I think you make an unwarranted leap. The Greek conception of deity was quite mundane. The gods of the pantheon were in no way "omni-" anything. The conception of the incorporeal "omni" God is a Christian/Islamic concept with it's roots in the Levant. Because Xenophanes and Plato concieved of idealized, metaphysical objects does not mean that this is how the Greeks in general concieved of deity. I also, however, think that Jack is wrong to think that philosophy and religion have "combined origins". I think the motives for each are entirely different, and distinct.Xenophanes replaced the concrete poly by an abstract mono...and Western religion, delegating God to the same extramundane world. — GraveItty
I always preferred to believe that the derivation from ‘re-ligare’, ‘to bind or unite’ was superior to the derivation ‘religio’ as ‘peity with respect to the gods.’ It says something about two aspects or facets of religion, the first being usually overlooked on the grounds that the second is what religion ‘really means’. — Wayfarer
I think you make an unwarranted leap. The Greek conception of deity was quite mundane — Michael Zwingli
I was with you, Fool, up to this sentence. I think religion does not explain anything, only pacifies existential anxieties with self-serving, tribe-centric, ritualized myths and cautionary fairytales, whereas science does not explain enough of "the big picture" for most people (especially nonscientists) producing only approximate, defeasible, probabilistic models of fragments of "the big picture". Philosophy explores ways of making sense of the incompletable(?) set of puzzle-like fragments in the most general scope; religion today only mystifies and stupifies what its theologians and preachers do not understand or refuse to accept. Thus:To make the long story short religion, as an explanation was too less and science as one was too much!
:fire:Napoleon: M. Laplace, they tell me you have written this large book on the system of the universe, and have never even mentioned its creator.
Laplace: Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là.
was with you, Fool, up to this sentence. — 180 Proof
I think religion does not explain anything, only pacifies existential anxieties with self-serving, tribe-centric, ritualized myths and cautionary fairytales, whereas science does not explain enough of "the big picture" for most people (especially nonscientists) producing only approximate, defeasible, probabilistic models of fragments of "the big picture". — 180 Proof
Philosophy explores ways of making sense of the incompletable(?) set of puzzle-like fragments in the most general scope; religion today only mystifies and stupifies what its theologians and preachers do not understand or refuse to accept. Thus:
Napoleon: M. Laplace, they tell me you have written this large book on the system of the universe, and have never even mentioned its creator.
Laplace: Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là.
:fire: — 180 Proof
As for the ramifications of modern technology, they result from mostly laissez-faire applications of science in the service of capitalist exploitation of human labor and natural resources (re: externalization of costs – material, social & psychological). Religion tends to aid and abet acquiescent conformity to debt-peonage & hedonic treadmilling, etc. — 180 Proof
Philosophy and religion have combined origins, as expressed in the history of Western philosophy.
— Jack Cummins
I disagree. Western religion has its origins in old Greece, a country more philosophical than others — GraveItty
religion does not explain anything, only pacifies existential anxieties with self-serving, tribe-centric, ritualized myths and cautionary fairytales — 180 Proof
We do well to acknowledge the beneficial effects of ritual in human life, and to recognize that this is what is properly referred to by the term "religion". — Michael Zwingli
Ah, I enjoy the ritual...it is the very reason I attend. I like it for it's particular beauty, and for it's familiarity. Of course, I don't recite the creed or many of the recited prayers, rather keeping mum with my eyes downcast (I sit at the back), and I don't take communion out of respect for the obvious position of the Church regarding that.I come from a Catholic background, and I do still go to church with a friend at times. However, I feel that going to church is extremely stressful, especially the rituals. — Jack Cummins
I as well.I approach the questions about God with mixed thoughts. — Jack Cummins
I would not use the term "divine status", and even if I believed in the concept of divinity, I cannot understand how an "elevation to divine status" might apply to a ritual. To me, ritual has a profound emotional, which is to say "psychological" benefit, but not believing in any incorporeal aspect of the human, I categorically deny any "spiritual" benefit therefrom.Curiously, you seem to point out that we’re surrounded in daily rituals and that any one of them could elevated to divine status. That sounds like an expression of spirituality to me, or ‘spiritual but not necessarily religious’. — praxis
Well, in my own estimation, ritual and community are indeed the only truly beneficial aspects of our modern theistic religions, the rest amounting, to echo Dawkins, simply to the reinforcement of delusion. Indeed, I think that certain elements of what are viewed as "pagan" belief systems contain more truth in this regard. There may be a benefit to the moral teachings of our religions, but since the morals taught are predicated upon existential falsehood, I feel that morality is better taught within another context, such as that provided by philosophy. In order to exemplify the psychological benefits of ritual, I would indicate the phenomenon of the "city hall", "courthouse", or "justice of the peace" wedding. Not that I am particularly enamored of American wedding traditions (if I never dance the 'hokey-pokey' again, it will be too soon!), but a buddy of mine got married at City Hall, and afterwards, all I could think was, "doddamn, that sucked..." Ritual, meaningful ritual, adds a huge amount of value to the milestones of human life.Also curious that you put so much weight on ritual, like saying that a cake has everything to do with eggs and the rest of the ingredients aren’t of much importance — praxis
I think that the posters on this forum who propose theist arguments are more inclined to swing my thoughts against belief in God than the atheist ones. I wonder if I am the only person who finds this. — Jack Cummins
I would not use the term "divine status", and even if I believed in the concept of divinity, I cannot understand how an "elevation to divine status" might apply to a ritual. — Michael Zwingli
the secular age — Jack Cummins
In a determinedly brilliant new book, Charles Taylor challenges the ‘subtraction theory’ of secularization which defines it as a process whereby religion simply falls away, to be replaced by science and rationality. Instead... The result is a radical pluralism which, as well as offering unprecedented freedom, creates new challenges and instabilities. — London Review of Books
Well, in my own estimation, ritual and community are indeed the only truly beneficial aspects of our modern theistic religions, the rest amounting, to echo Dawkins, simply to the reinforcement of delusion — Michael Zwingli
One key issue in Christianity is that it was adopted by an existing Empire, finally accepted by the ruling class. I think this is the reason why just so much of philosophy of Antiquity is embraced in Christianity. Christianity just swam into existing institutions and society without breaking it. After all, the last existing organizational remnant of the (West) Roman Empire lives on with the Papacy and the Catholic Church. (They still use sometimes Latin, don't they?)The origins of Western religion is interesting and I am sure that Greece was central, but it is probably extremely complex. — Jack Cummins
I think the down-to-Earth problem is that a person like Dawkins has gotten quite enough of hate mail from Christian fundamentalists that he has become bitter and simply has no respect for religious people, which make his views about them condescending. When it comes to religion, Dawkins is ready for the fight, ready to defend his precious science from creationists. I assume if the topic would be some new breakthroughs in science or interesting theories, he would be far open to discussion. And of course, Dawkins can pick from a multitude of lunatic holy-rollers. It tells something about the public discourse in the Anglosphere. I think Dawkins sees religion as a threat or at least a nuisance to science, and of course his personal experience likely has had an effect on him.The irony is that Dawkins’scientistic approach to empiricism makes his thinking religious in a broad sense. If a belief system is ‘delusional’ , an existential ‘falsehood’, that implies a correct truth, and the scientistic way of thinking puts scientific method in the privileged role among all the cultural disciplines of arbiter of truth as ‘correctness’. — Joshs
All I'm saying is that there are fictions (institutional truths) that are based on social agreement (rational) rather than social delusion (irrational). — praxis
I don't know how the scientific method could be construed as having a privileged role among all cultural disciplines. I don't know how scientific theories could be construed as belief systems — praxis
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