I have put this into the General Philosophy section because it is connected to several topics such as art, politics or religion. So in Kubrick's Eyes wide shut we can see that members of the elite basically do what they want. They get along with murder, drugs, prostitution and they rule everything. They form a social class which means what they do they do it systematically. On top of that they occasionally oranize occult rituals which makes that even scarier in some sense (how rational or moral could they be?).
The masked ritual scene with the naked chicks is full of masonic and religious (Christian) symbolism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhV-4658syE
I think one of the main messages of the movie is how religious and elite groups manipulate and rule society in a very destructive way.
The strangest part is that three days after Kubrick gave the movie to Warner Brothers he died of a heart attack.
Do you think that we are living in this distopian future or just Kubrick was a brilliant director with the most brilliant real world ending for his movie (but all the symbols are what they are: symbols and images of imagination)? — Meta
I agree with you in what you said. I don't mind if there are classes of society. But the point of the movie is that the highest class can get people killed and get away with it. That there are laws for people and there is the elite class and the members of this class ignore these laws or human rights. If that is true the whole concept of the government or society is a lie because those are not built on human rights. — Meta
The masked ritual scene with the naked chicks is full of masonic and religious (Christian) symbolism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhV-4658syE — Meta
Drawing 666 and pentagrams on the wall, wearing black robes, and walking around with candles isn't satanism; forcing people to pay us for our love is. — John Days
Meta, I love this film! I've only seen it once but I think it's an underrated masterpiece, one of Kubrick's best out of an incredibly filmography. — Brian
I don't think that Kubrick would make a movie without deep social critique. I see your point though. — Meta
Notwithstanding your biblical references, — TimeLine
So, if we say that an absence of love is evil, money is not the root of all evil but rather the enabling factor — TimeLine
since it is clear that whether you are wealthy or not has no bearing on being evil. — TimeLine
Jesus said A LOT about greed, which isn't a religious problem. All humans on the planet struggle with greed. Jesus also gave solutions to the problem of greed. It is in the context of problem and solution that I referenced some Biblical teachings. For example, Jesus said that the answer to greed is for people to start sharing with one another. That's not a religious position; it's a solution which works in real life. — John Days
I know plenty of religious and irreligious people who speak openly to me about their beliefs and I have no qualms with what anyone would want to say to me. Just accept that I believe we are people trying to figure out the meaning of a story. Ultimately, I agree when you say that's not a religious position; it's a solution which works in real life because that is what everything is.Yeah, I was hoping that wouldn't be an issue. — John Days
Que?When someone believes they will die if they do not charge a fee for their love, it's almost certain they have a problem with money-loving. — John Days
No, it doesn't. And using capital letters won't make it so.In a world with finite resources, it certainly DOES have a bearing on whether one is evil or not depending on how much of those resources he draws to himself. — John Days
Just believing we are more important than others. And the desire to have more is to attain the power to reinforce this belief.Real evil is believing we are more important than others just because we have more ability than they in taking what is available. — John Days
I have no qualms with what anyone would want to say to me. — TimeLine
Just accept that I believe we are people trying to figure out the meaning of a story. — TimeLine
Ultimately, I agree when you say that's not a religious position; it's a solution which works in real life because that is what everything is. — TimeLine
Que? — TimeLine
No, it doesn't. And using capital letters won't make it so. — TimeLine
The point is that power is not something one can attain through money, — TimeLine
money, it is just a means. — TimeLine
If a person believes he is morally superior, and so when guilty of a wrongdoing attempts to deceitfully fabricate lies to people around him and garner enough support to make himself believe that he is not guilty, that does not require money. — TimeLine
What separates a lay problem (not religious) from a religious problem, — szardosszemagad
Anything that the bible says is religious, — szardosszemagad
So... while you correctly identified the problem of greed as a real life, layman's type of problem, you can't say that it is not a religious problem — szardosszemagad
Anything that the bible says is religious,
— szardosszemagad
Nah, that's just social conditioning. Greed, fear, and pride are problems all humans deal with. — John Days
Yes, you can do whatever you desire. If you like, you can denounce the rules of logic. Do that. It does not mean that the logic is wrong -- it means that you either don't understand it, or else you have a vested interest in maintaining a point, or else you just said something sometime that people hold you to, and you are trying to save face.So... while you correctly identified the problem of greed as a real life, layman's type of problem, you can't say that it is not a religious problem
— szardosszemagad
Sure I can. — John Days
Hypocrites are the ones who want to say these are religious problems, because, if they themselves are not "religious", it's easy to think, "I am not religious, so I am not a bad person like you are". — John Days
A non-religious atheist is not concerned with what the bible says. — szardosszemagad
why he should disregard the bible's teaching despite the teachings being useful? Not because the atheist is irrational. But because he never reads the bible.if there are good teachings in the Bible about greed and how to deal with greed, why should an atheist disregard them because they can be found in the bible? That is irrational. — John Days
A theist or atheist who never read "Richard III" by Shakespeare, or more to the point, never read the Gilgamesh story in original Babylonian, can't be faulted for irrationality for not using the useful parts of these works. — szardosszemagad
They don't judge the teaching. They just don't bother reading it, because it is packaged with a whole bunch of what the atheists consider nonsense. They get the useful info other places.When people judge the quality of a teaching based on where the teaching is found, then they have become religious about being anti-religious. — John Days
That doesn't sound realistic at all. — John Days
Nah, there's lots of fantastical or delusion ideals which don't actually work in real life. — John Days
It's like you have no idea what it's like to live on Earth. — John Days
...why artists or passionate creators will talk of prostituting themselves even though it has nothing to do with physical meshing of genitalia. — John Days
Are you suggesting the world's resources are not finite? — John Days
Completely contradicts your previous statement about how money doesn't buy power. — John Days
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