's a placebo after being told that it is something else.
Whilst I was searching for the truth it provided my life with meaning driven by the naïve assumption that it would all come together one day in some kind of revelatory "meaning of everything" moment. Instead, I was able to acquire so much objectivity, that I could see "everything" and it didn't have any meaning because I'd stepped so far back that, not just me, but the entire human race had shrunk into complete insignificance. The god's-eye view is not a myth any more, it's just really fucking scary and I want to come back.
