On the other hand, the verification of the insight is through reason, implying that the insight has grounds in reason and is there discernible in principle. — tim wood
That the word is Theology, clearly rooted in pre-christian Greece, is in my opinion a clue that Theology is not about any conception of any version of a Christian God, either OT or NT. — tim wood
The idea of such being, nearly as I can tell, to retreat from and remain beyond reason and rationality. — tim wood
Does the supernatural element of any religion provide any insight whatsoever that is unavailable to reason and that cannot be reached through reason? — tim wood
My conclusion is that on these terms, the claim that God exists is simply an metaphysical error made by folks who don't know any metaphysics. — tim wood
An empty and trivial argument looms, here. I don't want that argument. But when you write that "no verification... is possible," I don't know what you mean. Suppose the insight occurs like a bright light: such a light blinds; one sees nothing. The light, bright as it may be, is just the opposite of illuminating. A lesser light illuminates by letting one see the darkness better, or into it perhaps more deeply. It both preserves what was seen, even as it adds to or clarifies it. That is, the illumination is in a sense "verified" by the darkness it preserves. Insight, along these lines, preserves - is connected in some way - to that which it clarifies. If there is no such contact, then what is it an insight into?Insights, at least poetic and religious insights (as opposed to, say, insight in the sciences) are sufficient unto themselves; in other words they are their own verifications, and no verification of them by anything outside them is possible. — Janus
Again, "insights are their own verification"? This is akin to saying that a true proposition is just plain true in itself without recourse to criteria, or that the criteria are coincidental to the quality of being true. And I disagree: verification is what grounds the insight, or the quality of being true, and lacking which there is no true or insight. Verification is an integral part.The only sense in which it could be said they are "verified" by reason is insofar as we might give reasons for thinking that insights are their own verification; and this would be merely a secondary sense derivative of the insight itself. — Janus
I'm having trouble reading your sentence: should I read it (more-or-less) this way, "The unmoved mover of the Greeks - was - the God of the Bible"? If yes, I disagree. The development by the Patristic Fathers of the idea of God is just exactly that. And the God of the Bible is just exactly something else. And the Bible's God is a lot more than just a notion of the Greek unmoved mover.I think that's a bit simplistic. The early Christian Platonists had no trouble showing that the Unmoved Mover of the Greeks, or the One of Plotinus, amounted to the Greek conception of the same God that had revealed Himself in the Bible. — Wayfarer
An empty and trivial argument looms, here. I don't want that argument. — tim wood
Again, "insights are their own verification"? This is akin to saying that a true proposition is just plain true in itself without recourse to criteria, or that the criteria are coincidental to the quality of being true. — tim wood
'm having trouble reading your sentence: should I read it (more-or-less) this way, "The unmoved mover of the Greeks - was - the God of the Bible"? If yes, I disagree. The development by the Patristic Fathers of the idea of God is just exactly that. And the God of the Bible is just exactly something else. And the Bible's God is a lot more than just a notion of the Greek unmoved mover. — tim wood
Clement of Alexandria was a Christian theologian who taught at the Catechetical School of Alexandria. A convert to Christianity, he was an educated man who was familiar with classical Greek philosophy and literature. As his three major works demonstrate, Clement was influenced by Hellenistic philosophy to a greater extent than any other Christian thinker of his time, and in particular by Plato and the Stoics.
Origen, reportedly trained in the school of Clement and by his father, has long been considered essentially a Platonist with occasional traces of Stoic philosophy. Patristic scholar Mark J Edwards has argued that many of Origen's positions are more properly Aristotelian than strictly Platonic (for instance, his philosophical anthropology).
I am no fundamentalist, but I generally buy the notion that if you're going to insist on believing that the Christian God is real and existing, then the Bible is the place, the only place, to learn whatever can be learned about Him. — tim wood
at a deeper level it seemed evident to me that essentially the same thing was going on in all these different places of worship, namely men and women were coming together under the auspices of some ancient, highly developed tradition which enables them to open their minds and hearts “upwards” toward a higher divine reality which makes a claim on the living of their lives. ...
