 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         We're both given to sort of peacocking, I think. We both do it, the OP was doing it, and I've responded by doing it. But how would you sum up the OP in a few sentences? — csalisbury
 Deleteduserrc
Deleteduserrc         
          unenlightened
unenlightened         
         -and I still think fixing academia requires restructuring academic incentive structures. But that is for the other thread. — csalisbury
This is the bible story that, even more than Job, popularises atheism — unenlightened
The very idea that there could be some principle adherence to which would be more important than one's own child's life is so repugnant on the face of it, that even in the bible, God has to relent once He has established His absolute authority. — unenlightened
 baker
baker         
         Because, as God commandeth -- Thou shalt have no other gods before Me!With that one command, God puts Abraham in a tight spot - he has to treat that which he loves as that which he hates. After all, Abraham may have surely met someone whom he'd have loved to use his dagger on and relate that to what he's commanded to do, off his child with his dagger. God then is attempting to teach Abraham a moral lesson - treat the ones you hate same as the ones you love. — TheMadFool
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         Warning! Idiosyncracy. — TheMadFool
What does all this mean? In seven simple words, "morality requires you to surrender your ego." — TheMadFool
 frank
frank         
         but that is obviously not what this story is about at all, — unenlightened
What I don't understand is why you want to make a new interpretation and persuade us that you are telling a better story. — unenlightened
It's not that I disagree with your seven simple words, but that is obviously not what this story is about at all, because if it was about that and everyone had got it wrong up 'til now, it would be a crap teaching story. There are stories that teach ego renunciation but not this one. — unenlightened
 frank
frank         
          thewonder
thewonder         
          Hanover
Hanover         
         From my position, I would say that either you or Kierkegaard has misunderstood the nature of faith. Empirical evidence is irrelevant to faith. My belief in justice is not increased by the discovery that it occasionally prevails, or decreased by the observation that it commonly does not. — unenlightened
 thewonder
thewonder         
         As to whether I have Kierkegaard right, I don't know, but I took his position that Abraham showed the perfect faith in God when he unquestionably agreed to sacrifice his son without objection. My point was that he didn't show faith as we understand it in a contemporary sense because Abraham had no reason to question God. — Hanover
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         But to your other comment, do you not have a rational basis (as opposed to an empirical one) for believing in the existence of justice or must faith also play a role? — Hanover
 praxis
praxis         
         do you not have a rational basis (as opposed to an empirical one) for believing in the existence of justice or must faith also play a role? — Hanover
 thewonder
thewonder         
          thewonder
thewonder         
          Banno
Banno         
         Are you on Highway 61, or route 66? — unenlightened
 Deleted User
Deleted User         
         Human digits are formed in the womb by the selective death of embryonic cells in the limb ends. Incomplete cell death results in webbed hands/feet.
But the state of nature is what we have fallen from, as the story goes, — unenlightened
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         I don't know what human digits are. — TaySan
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          Deleted User
Deleted User         
         What I ought to do is not what has to be, or what I want, or what you want; rather it is "the space at the wheel's hub that makes it useful" as Lao Tzu put it. The no-thing of creativity. — unenlightened
 Deleteduserrc
Deleteduserrc         
         Well on this thread I can perhaps present my position more clearly. The Academy resides on route 66 despite its monastic origins. So I grant your point for the reformation of the academy, simply noting how 'Jackal' that is. But down here on highway 61 where we get the killing done, and the dissolution of the monasteries and so on, there are no grades, and no tenure on offer. Say a true word or go straight to hell, as the Zen masters put it.
Science (as opposed to and distinct from the academy) only works if it is pursued religiously, and if it doesn't work, it's a steaming pile. So likewise, I am all for reforming the safeguarding policies of the Catholic church, but if the priests don't keep the faith, there is nothing left, and the congregation will drift away to some conspiracy theory that brings them comfort. — unenlightened
 Edy
Edy         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.