As supernatural entity, yes. As regulative idea, in the manner of Kant, useful indeed. And to my way of thinking, that means we're all more or less a part of God. And I appreciate "getting to the point."This makes the reference of God both useless and unnecessary. — JerseyFlight
Tackle this, if you're of a mind to, because I don't see it. Why not? My account would be the hermeneutic circle/spiral. Which would be to say that Christianity indeed informs as to its ethical core.if one "sees an ethical core" in Christianity one has not seen it because of Christianity. — JerseyFlight
And to my way of thinking, that means we're all more or less a part of God. — tim wood
It means we are all to some degree God. — tim wood
If I were to accept your opinion that “God exists” is a nonsense poetic comment…I would have to accept that my take on the question, “I do not know if any gods exist” is also a nonsense poetic comment. — Frank Apisa
No, the usages of words, not words alone, have meaning or not. Read e.g. Philosophical Investigations and On Certainty, both by Ludwig Wittgenstein. — 180 Proof
The use of religion by politics was constructive in the development of civilisation. It's perversion into nihilist militant extremism is a recent development, one which will be stamped out I expect.This truly is the functioning of a backward, primitive species.
Enlighten me? Either there is a singularity, or some other fudge (poetry). You still have the same problem. — Punshhh
Can you account for any opinion that there is no supernatural component in our origin, I can't see one? — Punshhh
Super natural: a manifestation or event attributed to some force beyond scientific understanding or the laws of nature. (Or maybe start with the mystery of consciousness, that should be easy :snicker: .) — 3017amen
In summary, you haven't explained your conscious existence and how you came to be... , now, you are saying that logic cannot answer the deepest questions of existence. — 3017amen
the values that comes with the god and the religion makes peoples life better. — Ibtehal
It is humanistic values coupled with advances in knowledge that makes people's lives better.
6m — JerseyFlight
Have you read the old testament wisdom books? — 3017amen
We are stuck to our pragmatic empirical methodologies however and thusly cannot answer said question as only questions about experiences themselves as well as their relations can then be taken seriously. — substantivalism
So can you argue through a pragmatic scientific investigation of your experiences that there was a potential possibility in the past of having held an experience of a human being called Jesus? Imagining talking to an acquaintance and "actually" talking to an acquaintance are two different experiences which we can distinguish. . . which one is Jesus (the purely imagined or the purely "real"). — substantivalism
Yes and no. We know that the laws of the universe are full of paradox and uncertainty. Godel's theorem warns us that the axiomatic method of making logical deductions from given assumptions cannot in general provide a system which is both provably complete and consistent. — 3017amen
It doesn't mean that the universe is absurd or meaningless only that an understanding of its existence and properties lie outside the usual categories of rational human thought. And so if the reason for existence has no explanation in the usual sense (through empirical observation), something beyond the natural laws governing existence is the so-called logical consequence. Hence the concept of super-natural. — 3017amen
I suppose another thought there would be relative to Subjective Idealism. If the concept of consciousness viz Christianity, includes parcing the nature of both mind and God (God's suppose-ed son Jesus), then reading a historical accounting of a historical figure or person wouldn't be a starkly opposing process compared with apperception of anything from our conscious existence. — 3017amen
Though, others have defined natural in such a manner that dealing in the supernatural (using such a term) would be redundant or useless as a distinction. — substantivalism
you saying that a person talking to another person is equivalent to imagining they are talking to a person? What is that you are trying to say here. . . was Jesus a "real" person or not (not purely a fictional one but a potential "human" experience the same as talking to a friend of yours). — substantivalism
Explain why it's redundant or useless as a distinction (?). I look forward to your response. — 3017amen
Are you saying that all historical figures were fictional characters? — 3017amen
Natural is what exists and either is or gives rise to our experiences. — substantivalism
Historical figures (assuming were talking about real ones here) = "potential" encounters not unlike other people we've experienced. — substantivalism
Which is full of paradox and uncertainty, and are provably incomplete and inconsistent (Godel). And so how does your natural experiences help you in your argument? — 3017amen
What argument do you have there, that supports the use of the natural laws of the universe? I anxiously await your response. — 3017amen
I agree. Think of it this way, if someone came to you and said I saw someone performing a miracle, would you believe them? Whose truth is that? — 3017amen
natural experiences but what gives rise to and are experiences (what they do or how they do it) are what is natural. — substantivalism
Not to mention this experience would have to be replicated and investigated to rule out other possible factors as well as whether it was entirely "psychological". In that if we replicate it with numerous bystanders would he be the sole one experiencing it and all others at a loss? — substantivalism
I'm not following that... . How does that explain the inherent flaws from our natural laws of the universe and your conscious existence ? — 3017amen
You're not addressing the questions; are you simply not able to, using your experiences? — 3017amen
In the end, that sounds like George Berkeley's metaphysical theory of Subjective Idealism. No real exceptions taken there... . :up: — 3017amen
I was talking about how some may define natural differently in such a manner that they wouldn't require the label supernatural. There I was clarifying that experiences alone aren't what's natural but what is natural is an umbrella term covering those experiences and what gives rise to them. It's just different ways of approaching the definition of the terms here.
