What is being asked is not what Christianity, Islam, or Judaism is without God, but whether one can have a religion without god. — Ennui Elucidator
NEVER HAVE BEEN the justification for religion - the justification was always provided by human communal practice. — Ennui Elucidator
Why you think that the Bible is a life guide, I'm not sure — Ennui Elucidator
Being Jewish is not about interpreting some text correctly (hermeneutics), but about being a part of a people, i.e. community. — Ennui Elucidator
We're arguing semantics here. We could talk about Judaism in practice or Judaism in terms of its central ideas and practices. — Moses
Do words just not have any meaning anymore? — Moses
Why you think that the Bible is a life guide, I'm not sure, but it sounds like you bought what someone else was selling. Give the "Pentateuch" a read and see if you can find where it tells you what to do. — Ennui Elucidator
Seriously, the people (and religion) have long since moved on (undeniably helped by the destruction of the second temple and the transition into the diaspora). — Ennui Elucidator
The core/central ideas and practices are not found in the Bible (books of Moses or otherwise). You can't hold up a book, say "This is your religion!" — Ennui Elucidator
There is no normative statement that can be made that is other than "Hooray!" or "Boo!!" (i.e. emotivism). In that context, every axiological claim is of necessity "bullshit" (be it religious, ethical, or aesthetic in nature). — Ennui Elucidator
the bullshitter doesn't care if what they say is true or false... — Moses
It's fine if people think morality is nonsense, but if you think that then please don't present moral claims. — Moses
Bullshit is "speech intended to persuade without regard for truth. — Moses
...every axiological claim is of necessity "bullshit"'; — Banno
Only, when an abolitionist claims slavery is unacceptable, they do care about the truth of that statement. That's by way of pointing to a problem with naive emotivism; moral statements are statements, and hence prima facie are truth apt. — Banno
Bullshit = Rhetoric then?! — Agent Smith
I'm also not sure where you got that I'm an outsider. — Moses
Well, there's far more going on than one might put into a single post, but notice that "every axiological claim is bullshit" does not follow directly from emotivism. "Boo for slavery" is not bullshit. — Banno
Philosophers have a vocational bent for trying to divine the essences of things that most people never suspected had an essence, and bullshit is a case in point. Could there really be some property that all instances of bullshit possess and all non-instances lack? The question might sound ludicrous, but it is, at least in form, no different from one that philosophers ask about truth. Among the most divisive issues in philosophy today is whether there is anything important to be said about the essential nature of truth. Bullshit, by contrast, might seem to be a mere bagatelle. Yet there are parallels between the two which lead to the same perplexities.
Where do you start if you are an academic philosopher in search of the quiddity of bullshit? “So far as I am aware,” Frankfurt dryly observes, “very little work has been done on this subject.” — “Say Anything by Jim Holt”
There are things far more important than truth? :chin:
— Agent Smith
What nonsense!
:snicker: — Agent Smith
Accepting the origin story of a group with an agenda is dangerous - if not for the simple reason that accepting it achieves the goal of the story. — Ennui Elucidator
Why you think that the Bible is a life guide, I'm not sure, but it sounds like you bought what someone else was selling. Give the "Pentateuch" a read and see if you can find where it tells you what to do.
— Ennui Elucidator
I recognize it's not the mainstream view, but see:
https://www.yoramhazony.org/phs/ — Hanover
Without the Bible, you'd be yet another sucker "just trying to do the right thing". With the Bible, you'd be doing the exact same things, but you'd have the divine justification for them and feel righteous. — baker
You know those things by which to guide your life also without the Bible. You don't need the Bible for its content, you need it for the institutional justification of said content. — baker
We have the now and our experience of it - that is all. — Ennui Elucidator
Call it god, call it justice, call it whatever you want, but the universe does not weep if I die now, tomorrow, or never. — Ennui Elucidator
Gussying up emotivism with appeals to reason, logic, and other intellectual contrivances to get people to more readily agree with you — Ennui Elucidator
You don't get it. I don't care if people agree with me. I'm not engaging with you for popularity points in the philosophy forum or to make internet friends. If I'm engaging you it's because I enjoy challenging/learning the boundaries of your thinking and if you can answer my queries then you've helped me gain a better understanding so thank you. — Moses
The problem is when you try to remove God from religions and still maintain that the rituals or morals are still good; it's like removing the foundation from a house and expecting it to still stand. . . . Sure you could try to salvage some of the ideas like human life having value or being nice to the poor but these ideas need to be justified on totally different foundations. — Moses
EDIT: The Pentateuch is largely a life guide; if religion has been degraded to mere aesthetics then it has been degraded. — Moses
I approach things more as an ethicist. In any case I don't understand why we're talking about justification for religion here. — Moses
The purpose of the OT is to instruct/inform regardless of whether you agree with it. The OT is a guide. I don't understand on what basis a reconstructionist jew comes to advocate a moral/ethical positions. People always need to live and make decisions on what basis ought we make them. Religions need to answer this. There needs to be something here. Especially in the realm of ethics. — Moses
... This entry therefore provides a brief history of the how the semantic range of religion has grown and shifted over the years, and then considers two philosophical issues that arise for the contested concept, issues that are likely to arise for other abstract concepts used to sort cultural types (such as “literature”, “democracy”, or “culture” itself). First, the disparate variety of practices now said to fall within this category raises a question of whether one can understand this social taxon in terms of necessary and sufficient properties or whether instead one should instead treat it as a family resemblance concept. Here, the question is whether the concept religion can be said to have an essence. Second, the recognition that the concept has shifted its meanings, that it arose at a particular time and place but was unknown elsewhere, and that it has so often been used to denigrate certain cultures, raises the question whether the concept corresponds to any kind of entity in the world at all or whether, instead, it is simply a rhetorical device that should be retired. This entry therefore considers the rise of critical and skeptical analyses of the concept, including those that argue that the term refers to nothing. ..
— SEP on Concept of Religion
I don't subscribe to the notion that wisdom and ethically appropriate behavior is known a priori. — Hanover
What I can say is that the Bible, for whatever historical reason, in Western society, became the vehicle for those most concerned and focused on finding meaning and purpose to our existence. From that piece of literature,with much creativity and bias, entire systems of often conflicting thoughts sprang forth.
My resort to the Bible for wisdom has nothing to do with delusions that God himself spoke it while Moses transcribed it. It has to do with it having been designated the human societal Western Constitution (so to speak) and the thousands of years of our best and wisest having wrenched meaning from it, even if the literal text no longer resembles the final interpretation.
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