Go to the heart of any religion and you will find philosophy. What we have come to know as religion is simply an exoteric representation of a philosophy — Tzeentch
Go to the heart of any religion and you will find philosophy. What we have come to know as religion is simply an exoteric representation of a philosophy, because the nature of philosophy is such that it cannot necessarily understood by everyone. — Tzeentch
The issue is that religion is thereby also vulnerable to being tainted by the less luminous, being used as a tool of power — Tzeentch
Go to the heart of any religion and you will find philosophy. What we have come to know as religion is simply an exoteric representation of a philosophy, because the nature of philosophy is such that it cannot necessarily understood by everyone. — Tzeentch
The issue is that religion is thereby also vulnerable to being tainted by the less luminous, being used as a tool of power, etc. — Tzeentch
Sounds reasonable except for the fact that no one understands religious philosophy. No one can answer questions at the "heart" of any religion. That is a necessary condition because religion requires faith, and ultimate authority to have faith in. You cannot have an exoteric religion because it would not require faith and religious authority — praxis
Many authors, from Caputo to Sheehan and Critchley, look at religion in terms of the philosophical ideas they see at its heart, which has no necessary ties to structures of authority. — Joshs
These ideas are implicit in the religion, and made explicit in philosophical explication. — Joshs
No one can fully explicate these ideas. Again, this is a necessary condition. — praxis
Sounds reasonable except for the fact that no one understands religious philosophy. — praxis
No one can answer questions at the "heart" of any religion. — praxis
That is a necessary condition because religion requires faith, and ultimate authority to have faith in. You cannot have an exoteric religion because it would not require faith and religious authority. — praxis
So why is philosophy not vulnerable, or less vulnerable, to abuse and religion is vulnerable? — praxis
Esoteric knowledge requires faith in authority, and because they are final answers it requires ultimate authority. Ultimate authority = power. — praxis
A central area of discussion appeared to be about whether the idea of God and the problem of evil could be reconciled. — Jack Cummins
You said this is a necessary condition because religion requires faith and authority. I’m not clear on the difference between religious faith and the metaphysical faith at the core of philosophical thinking. — Joshs
To believe in something you have to have a something to believe in, a way of thinking about the world. — Joshs
One can choose one particular faith over another in the same way one can choose one philosophy over another; on the basis of how well it makes sense of the most important aspects of life. People move from one religious structure to another all the time on this basis. — Joshs
I don’t see this supposed difference between philosophy and religion as any more coherent than that between philosophy and science or between science and the arts. — Joshs
Each new era in philosophical history brings with it a new approach to religion that is throughly intertwined with the new philosophical worldview. This intertwining is only possible because philosophy and religion are just different styles of articulating a belief and value system. — Joshs
No one can answer questions at the "heart" of any religion.
— praxis
Perhaps not, — Tzeentch
... but no one can answer the questions at the heart of philosophy either. — Tzeentch
Esoteric knowledge requires faith in authority, and because they are final answers it requires ultimate authority. Ultimate authority = power.
— praxis
This is not necessarily true. If the esoteric teachings are of a philosophical nature, as I said, authority and faith would not be a part of them. Esoteric means nothing other than "hidden" (from the common eye). There is no element of faith or authority, or even religion in there. — Tzeentch
Religion is based in faith, philosophy and science in reason, and the arts in aesthetics. — praxis
I'm not sure if you realize what you're saying. — praxis
Religion is based in faith, philosophy and science in reason, and the arts in aesthetics.
— praxis
That distinction is a quaint old notion with a long pedigree in Western thinking, but it has been discarded by a range of thinking that recognizes the grounding of philosophical and scientific reason in aesthetics. — Joshs
I'm not sure if you realize what you're saying.
— praxis
I’m saying the same thing that Wittgenstein, Heidegger, Nietzsche , Kuhn, Rorty and Merleau-Ponty said years ago.
Here’s one attempt to apply Kuhn to religious conversion.
“Thomas Kuhn's theor of paradigm-shift can be used as a methodological tool in the study of religious conversion. The same way that the scientist is limited to work wvithin a scientific paradigm, the believer can be said to exercise religion within a theological paradign. And as anomaly can lead to science crises and a change of worldrew, anomaly wilhin the horizon of the believer can lead to existential crisis and religious reorientation.”(TOMAS SUNDNES DRoNEN) — Joshs
Philosophy and religion have combined origins, — Jack Cummins
in what sense is scientific reason based in aesthetics? — praxis
try to avoid facing up to the harshest aspects of existence. — Jack Cummins
Both a theist and an atheist can philosophize about the existence of God til the cows come home and in the end, their positions are unlikely to change. One difference is that the theist relies on authority and has faith in that authority. Has any theist alive today come up with the idea of God, and a whole belief system that surrounds it, themselves? — praxis
I'm saying that religion requires hidden ultimate "truths" and it's that inaccessibility that gives the religious authority their power. — praxis
When speaking about the harshest aspects of existence, I am referring to the existential aspects of existence which cause so much suffering, ranging from fear of one's own death, experiencing the death of significant others, poverty, and seeing atrocities in the world, including people treating others in an inhumane way, and all forms of suffering — Jack Cummins
I don't think so. The Presocratic and later Hellenic philosophies such as the Epicureans, Stoics, Kynics & Pyrrhonians explicitly opposed logos to mythos, even irreligiously in some instances. Buddhists, Jains and Charvaka, while not irreligious per se, pursued soteriological paths by lived experience and practical reasoning independent of religious considerations. Early Daoists and Confusians also marginalized "gods" and "mysteries" in their reflections on living.It islikelythat it may only be in the last couple of centuries that philosophy and religion are seen apart from one another ... — Jack Cummins
Stop thinking! God did it! — Faith
Punctuation makes all the difference. :mask:Stop thinking God did it. — Reason
I'm saying that religion requires hidden ultimate "truths" and it's that inaccessibility that gives the religious authority their power.
— praxis
The philosophical and spiritual concepts underlying religions are well-documented and accessible to all who would put in the time and effort, so I don't see how this is true. — Tzeentch
[If ordered to] march: tramp, tramp, or shoot: bang, bang. This is the manifestation of the highest Wisdom [of Enlightenment]. The unity of Zen and war of which I speak extends to the farthest reaches of the holy war [now under way] — Daiun Sogaku Harada Roshi
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