Any such notion of a self with all its meanings set against a meaningless world is an archetypal expression of Cartesian thinking. This is one of the very important themes in Heidegger. — Janus
I would not necessarily agree that "there is ALWAYS an out-group for the religious" — Janus
Just look at our friend Wayfarer, who espouses the value of religion AND enthusiastically condemns the materialist infidels. — praxis
I basically believe that nothing has any meaning. — yupamiralda
if you're not with them then you're against (hate) them. — praxis
Just look at our friend Wayfarer, who espouses the value of religion AND enthusiastically condemns the materialist infidels. — praxis
I get that you hate religion. I'm not so much 'enthusiastic' about it, as wanting to retrieve from it what made it meaningful in the first place. It seems obvious to me that a good deal of modern nihilism is based on the lack of any sense of relatedness to the Cosmos. — Wayfarer
Observe, Janus, if you're not with them then you're against (hate) them. :roll: — praxis
Your view is too simplistic. What is lost in worldviews dominated by reductionist thinking is the sense of the sacred. Of course, religions themselves often reinforce this loss, and one way they may do this is by claiming certain places, objects, events or people as sacred in contrast to the rest as being ordinary, mechanical, fallen and so on. The sense that life itself, the universe and everything in it is sacred, divine, is both the result and expression of the meaning that is always and everywhere immanent . — Janus
Exactly. Youre comparing your view with humans' preliminary explanation of the world and their place in it - when humans believed that they were the focus of creation. Religion has a tendency to inflate one's self importance which is just another form of delusion - delusions of grandeur.A view like this is probably closest to the kinds of animism that suffused the lives of hunter/ gatherers. — Janus
The part I don't share is in thinking that there are "higher truths" to do with some transcendent realm that enlightened individuals or the favored "instruments of God" have privileged access to. — Janus
Exactly. Youre comparing your view with humans' preliminary explanation of the world and their place in it - when humans believed that they were the focus of creation. — Harry Hindu
So there's a perceived antinomy between conformist, authoritarian religious belief, and contrarian, creative individualism.
So I think that's why you rebel so strongly against any suggestion of religious authority, isn't it? — Wayfarer
Whereas, the type of teacher associated with the more characteristically Eastern modes of understanding (i.e. dharma) does not necessarily represent authority in that sense (although he might). The model is different - more like the teacher empowering the student by guiding and imparting wisdom. — Wayfarer
if you're not with them then you're against (hate) them.
— praxis
It's not a general statement, but an observation based on what you say. OK, maybe 'hate' might be too strong a word but you generally express a very strong sense of hostility, scepticism, or something similar, against anything you deem 'religious'. — Wayfarer
I basically believe that nothing has any meaning.
This is false.
— praxis
Well, that was my interpretation of the kinds of things you say, such as
Because the foundation (spiritual authorities) have been proven to be frauds, for the vast majority anyway.
— praxis
Perhaps I misunderstood? — Wayfarer
But I disagree that these kinds of insights are only personal or private. — Wayfarer
modern culture is grounded in rejecting that authority, on thinking for yourself - as Praxis has stated more than once in this thread. So there's a perceived antinomy between conformist, authoritarian religious belief, and contrarian, creative individualism. — Wayfarer
The important point for me is that the emphasis is on commonality and love and not on hatred and separation, — Janus
Around and around we go.In the kinds of animistic worldviews found in hunter/ gatherer cultures humans are not the focus of creation. That idea came later, most notably with the Abrahamic religions, and most especially Christianity. — Janus
Animism is the religious belief that objects, places and creatures all possess a distinct spiritual essence. — Wikipedia
?You are projecting to the general what applies only to the particular: what applies to you — Janus
Maybe I just don't understand my own position. I basically believe that nothing has any meaning. When asking myself what I should do under this condition, I decided I didn't believe in anything more strongly than that I was a biological organism, and my thinking should revolve around the idea of being a successful biological organism (and doing what I can to ensure my offspring's success). I know my ideas are troubling, or absurd, or whatever. But they all follow, somehow, from that. I'm here because I don't totally trust my own thinking and I want criticism, even insults. — yupamiralda
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