I am sure that there have been great mistakes in the way the Church has interpreted science. My own perspective is really to try to go beyond mistakes and rifts in understanding, with a view to working towards ways of understanding, especially in relation to the development of strategies which focus on addressing the issues of our time, especially ecology and think about the wellbeing of future generations. — Jack Cummins
I think that it is a very blurry line. Initially, I began reading Plotinus today with a view to discussion with Apollodorus in relation to a thread which I began a few days ago. However, the more I I think about it, the whole question of thinking about the divine becomes more blurry. However, my own foreclosure on such matters remains because both the language of those who speak of the divine and those who speak of neuroscience seem caught up in knots. @Madfoolhas already created a thread based on my own thoughts about philosophical knots and philosophical dangers, but, from my own perspective, philosophy, especially in connection between the areas arising in the area between science and religion is like being completely entangled in knots, and my own quest is about trying to see ways of disentangling these knots. — Jack Cummins
religion — Jack Cummins
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.