I reject the premise that it's ultimately possible to verify that moral claims objectively obtain. — Baden
How does "it not being possible to verify that moral claims objectively obtain" not matter? — Noble Dust
Lemme try this: It's flippant to deny the possibility of life after death. — Noble Dust
And Jeff is cool but over-rated. Typical 27 club shit. — Noble Dust
Because moral behavior is good in itself. The way to verify that is to experience it. If you experience it, then it obtains. — Baden
My position, more precisely, is to deny that there is any reason, evidential or otherwise, to believe in life after death. — Baden
The flippancy must be catching. — Baden
Side-note: I don't want to disrespect those who are in extreme pain (though they represent a minority and not the "overwhelming majority" as javra claimed) and employ coping mechanisms to deal with it. That's a rational strategy. Though to a degree surface-level; there's a certain level of deliberate self-deception involved probably. Anyway, I'd jump on that bus too if I needed to. — Baden
I've been quite drawn to Buddhism all my adult life. And contrary to popular opinion Buddhism teaches that there are hells - more than one! - into which beings are reborn due to their karma, where they remain for aeons of kalpas (= a very long time, Indian astronomers conceived of aeons in quite realistic terms).
Actually there are six realms into which beings are (constantly) reborn - hell realms, animal realms, hungry-ghost realms, 'demi-god' realms and heavenly realms. (None of these realms constitute Nirvāṇa which utterly transcends all realms, although in popular religion, Nirvāṇa is frequently imagined to be a kind of heaven.)
So what do I make of this? I don't claim to know, but I have a conviction that 'identity overflows physicality', as it were - that there is both a 'before' and an 'after' of the book-ends of this physical birth. This doesn't mean that the person I am now continues in another life. But whomever or whatever inhabits those other realms, they too are beings and they are born with an inherited past and what they do will propagate states of being into the future. I'm very vague on detail but I think something like Sheldrake's 'morphic resonance' could provide an explanatory medium (see here for example.)
If you read into the early Buddhist texts very little is said about it in detail; it's simply the assumed cultural background and the Buddha is, among other things, 'lokavidu', that is, 'knower of worlds'. This means he is able to foresee where beings are bound, but he too is generally extremely reticent about the details. (Early Buddhism, on the whole, is noticeably lacking in 'believe it or else' kinds of dialogue.)
In later buddhist iconography, the 'six realms' are graphically depicted in for instance the Tibetan Bhavachakra paintings (meaning literally 'wheel of becoming'. In classical Indian culture, travelling panditas would carry one of these with them and then hang them in the hall as the subject for lectures on the fate of the soul.)
As an inhabitant of modern culture, I don't want to interpret myth literally, but I also don't want to relegate it to the domain of 'mere mythology'. I'm sure that heaven and hell are more than 'mere' myth, although again, vague about the details (although also convinced enough to worry about them). But I also understand that rejection of such notions is one of the cardinal beliefs of secular culture, and so this forum is probably not the place to thrash it out. — Wayfarer
Word, I'm cautiously with eternal return in the sense of reincarnation, maybe..?? Not sure what you mean otherwise. At least from what you quoted. — Noble Dust
I've had some extremely acrimonious exchanges in the past about these subjects, so I'm cautious. — Wayfarer
Something stuck with me, which is that beings in those between states will instinctively follow or attach themselves to things they're drawn to, which are very much a result of the habits they've formed. So if you're drawn to the wrong things, end up manifesting in bad states of being - meaning that habits will have disproportionately large consequences in such a situation. — Wayfarer
Dammit, still at it. Yesterday, I went to the trouble of methodically purging all browser history pertaining to Philosophy forum, but old habits die hard. I'll probably get reborn in some cyber-hell comprising constant circular arguments. :confused: — Wayfarer
Yeah, that was not a cogent explanation, so I would need one, in order to respond. — Noble Dust
Give me a fucking break, who moved this to the lounge? Baden @StreetlightX @jamalrob @Michael @Hanover@fdrake
What a fucking disgrace to philosophy. — Noble Dust
I'd be happy to hear a "non-cogent" argument if you have one to give. I'd probably respond in a similarly non-cogent manner. Non-cogency is sort of my speciality... — Noble Dust
Not at all; as the mods well know, the lounge is where threads go to die. Hell, everyone knows that. — Noble Dust
No, fuck the mods, in this instance. i.e. Baden @jamalrob @StreetlightX @Hanover, etc. Fuck them for moving a thread that deals with universal problems to the lounge where no one will see it, and it will happily die. Fuck that shit. — Noble Dust
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