Yes, and it seems the serious question is the practical one, how to best train oneself. Regrettably, there is no one perfect answer to this. For me, it's spending lots of time in nature, for somebody else it might be attending Mass, or doing scientific research, or driving a bus. We spend a lot of time arguing over which is the "one true way" when we probably should instead be focused on the question of "what is the right way for me?" — Jake
Words can easily get in the way. As example, if we ask "what is the right way for me to see God" the word God immediately brings to mind a collection of images in Western culture that may be helpful, or may be a fatal distraction. — Jake
I'm not sure what part of Catholic teaching might address any of this, perhaps you point to something? — Jake
As far as Catholicism goes the solution I see is simple and straightforward, have the clergy and nuns swap roles. Still an entirely Catholic operation, but all the branding damage is removed as an obstacle. One decisive act and Catholic credibility is back on track in the public realm, but regrettably in it's current form Catholicism appears to be incapable of such clarity. But then, I haven't been Catholic in a long time, so what do I really know about it? — Jake
Wisdom is that which enables us to discern or recognise right action. It is not right action of itself. — Pattern-chaser
And that's all there is to it? — S
No. It requires your deliberate misunderstanding to reduce it to nonsense. :sad: — Pattern-chaser
Is it wise to give a definition if the wording is terrible and leads to the very thing you call nonsense? — S
The wording isn't terrible. — Pattern-chaser
how about something like an objective search for truth as you perceive truth to be, and acting in accordance with your truth. — Rank Amateur
The problem is that we can never truly be objective, — S
And that it could still be unwise, or so it seems to me, to go out searching for what we perceive truth to be, and acting in accordance with this perceived truth, which might not be true at all. — S
Anyway, here's what I really think about wisdom. — S
sure, and we can never be absolutely, truly a bunch of things. Does the inability of purity make the quest less important? — Rank Amateur
except there is no "truth" or "wisdom" judge to give you the absolute and un-biased truth that you really are a fool. Although - there will be no shortage of impostures that tell you they are - and that you are — Rank Amateur
You too?? — Rank Amateur
But for me it is a label, we have to call this entity something so we can somewhat discuss the concept. — Rank Amateur
There is an immovable obstacle in the way of this idea. One that is complete catholic dogma so don't have a reasoned argument against. But the catch is, it has been addressed authoritatively, which means infallibly. — Rank Amateur
There is no way around the abuse scandal - none. — Rank Amateur
Just for the sake of friendly debate, I would ask, what price are Catholics willing to pay for sticking with the failing status quo? The credibility and influence of the Church is collapsing, which from the Catholic perspective will result in lost souls. Is losing these souls worth it, just so the clergy can do one particular job instead of another equally important job, the work of nuns? — Jake
Not arguing, explaining. — Rank Amateur
For Catholics, the authority of the church is a direct and unbroken line from Christ to Peter, to every pope since. — Rank Amateur
The real question is if there are supernatural realities. — Walter Pound
For Catholics, the authority of the church is a direct and unbroken line from Christ to Peter, to every pope since. — Rank Amateur
Like an individual cell can not think, perhaps the universe as a whole can exhibit properties like thinking. — Bill Hobba
How to restore the lost credibility of this institution which has been so central in Western culture? — Jake
Like an individual cell can not think, perhaps the universe as a whole can exhibit properties like thinking. Spinoza has a whole dialectic on this with subtle definitions of substance etc. — Bill Hobba
maybe you could refrain from clogging the forum with your cleverness? You know, there's an appropriate place for what you want to do. It's called Facebook. — Jake
Words can easily get in the way. As example, if we ask "what is the right way for me to see God" the word God immediately brings to mind a collection of images in Western culture that may be helpful, or may be a fatal distraction. That's why I'm often arguing for ignorance, clearing the mind of theories and conclusions to assist in facilitating experience. Each of us can reach for experiences that transcend the mundane, and there is really no need to then label and categorize the experience. I'm not sure what part of Catholic teaching might address any of this, perhaps you point to something? — Jake
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