This is in fact one of the key reasons why my impression is the opposite of yours. Staying together to ride out the ups and downs that happen even in the best partnership is generally a good thing and, in my experience is practised by both believers and non-believers. It is much more a function of wisdom and maturity than it is of religious beliefs.What will hold them together? — Agustino
It depends - some things ruin the value of the partnership, and make its aim impossible to achieve.Staying together to ride out the ups and downs that happen even in the best partnership is generally a good thing — andrewk
Yes that is a problem because (1) people are not willing to change for each other, (2) they pick each other without judgement, (3) they don't share the same aspiration as you said. But if they believed in God - then their aspiration would have been to serve God, and they would share it. Hence, it would still end up as I have stated - such a partnership will intrinsically be more likely to succeed. Granting of course that the two people do honestly love God first, before loving each other. Indeed - it is this other love that makes their own love stable.But it is often the case that people form a partnership that is bad for both of them, because their personalities and aspirations are simply not compatible. Untold misery is then caused when religious dictates make such a couple remain together. — andrewk
Okay. Rudolf Otto in the Idea of the Holy presents a similar conception of divinity. May I ask you, in your opinion, what is the ethical import, if any, of this conception of God? How do you - as a believer in a God who is Ganz Andere, how do you live your ethical life as a Christian? Are there differences in comparison to someone who is a Thomist?Obviously in the sense that God doesn't have Being if he's radically Other. It also doesn't offer us a teleological explanation, explain the problem of evil, or makes God explainable in terms of essence, existence, or any properties whatsoever which would delimit God. — Marty
Reasons are just explanations for things, which can be merely casual. It follows the PSR, and if that's true, then all things need a reason for their being. Such as a red ball that's in the middle of a forest needs an explanation, or as something as vast as the sun needing a reason for being there casually and contingently. Even if we don't know the epistemological reason for why things are why they are, and how they got there, the fact remains that they must have a reason - the opposite would mean it's reasonless. Which to the Thomistic is absurd. — Marty
Okay. Rudolf Otto in the "Idea of the Holy" presents a similar conception of divinity. May I ask you, in your opinion, what is the ethical import, if any, of this conception of God? How do you - as a believer in a God who is Ganz Andere, how do you live your ethical life as a Christian? Are there differences in comparison to someone who is a Thomist? — Agustino
Something I've contemplated is whether or how God could "fit" in a human mind. A simpler analogy would be with a spiritual guru. We can't know the guru concretely or in fact until we have become the guru and possesses his insights as are own. Before that moment there is the hope or expectation of such a moment. But it's like a empty negation. "I know there's is something I don't know (that the guru knows.)" But how is this knowledge established? How does the guru have authority before he is understood? The point is that he's not fully real for the disciple until he is contained in the disciple as an insight or realization. — Hoo
"And I must not imagine that I do not apprehend the infinite by a true idea, but only by the negation of the finite, in the same way that I comprehend repose and darkness by the negation of motion and light: since, on the contrary, I clearly perceive that there is more reality in the infinite substance than in the finite, and therefore that in some way I possess the perception (notion) of the infinite before that of the finite, that is, the perception of God before that of myself, for how could I know that I doubt, desire, or that something is wanting to me, and that I am not wholly perfect, if I possessed no idea of a being more perfect than myself, by comparison of which I knew the deficiencies of my nature?" — Descartes
I think the laws are contingently so in the sense they could have been otherwise, and rely on each other for their function to be such. But this only means they must be contingent (conditioned) by something that is not-contingent. This would be God, as a perfect being is a necessary being.I can't take the PSR as an axiom. Perhaps it's just an implicit acknowledgement that explanation depends on the projection of necessity. But of course top-level necessities are contingent (why exactly these necessities or laws?), unless one hands them to God, but then God is contingent, unless ...?