For natural laws here or laws of nature i'd take a regulative stance and merely state that certain features of cognitive awareness/connection to insinuating experiences/having said experiences retain many numerous experiential correlations. — substantivalism
You can only use your own experiences; what else would there be? — substantivalism
I can only conclude to holding a form of epistemological idealism with pragmatic/scientific methodology to guide me from general experiences to other general/abstract conclusions made from them. — substantivalism
Again, as i've said numerous times before, we CANNOT know the true nature of our experiences (this includes a sort of Berkley idealism in which experiences in of themselves are all that they are) as we are only aware of the affects that such experiences have on "us" and the abstract conclusions made thereafter. — substantivalism
...not exactly sure what all that means. I would say to you, don't be afraid to embrace the concept of super-natural. As I said, (in our context) it's just a consequence of temporal-ness and finitude that exists in the world of physics and logic/reason. — 3017amen
The concept of super-natural. In the alternative, one could always parse the notion of synthetic a priori knowledge :chin: — 3017amen
What would be an example of that sense of scientific pragmatism relating to (explaining) the nature of your conscious existence? — 3017amen
No exceptions taken.
In summary, looks like we still have paradox and uncertainty, inconsistency and incompleteness. — 3017amen
The idea of constructing better abstract models of reality and waiting for them to break. Acknowledging their success but aware that they merely describe a black box and that their time could be up at anytime.
Going back to the actual reply the first thing covered was an explication of semantics. We can or could define natural in such a way that it precludes such supernatural distinctions. The second was just me clarifying the other common philosophical position on natural laws. Not sure you got this or not. — substantivalism
Did you create your knowledge or gave rise to these foundations? If the answer is more or less univocally no or probably no then it had to come from that which isn't "you". From outside. . . from experience. . . from the reality's interactions with itself or what was to become "you". — substantivalism
I've given rise to myself so what is likely is that the nature of my existence comes from outside (not me). — substantivalism
I still await to see a full conclusion that it isn't our concepts or abstract models which confuse us (give rise to contradictions) and it's the nature (the thing that's inaccessible) is fundamentally contradictory. — substantivalism
And how would you define it then? What are 'abstract models' in themselves? — 3017amen
Is that some form of Platonism? Or is it some incomplete mathematical axiom? — 3017amen
Is that like the mysterious/metaphysical sense of wonderment? In other words, does consciousness and self-awareness cause higher life forms of life to wonder about things? Or, as you say, does wonderment come from experience? — 3017amen
Okay. so something outside yourself caused your self to come into Being. Is that a form of super-natural causation, or something that just is. If it's something that just is, then we're back to where we started. — 3017amen
As do physicists: ToE. — 3017amen
Abstract models merely are further combinations of concepts that we possess now and continue to learn formulated in such a way that they are implied to be certain aspects of our experience. Giving the three letter word red to the experience of seeing such a color. — substantivalism
isn't platonism and it was never meant to be deductive but inductively/abductively strong. — substantivalism
You experience wonderment but I do not have a feeling of creating it directly only one of passive interaction when the right set of experiences arise. — substantivalism
fact that I don't know means there is something beyond me that gives rise to such experiences. — substantivalism
So abstract models are natural then, from experience? — 3017amen
No exceptions taken, since in our context; Jesus, Platonism, etc. etc. can be abstract models about some other form of consciousness from which the ideas themselves also come from consciousness. Does that sound right? — 3017amen
No exceptions. Can you translate that into Revelation in Christianity, as well as the religious experience phenomenon that uses induction? — 3017amen
So you really don't know how, and why, wonder exists, correct? — 3017amen
Okay, so you don't know. — 3017amen
ask yourself why hold onto this model if it contradicts it or postulates the existence of experiences not yet had (nor presently capable of being shown possible). — substantivalism
If you are to fudge a model to allow for your Jesus then you most be truthful about the application of said model to other similar entities while respecting core meanings. Further, it's a wonder of mine of whether what you could say ontologically/metaphysically through your christian existentialism I or anyone else could just as easily translate (language wise or theory wise) into a form of physicalism/panpsychism/objective idealism/subjective idealism/process philosophy/etc. Is metaphysics so conventional? — substantivalism
Only that it does and correlates with certain experiences (there is no reason to postulate its independency from external factors or its dependency but there are strong correlations). — substantivalism
Don't know the true nature of these experiences — substantivalism
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