Actually i agree, watching tv is a great way to pass the time but not a great way to get ideas about how society should work or about how to vote at the election.
— christian2017
Plato said learning geometry and would have said watching Snow White are activities that help the society. Platonic stuff
Matter is defined by degrees of solidity. Nothingness must be the softest "thing" possible (although it's closer to an idea than a substance. Sorry Descartes). I think science can answer the HOW but not the what or the why. The how can be explained by a non-existing clock. It clicks, the first second thus exist, and then the second, ect. Suddenly a whole clock exists and it rebirths itself every hour. It didn't come from nothing as far as science is concerned. It just is a brute fact. Nothingness is necessary (how could there not be nothing?) but not brute. It's too soft for that :) — Gregory
Can matter exist without movement/heat?
— christian2017
No. It everything is dependent on motion and motion on them, but motion is the prime mover. — Gregory
spaces in our universe that have nothing — christian2017
If matter matter requires motion and all matter involves gravitational pull (Newtonian as well as Einstein believed this), wouldn't that imply there was always motion, thus eternal motion going back forever? Or did i misunderstand you and matter or small particles did not always exist? — christian2017
spaces in our universe that have nothing
— christian2017
I believe those places are were holiness resides. Not a being, not a Person, but abstract holiness.
"Impermanence, called anicca or anitya (Sanskrit) appears extensively in the Pali Canon as one of the essential doctrines of Buddhism" Wiki
Impermanence implies something from nothing.
"The Theravada school teaches that there is no universal personal god. The world as we know it does not have its origin in a primordial being such as Brahman or the Abrahamic God." Wiki — Gregory
back to collective soul or collective consceeeence. I don't entirely disagree with that. Is that what you are getting at. — christian2017
back to collective soul or collective consceeeence. I don't entirely disagree with that. Is that what you are getting at.
— christian2017
We and the world have all the reality to exist on our own, yet we are dependent on nothingness. I can't settle that paradox, but it is not a contradiction. If it feels like a contradiction, the thought will take time. We don't all share a common soul nor experience the same things. So we are "collective" only through the womb of nothing. "A medium" as Hegel put it — Gregory
I'm guessing if i wanted to know what you believe i would study a Hindu or Buddhist Holy book? — christian2017
I'm guessing if i wanted to know what you believe i would study a Hindu or Buddhist Holy book?
— christian2017
For an Eastern view, yes. For a Western view, the German idealists — Gregory
Perhaps you know more about this subject. — christian2017
Perhaps you know more about this subject.
— christian2017
I've read a little about it. Ancestor worship is very popular in other religions. I personally think it may have been a more comforting religion in times of crisis than the Jewish rabbi one now popular — Gregory
I was talking about Hinduism. Did i mention ancestor worship? Whats this about a jewish rabbi? — christian2017
I was talking about Hinduism. Did i mention ancestor worship? Whats this about a jewish rabbi?
— christian2017
I was speaking of Jesus. You brought up Druids, so I brought up another interesting theory. With the theory of evolution, how far back is it scientifically rational to worship your ancestors? Hinduism doesn't interest me as much as Buddhism though. Fascinination with nothingness! — Gregory
Oh so you were saying ancestor worship was more comforting than christianity (your original phrase was slightly vague). I disagree but whatever. — christian2017
Humans could easily go back 2 million years and a minimum of 100,000. I don't see why human ancestor worshiping religions can't go back to scientific adam and scientific eve. You ought to look up those concepts because scientists actually recognize scientific adam and scientific eve. — christian2017
Oh so you were saying ancestor worship was more comforting than christianity (your original phrase was slightly vague). I disagree but whatever.
— christian2017
Christianity is immoral, ancestor worship isn't. Sure it's comforting to think a God would die for you in order to change you (not you personally) from a evil person to a good person. But it's a clear perversion of justice in the name of mercy. Mercy has to do with doing away with punishment in order to give someone a chance to make up for what they did. Christianity changes mercy into something else, saying that you can't make up for your sins so that your only salvation is for God to walla! change you into a good person. It's sick. It was created by sinners for sinners. Bad people created it. Weak people believe it. We all have weak moments though — Gregory
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