while anything that is God would be too hard to ever pin down with our thoughts — Gregory
If the philosophy becomes based on a must-be-true "revelation" from a supernatural being.. All the philosophy in the world that tries to bolster it can't help it become true. — schopenhauer1
Spinoza argued that theology and philosophy must be kept separate, particularly in the reading of scripture. Whereas the goal of theology is obedience, philosophy aims at understanding rational truth. Scripture does not teach philosophy and thus cannot be made to conform with it, otherwise the meaning of scripture will be distorted. Conversely, if reason is made subservient to scripture, then, Spinoza argues, "the prejudices of a common people of long ago... will gain a hold on his understanding and darken it." — Spinoza Wiki Article
Yep, I think it was Baruch Spinoza who pretty much cleared the way for critical reading of the Bible and religion in general? — schopenhauer1
Well, Epicureans pre-date Christians, but I can see the ones that were around after Constantine using the same methods. What I meant was, after a thousand years of Medieval dogmatism (attachment to theology and revelation as the root of philosophy), it took people like Spinoza to completely separate the two.. Even Descartes with his skepticism, and (otherwise) naturalists like Newton had God central to their own philosophies (despite their excellent mathematical and scientific work). — schopenhauer1
Jefferson also wrote the Contstitution. — Garrett Travers
Also, as a minor point, Jefferson didn't write the US Constitution. He wasn't at the Constitutional Convention. More involved people were Hamilton, Madison, John Jay, Franklin, etc. Jefferson did help write Virginia's constitution and the main drafts of the Declaration of Independence and whose theory influenced others of that founding group. — schopenhauer1
I'd like to know what your thoughts are then, regarding the rivalry between the Epicureans and the Stoics. What do you think the major points of contention were and why one was closer to truth than the other. I know Stoics were also pretty influential. — schopenhauer1
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