True.But, talking in philosophical terms, the point is that the Christian belief in the resurrection obviously implies acceptance of a reality beyond the physical. This challenges our accepted understanding of the way things are on a lot of levels. — Wayfarer
(Hence what I call 'handrail materialism' - the adoption of materialism as an attitude because it gives you something to hang onto in the face of uncertainty.) — Wayfarer
I agree. Live with the unknown. Don't make it about knowledge. That's just the same, sad metaphysical quest for the magic word. And yet there are words that liberate us from magic words...ladders to be thrown away... Or that's how I see it..I think a part of spirituality is the ability to live with the unknown - to accept the idea that nobody really knows about these matters, rather than accepting the implied authority of science (or scientism) in respect of something it really has no idea of. — Wayfarer
You can't just dismiss the possibility of a soul, by saying it seems to be highly unlikely. You may be one who lives your life making decisions based on what "seems" to be the case, but this is philosophy, and we don't take "seems to me" as justification for any such assertion. — Metaphysician Undercover
I have a sense of humor about this. — Hoo
But our "self" wants recognition, so what it glues itself to is above others too, whether they like it or not.
Do you think that this is a form of worshipping false idols? — saw038
I'm having fun. It's the "seriousness of a child at play." I really don't mean to offend, but perhaps the imp of the perverse grabs the steering wheel now and then. I'm a smiley joker in person.Thank heavens for small mercies. X-) — Wayfarer
I am sure 'religion' recognizes that, in fact, is built around it. Certainly, that insight is often corrupted and distorted, but it's present in the texts. 'He who saves his own life will lose it...' — Wayfarer
And in fact we do use "seems to me" to be a preliminary for something. It seems to you that my argument is wrong. It does not seem this way to me. — darthbarracuda
From a more naturalistic point of view, I can. There is no being 100% sure (even about this claim). Truth is estimated by likelihood. — darthbarracuda
My point is that it seems interesting that we associate this idea of 'I' with a very limited perspective of the totality that we occupy (our bodies).
I agree with a lot of what you say, but I think the idolatry is the key problem that I take serious issue with. — saw038
I dismiss it by (1) there being no evidence of such a thing with respect to the multitude of vague ways that people have defined it, (2) the idea of nonphysical existents being incoherent.You can't just dismiss the possibility of a soul, by saying it seems to be highly unlikely. You may be one who lives your life making decisions based on what "seems" to be the case, but this is philosophy, and we don't take "seems to me" as justification for any such assertion. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've only read bits and pieces of it, but I can see how it might have that effect. Dawkins isn't someone who should dabble in philosophy in my opinion, because he kind of sucks at it. He should stick with zoology. David Deutsch is another. He's even worse as a philosopher than Dawkins in my opinion. Deutsch should stick to doing physics from a strictly instrumentalist perspective.I think the publication of The God Delusion was a real turning point - — Wayfarer
I dismiss it by (1) there being no evidence of such a thing with respect to the multitude of vague ways that people have defined it, (2) the idea of nonphysical existents being incoherent. — Terrapin Station
Of course, I think some philosophers who were trained as philosophers suck, too, but that's another story. — Terrapin Station
1. Was Jesus' resurrection only a work of literature with no physical grounds that such a thing occurred?
2. Was Jesus' resurrection a true story that transcended the realm of physical laws as we currently perceive them?
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