Religions and governments typically are though.
— praxis
You mean "Churches" (religious/spiritual leaderships), right? — Alkis Piskas
This is true for some coersive, suppressing institutions that try to prevent people's self-development, independent thought etc. Medicine is a typical example, as you said. Church too. But you cannot generalize it and apply it to all the groups ("brands as you call them) on earth!Any brand wants you to be as dependent on that brand as possible and therefore has an interest in its subscribers not developing — praxis
Who says that Zen is a religion? It is a school of Mahayana Buddhism. I personally consider it a practical religious philosophy, as most of the Buddhist schools.Zen is a good example of what I mean because it's regarded as an austere tradition that focuses on training (meditation) and experiential intuition. Some people don't even consider it a religion. — praxis
What do you mean by "better than it typically is" mean? What does "typically" represend and Where does it result from? Have you been trained in Zen quite a lot and are not satisfied with the results? And what about million people who live on Zen principles and are practicing it?If this were really true then why isn't the training better than it typically is? — praxis
Reading a book about a subject is great but one cannot expect or even "see" results if this subject involves training, and particularly an intensive and long one. In this case, one has to find out what other people who have obtained results say about them.I'm currently working through a book on Zen training called Hidden Zen, by Meido Moore. — praxis
Reading a book about a subject is great but one cannot expect or even "see" results if this subject involves training, and particularly an intensive and long one. In this case, one has to find out what other people who have obtained results say about them. — Alkis Piskas
Do you maybe mean "morality"?
(Morale is "the confidence, enthusiasm, and discipline of a person or group at a particular time" (common definition)) — Alkis Piskas
I am afraid that you are trying to justify your mistake, making it much bigger than what it was, instead of just accepting the --again, minor-- correction I did. (Indeed, it looks like just a typo.)According to Julian Baggini morals are to do with morale — Fine Doubter
Seems that money is one of the main reasons that chaos would be greater in societies without God — dimosthenis9
People wouldn't need lies if they could follow Logic, but apparently they can't. — dimosthenis9
your mistake — Alkis Piskas
Sharing your views is a kind of mutual leading by example — Fine Doubter
I was frightened by your lack of care for all the theists in your country because you think they deserve tanks, and mafia, and lies, rather than your sitting down with them discussing. — Fine Doubter
Even 180 Proof had constructive ideas — Fine Doubter
Normally most of us perhaps like Banno would assume that if you didn't react you had accepted our answers anyway. — Fine Doubter
The Forsters' associates used twisted versions of Nietzsche's loose notes to drum up business for the Nazis, though Hitler himself is thought not to have bothered with either those, nor the real thing. — Fine Doubter
Aha, interesting point. This is where we need to expand on our own understanding, then others will catch hold of it when we are conversing with them. — Fine Doubter
In the United States combined with other powers, money is the reason chaos has been made greater in societies claiming to have a "god" and my acquaintances are in grave danger in direct connection with this sort of thing. I have spent a lot of time looking into this. The detail would to have to be made suited to a worldwide largely agnostic readership. — Fine Doubter
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