...given the various cultural ways of being human we can I think to some extent understand how it is that they constitute different "lenses" through which the divine Reality is differently perceived. For we know that all human awareness involves an indispensable contribution by the perceiver. The mind is active in perception, organising the impacts of the environment in ways made possible both by the inherent structure of consciousness and by the particular sets of concepts embedded in particular minds. These concepts are the organizing and recognitional capacities by which we interpret and give meaning to the data which come to us from outside. And this general epistemological pattern, according to which conscious experience arises out of the interpretive activity of the mind, also applies to religious experience. — John Hick
If God is what the history of God tells us (akin to philosophy being in a sense the history of philosophy), then God is a creature of idea and the history of idea - which in my opinion is the only actual God there is. That is, God is as the efficacy of the idea of Him for thinking. — tim wood
But as the history of science and God shows, that God keeps changing, a phenomenon sometimes called God-in-the-gaps. In my opinion, the secret is to keep re-examining in God that which comes to be understood to be immune to change. — tim wood
For oppression makes a wise man mad, And a bribe corrupts the heart. 8 The end of a matter is better than its beginning; Patience of spirit is better than haughtiness of spirit. 9 Do not be eager in your heart to be angry, For anger resides in the bosom of fools. 10 Do not say, "Why is it that the former days were better than these?" For it is not from wisdom that you ask about this. 11 Wisdom along with an inheritance is good And an advantage to those who see the sun. 12 For wisdom is protection just as money is protection, But the advantage of knowledge is that wisdom preserves the lives of its possessors.
No, it's not saying that at all; insights are not the same as kinds of things as propositions. Think about what it means to have insight into a poem or into a spiritual truth. It's not a matter of being correct in any way that could possibly be verified. To think that would be to commit a category error. Remember I qualified my initial statement by excluding scientific insights. — Janus
we be wise without a supernatural God? — tim wood
I think the second part of that sentence contradicts the first - that is just the kind of thing a fundamentalist would insist on. Or perhaps you're not a fundamentalist, but your idea of what Christianity comprises has been formed on the examples of fundamentalists. — Wayfarer
And when you ‘re-examine God’ what can you possibly be talking about, but an idea? What people say? What functions are attributed to this hypothetical entity? If someone was to set off on a quest ‘to find God,’ what would that likely entail? What kind of search would they be undertaking? I imagine it would involve a fair amount of solitude, and perhaps a lot of reading. But I don’t think it would be a scientific expedition. — Wayfarer
Basically this is my whole philosophy summed up. “God is the source of all wisdom, let’s listen together.” — MysticMonist
I think we have to distinguish among ethical Christians (my group), cultural Christians, and religious Christians (all for lack of better names). The first two are no doubt interesting, but not my topic here. The religious Christians (of my experience) are linked by their profession of a belief in a real being they call God, that I call a supernatural being. Not only do they profess that belief, but they also maintain that belief, in the sense of believing real and existing, including the miracles, in those supernatural elements is the sine qua non of being a Christian. You may recall a Dr. Gene Scott, a late night religious personality: he put it succinctly, "If the resurrection isn't true, then Christianity is just another cult." (Harsh, because I think Christianity allows for more thinking than a cult can.) — tim wood
You may recall a Dr. Gene Scott, a late night religious personality: he put it succinctly, "If the resurrection isn't true, then Christianity is just another cult." (Harsh, because I think Christianity allows for more thinking than a cult can.) — tim wood
You apparently want to walk Christianity forward by walking with criteria established by "modern" criticism as developed through philosophical reflection. I'm thinking a religious Christian goes your way with difficulty, if at all. The question is, is your way Christianity? And that seems not a simple or easy question. The answer may devolve to definition, which is to say it does not resolve. — tim wood
I can't in reply do justice to your posts, but I appreciate them. I never before recognized just how sharp the "We believe..." is.I suppose you could say that the early church solved this very problem by thrashing out and adopting the Confessions of Faith, such as the Nicene Creed, which was the summary of what every Christian is expected to believe.... Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus, no salvation outside the Church, meant what it said. It didn't require your agreement, and certainly not your opinions, only your belief. I think that's the attitude that characterises your third group. — Wayfarer
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