As to the totality, maybe that's equivalent to God as Being. — Hoo
The reason for having ethical systems in the first place though is to create order - both in the soul and in society (the latter being merely man writ large as per Plato). If you're skeptical of it, then you slide into an ethics which is very dangerous - because it gives free reign to everyone to decide and judge by themselves, which is anti-thetical to happiness, especially once you realise that one's own happiness is always in part dependent on society and others, and hence demands harmony. Harmony can only be achieved through collaboration, which requires a shared understanding - not caprice.But if you're skeptical of these things - the ability to concretize an ethical system that everyone has a duty towards, in which we place ourselves ourselves as a duty towards our own ethical standards - then you place ethics beyond that domain, into something otherwise than being. — Marty
This is contradictory. If they are groundless, then they cannot be challenged from the ground up because there is no ground.All it means is to go against ground. All ethics are, if you buy into the argument, groundless. Which means it an absolute duty for us to challenge them constantly from the "ground" up. — Marty
Then how do we access ethics if they are radically Other? How does a priest for example teach ethics to his congregation in such a case? If ethics are radically Other, then it would follow that even the ethics illustrated in the Bible are not "real".But Levinas never says ethics is up for grabs. That's why ethics are radically Other. So if they're radically other they can't be for everyone to decide and judge. — Marty
This is contradictory. If they are groundless, then they cannot be challenged from the ground up because there is no ground.
Then how do we access ethics if they are radically Other? How does a priest for example teach ethics to his congregation in such a case? If ethics are radically Other, then it would follow that even the ethics illustrated in the Bible are not "real".
Ok.Yes. They're challenged for being grounded. — Marty
Can you give a specific example to illustrate what you mean here? Also how can such an ethics create order in society and in the individual soul? It seems to me to be very close to arbitrary and debatable - precisely because it cannot be decided upon rationally.Ethics are showed in the absence of being, in what it's not. In the sense of what haunts us in the world isn't what there, but in what's not in the world. A possibility not actualized. — Marty
If God is defined as 'explaining everything else,' then God wouldn't be God if there were an explanation of his existence. God to be God is 'the ultimate truth.' That's just how it is. We can't go further than that. — Richard Swinburne
The reason I see Thomism as mystical is that it relies on various words that have no definition that can escape either circularity or triviality, of which 'simple' is an example. Others are 'contingent', 'conditioned' and 'immaterial'. They mostly seem to be based in ontology and connected to the Aristotelean idea of essence - another term that one either finds meaningful or one doesn't. Since no definitions are available, people either find themselves naturally accepting them as if they mean something, or they don't. I am in the latter camp. — andrewk
But any cosmological argument is merely going to state that all we need is a contingent world. — Marty
Can there be answers that do not admit further questions, even in principle? — Jorndoe
That corresponds with my understanding of certain sorts of philosophy (eg classical theism, Heidegger) and that's why I see those sorts of philosophy it as mysticism. Plato sometimes sounds non-mystical but I find him to be mystical in much of his work.There is a tradition in philosophy for philosophers to develop the meaning of a term. This means that one has to read much of the philosopher's work to understand fully the application of the word — Metaphysician Undercover
The mistake most atheists make in asking 'who made God, then?' (usually with a triumphant crossing-of-arms, as if it's a knockdown argument) is that it fails to grasp the 'uncreated' nature of the first principle — Wayfarer
The mistake most atheists make in asking 'who made God, then?' (usually with a triumphant crossing-of-arms, as if it's a knockdown argument) is that it fails to grasp the 'uncreated' nature of the first principle. In other words, it attempts to situate the first principle on the same level, or within the same domain, as phenomena. — Wayfarer
There's no way that reading several books can be necessary to comprehend a definition. — andrewk
if there was a definite earliest time (or "time zero"), then anything that existed at that time, began to exist at that time, and that includes any first causes, gods/God, or whatever else — jorndoe
The first cause doesn't have to be temporal. It's an instantaneous cause. — Marty
This would be God, as a perfect being is a necessary being. — Marty
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