As to the commandment "love others as self" I think that is perfectly natural for a socially functional animal, and does not necessarily require any special extra beliefs in anything transcendent, although it may require that for some, but I think it all depends on the way one thinks. — Janus
simply a contingent fact of brain evolution. — Terrapin Station
the New Atheists ingeniously deny the existence of a bearded fellow with superpowers who lives in the sky and finds people’s keys for them. Daniel Dennett wants to know “if God created and designed all these wonderful things, who created God? Supergod? And who created Supergod? Superdupergod?”—thereby revealing his lack of acquaintance not only with Augustine and Thomas but with Aristotle.
It was Aristotle who wrote that “one and the same is the knowledge of contraries.” Denys Turner...puts the matter like this: “Unless…what believers and atheists respectively affirm and deny is the same for both, they cannot be said genuinely to disagree.”
There are, then, a great many people who say “God” and mistakenly believe that they have the notion, at least, in common. Hart is interested in clarifying the notion, and one of his deeper points is that the major theistic religions do indeed have something in common when they say “God.” ....Hart’s “own” definition: “one infinite source of all that is: eternal, omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, uncreated, uncaused, perfectly transcendent of all things and for that very reason absolutely immanent to all things.”
As Hart makes plain... that definition is not Hart’s, but one shared by most major religious and philosophical traditions. It is as much Aristotle’s definition as it is Moses Maimonides’s and Thomas Aquinas’s and Mulla Sadra’s and, indeed, Spinoza’s. It describes equally Brahman and Yahweh.
Then there's no reason to believe them, — Wayfarer
That would be false because your goal is to seek the truth. — 3017amen
Then there's no reason to believe them,
— Wayfarer
To believe them? It's not clear to me what you're referring to. To believe what? — Terrapin Station
I think that is perfectly natural for a socially functional animal, — Janus
People do think in terms of normatives and purposes and so on. It's simply a contingent fact of brain evolution. There's no purpose, there's no "should" to brains evolving as they did. — Terrapin Station
The specific belief in question was 'treat others as self', — Wayfarer
The subject has compelling evidence for the existence of an experience that s/he conceptualizes as 'seeing god". Alternatively s/he could conceptualize it as "realizing Buddha Nature", "seeing the unity of Atman and Brahmin", " becoming who I am" "Satchitananda" (being, consciousness, bliss), "attaining enlightenment", "rejoining the Ocean of Being", 'wandering in the dreamtime". "playing in the Akashic fields" " strawberry fields forever" "lucy in the sky with diamonds" " McArthur's Park is melting in the dark" " it's all too beautiful" and so on ad infinitum. — Janus
Some say God is truth
Some say God is false — 3017amen
Hey 180 don't be shy come join the party!
LOL — 3017amen
Hey 180 don't be shy come join the party!
LOL — 3017amen
1. God does not exist.
True or false or something else? — 3017amen
Couldn't one have a goal of Nilhilism? — 3017amen
As a goal you chose Atheism LoL — 3017amen
Ergo, belief in God is not a belief about something that exists or doesn't exist. It's a belief about the meaning of what exists. A theistic philosophy posits that the nature of the Universe is such that it means or implies the reality of a source of order which cannot itself be understood on the level of phenomena. — Wayfarer
What I'm trying to explain is that the 'God' that atheism says doesn't exist, really doesn't exist, but that this doesn't validate atheism. Mainly it’s a straw god argument with which Internet forums abound. — Wayfarer
He is too busy to attend your boring theist party. Atheists party hard. — Swan
Speaking of half-truths, actually you halfway joined the party already LOL!! — 3017amen
Storybooks — Swan
As to the commandment "love others as self" I think that is perfectly natural for a socially functional animal, and does not necessarily require any special extra beliefs in anything transcendent, although it may require that for some, but I think it all depends on the way one thinks. — Janus
But if such ideas are
simply a contingent fact of brain evolution. — Terrapin Station
Then there's no reason to believe them, they are not grounded in anything other than contingent facts. Some people just happen to believe such things - and good on 'em! But the problem is, it doesn't amount to a philosophy. — Wayfarer
So I'm using that to show that naturalism can be questioned as a basis for ethics, because it provides no reason or grounding for such principles as 'love thy neighbour'. Basically it says they're a by-product of an essentially meaningless process. And I'm using your quote to illustrate that. — Wayfarer
and in the moment of "seeing god" and saying "I see god" god exists to the one who sees him. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Today because of consumerism, entertainment and the self-centredness they foster, community, and concern for others, at least in the populous urban environs, has, unfortunately, largely declined. All this is more on account of capitalistically oriented thinking, and the sense of individual ownership and entitlement that comes with it than anything else. — Janus
I thought it went without saying that God is not a physical entity but spirit. — Wayfarer
My argument here is basically that what we nowadays understand as 'what exists' comprises the 'domain of phenomena' - those things, forces, entities, that are knowable by scientific means, the realm of naturalism, and so on. So, most often, when the question is asked whether God exists, it presumes that God is part of that domain of phenomena. Hence the 'flying spaghetti monster', the 'celestial teapot' and all the other memes that you encounter in internet atheism. — Wayfarer
All the 'new atheists' (in particular) don't understand what it is they think doesn't exist. — Wayfarer
The vital perspective that has gone missing is that of degrees of reality. This is related to a worldview grounded in the idea of the chain of being - that reality emanates from or is originated by a transcendent intelligence, and cascades down through various levels of being, of which matter is the lowest level, i.e. most remote from the origin or source. — Wayfarer
And as our culture sees matter as being the only reality, then obviously understanding or coming to terms with that outlook is quite a difficult matter. — Wayfarer
It will point out that whilst all phenomena are compound and transient, there is something that the intellect can grasp that is not, and that is the reality of number and geometric form. So represents knowledge of a different kind to sensory knowledge - it's direct intellectual apprehension, dianoia. — Wayfarer
I think that a problem of the theism/atheism debates among laypeople is that whatever is meant by "existence" is not properly defined at all. This means that people tend to mix physical and metaphysical perspectives, in addition to mixing epistemic, ontic and normative perspectives. More often than not, you end up with a big mess with everyone talking past each other. — Echarmion
All the 'new atheists' (in particular) don't understand what it is they think doesn't exist.
— Wayfarer
Do you think that, if they understood, they wouldn't be atheists? I think I understand, at least the basics, but I am not convinced. — Echarmion
I agree that such a-priori apprehension exists. But that alone is not sufficient to establish a platonic world of intelligibles. — Echarmion
The vital perspective that has gone missing is that of degrees of reality....
— Wayfarer
That perspective too requires justification though. How do we judge whether this perspective is, for lack of a better word, true? — Echarmion
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