baker         
         When you ask “What Does X believe”, you don’t read a book, you ask the members of the religion. — Ennui Elucidator
Ennui Elucidator         
         And you get extremely inconclusive results. — baker
Ciceronianus         
         I wonder, which other of the Stoic authors may I turn to for an exposition of this topic? — Michael Zwingli
Michael Zwingli         
         Cicero was sympathetic to Stoicism and his De Natura Deorum describes the Stoic and other conceptions of God. — Ciceronianus
Ciceronianus         
         Haha, I never got far enough along in Latin to bother with man's labyrinthine prose! — Michael Zwingli
Michael Zwingli         
         
stoicHoneyBadger         
         By "factually incorrect" you mean what?
That there is no heaven, no eternal damnation, and no nibbana? — baker
stoicHoneyBadger         
         if I like the advice itself, I might ignore the fact that it comes from a 'not very credible source'. — stoicHoneyBadger
I agree. That's what I would do too. — Alkis Piskas
Well, this sounds like a prejudice. It also sounds that you didn't read what I wrote on the subject! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
Ennui Elucidator         
         
Thunderballs         
         What if they give a class on chemistry and teach that a spark plus oxygen and hydrogen yields water? Because a religious institution teaches it, it is scientifically unprovable? — Ennui Elucidator
Alkis Piskas         
         Nietzsche is a giant and very popular philosopher. I don't know anything about his private life. Rich or poor, is certainly of no importance to me. I would even accept statements even by Wittgenstein, who was heavily deppressive and looked like wandering curse --one the most depressive figures I have ever seen in my life!-- if he didn't say such shallow things as "The limits of my language are the limits of my world" (I have created a topic on that!)Probably best example for this would be Nietzsche, who lived a rather miserable life himself, yet you feel tremendous energy and power coming from his writings. — stoicHoneyBadger
You said "I highly doubt that you can use logic to derive an ethical system", which is quite general, although I specifically explained that the ethics system I was talking about relies on reason (logic) and that the basis of it, the main principle, is survival, which is something objective and logical (at least, it is accepted as such in almost all civilizations). So, If you meant that you doubt about the viability of the specific ethics system I described, then it's OK. But I would like --not require! -- if you could also tell me why. (I always like to hear things that challenge my reality! :smile:)Probably I misses something, but anyway, how do you derive an ethical system from an observation using logic? — stoicHoneyBadger
stoicHoneyBadger         
         You said "I highly doubt that you can use logic to derive an ethical system", which is quite general, although I specifically explained that the ethics system I was talking about relies on reason (logic) and that the basis of it, the main principle, is survival, which is something objective and logical (at least, it is accepted as such in almost all civilizations). So, If you meant that you doubt about the viability of the specific ethics system I described, then it's OK. But I would like --not require! -- if you could also tell me why. (I always like to hear things that challenge my reality! :smile:) — Alkis Piskas
dimosthenis9         
         2. Giving moral guidance in a form of only 10 commandments or 4 noble truth, etc. just printed on a page would not have much interest, so it need to be wrapped in an intriguing story of a hero living out those believes. — stoicHoneyBadger
stoicHoneyBadger         
         As one day, people might reach to the point to get their morals simply by Logic. And no need of any God. — dimosthenis9
dimosthenis9         
         Not sure how people can create morals by logic? — stoicHoneyBadger
Banno         
         There's very little of the works of the ancient Stoics that now exist, — Ciceronianus
Thunderballs         
         the tragedy of their rise is the destruction of the literature and art of antiquity. — Banno
Banno         
         
Thunderballs         
         Christianity got there first. It's a consequence of the intolerance inherent in monotheism. — Banno
Wheatley         
         
Wheatley         
         
Hanover         
         Christianity got there first. It's a consequence of the intolerance inherent in monotheism. — Banno
180 Proof         
         Pandeism (i.e. Spinozism sub specie durationis). :up:As far as alternatives to what seems to be our common upbringing in the Catholic faith, for me, the immanent deity of the Stoics has an appeal, or some form of pantheism or pandeism. — Ciceronianus
Thunderballs         
         Ask Hypatia. — Banno
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.