Religion is for those who, for whatever reason, are not inclined towards self-actualization and religion could be rather superfluous for the self-actualized. — praxis
If self-actualization is a goal - what if your best self is as an efficient serial killer? — Tom Storm
It is all an illusion. — praxis
If self-actualization is a goal - what if your best self is as an efficient serial killer? — Tom Storm
Becoming a tree hugger is just at one end of the pantheist spectrum. A fascination with power and being active is on the other end.That being the case, communing with nature (or literally whatever) could be seen as communing with God. Doesn’t seems there’s any point to pantheism without experiencing the “sense that one is part of divinity”. I formally submit that the pantheist could become lost in this sensing and unwittingly become quietist. — praxis
So M coined this phrase, I suspected, in order to finish the the thought process like every goal-oriented person does, and he carefully chose an expression that sounds meaningful while completely devoid of the same. — god must be atheist
The way I understand his approach is that we can itemize our limitations but not what being bound by them permits to exist. So the "actualization" regards being able to be an agent more than making whatever that "self" may be come into existence ex nihilo. — Valentinus
is Stoicism a better guide to living than Christianity and should it replace the latter as a set of values to live by? — Ross Campbell
Christians have hated, killed, and oppressed each other and non-Christians since it was founded, and avarice is more characteristic of Christians than charity. — Ciceronianus the White
they enjoy the pretense of sinlessness. — Ciceronianus the White
n actual real world fact, it is extremely common for Christians to refer to themselves as sinners. — Foghorn
We're not Christians by the way. — Foghorn
I don’t know if this is novel to you, but in the last few years there has been a real resurgence of popular interest in Stoic philosophy — why’d you just roll your eyes? All to the good when people are interested in the ancient world, but this is one of the more mystifying bits of interest: clichéd self-help from a philosophy that, if you looked at it really hard, was nasty, fatalistic, bordering on fascist.
But what’s your hunch about why people are being drawn to Stoicism? What comes out in Marcus Aurelius particularly is rather clichéd thoughts: Never take a major decision when your mind is troubled. We can all agree with clichés like that. And they come with the rubber stamp of great antiquity because they were written by an emperor — an emperor who was about as brutal in massacring the enemy as Julius Caesar. But we tend to forget that side of him because he’s a bearded “philosopher.” It’s not very salutary to look at your Amazon ratings, but I always feel terribly pleased — though it doesn’t happen often — when I’m higher up than Marcus Aurelius. — Ancient Rome Will Never Get Old. Take It From Mary Beard. - NYT
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