I maybe completely off the mark on this one but I get the distinct feeling that parents love it when their kids are smart and simply go bonkers when they're smarter. — TheMadFool
Yes, your comment is an equivocation, though an innocent one. :smile: — JerseyFlight
Equivocation? How so? — TheMadFool
This perspective begins from the premise that religions are culturally formed belief systems. — JerseyFlight
What I have learned, having had many exchanges, is that the act of formally defining things is often the mark of a novice dialectician. — JerseyFlight
Wrong, I am incompetent at using formal logic and therefore it is useless, I refuse to see it any other way. — Judaka
I've lost all faith in sarcasm over the internet. — Judaka
Its very obvious to define "technology" as religion, when every aspect fits the major "theories" of religion. — batsushi7
But I think what makes something a religion is the structure of the belief system, and I don't see that similarity between the structure of the belief systems relating to God, and the structure of the belief systems relating to technology. — Metaphysician Undercover
So what I see in the human relationship with technology is a lack of religion. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are incorrect. Logical thinking requires solid definitions. — Philosophim
Yes, it does require some definitions, but you fail to grasp my point. What you are talking about is the process of novice dialectics. This is proven quite easily, when two knowledgeable philosophers come together to discourse they do not define every term, because they are not coming to the conversation without any prior understanding. Further, if you reason this way you will not get very far in knowledge. I can easily play what I call, 'the narrowing game,' but I try not to do it because I am trying to get somewhere in the conversation, I am not merely trying to win. You are, in fact, already practicing what I say, unless I'm mistaken and you define every conjunction? Of course you don't and neither does the other person because you have a basic understanding of these symbols. It's the same way with more advanced dialectics, this act of presupposing, of shared meaning, is how knowledge unfolds through dialectic. — JerseyFlight
But surely one can be a novice dialectic when it comes to one particular subject and a well versed one when it comes to another. — DoppyTheElv
If a philosopher of mind and a philosopher of religion meet to have a discussion, would not one of them require some definitions to be able to continue discourse? — DoppyTheElv
Yes. But this begs that question, why would I attempt to have a conversation on the philosophy of mind (with a person who is learned in this area) without any prior knowledge?
What I said is quite accurate friend... even now you do not need a definition for every word I use, and what does this allow us to do? It allows us to communicate at a deeper level. — JerseyFlight
I didnt mean it as an argument my apologies. I simply wanted to get a clearer picture of what you were saying. — DoppyTheElv
No matter how good technology gets, it won't solve the core mysteries of existence: Why are we here? What's the point of this existence? What's the true nature of reality? As long as those questions remain unanswered, people will turn to religion. — RogueAI
Strange you say this, because people are only turning to organized religion in a superficial sense.
Are you really suggesting that people will choose the comfort of the ideal of God over Netflix?
Come on son, that world is dying.
Further, religion does not answer the questions you posed, it merely pretends to answer them.
The true nature of reality is that we are not supposed to be here — Gregory
Society is obsessed with photos and mirrors. — Gregory
This is proven quite easily, when two knowledgeable philosophers come together to discourse they do not define every term, because they are not coming to the conversation without any prior understanding. — JerseyFlight
unless I'm mistaken and you define every conjunction? — JerseyFlight
It's the same way with more advanced dialectics, this act of presupposing, of shared meaning, is how knowledge unfolds through dialectic. — JerseyFlight
I usually do not discourse with novice dialecticians. — JerseyFlight
The topic here is the question, 'Is Technology a New Religion,' you are talking about people deriving pleasure or satisfaction from religion. — JerseyFlight
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