Well, without a transcendent God to tell us what to do, we merely have to reject salvation and become the homunculus we always have been. Such a process is not that different then what Abraham had to do when he found God and let God save him, which merely causes one transcendence to be replaced with another transcendence, or one salvation to be used instead of another salvation.depending on how one looks at it. God has been used as a type of magic feather to allow us to do the things that we might not think of doing or perhaps not think ourselves capable of doing without 'God' guiding us (although what we have and and haven't been able to do may not be that impressive by some peoples standards), but whether we still need to continue holding onto our magic feathers may be dependent on each individual themselves. For some the answer may be 'yes', but for others the answer could be 'no'.I agree here, but this is when the discussion of the transcendental dialectic begins, whereby is it not a compelling premise that it is a necessary condition that our existence can be reasonably concluded as having formed by a causal sequence returning back to the unknown yet substantive formation of the universe? We can conclude that God being a man on a cloud or the trinity etc are the illusions of reason as we are able to trace the source as rational, autonomous beings following a synthesis between us and consciousness of the world, and the possibility of transcendental reflection for ourselves is practically indispensable epistemologically, but I am not convinced that we simply stop at the point of being aware of our limitations but rather continue - morally - toward the ideal, making God necessary for perfecting our moral position.
What do you think of this? http://staffweb.hkbu.edu.hk/ppp/ksp1/KSP5.html — TimeLine
We can conclude that God being a man on a cloud or the trinity etc are the illusions of reason as we are able to trace the source as rational, autonomous beings following a synthesis between us and consciousness of the world, and the possibility of transcendental reflection for ourselves is practically indispensable epistemologically, but I am not convinced that we simply stop at the point of being aware of our limitations but rather continue - morally - toward the ideal, making God necessary for perfecting our moral position.-
as we are able to trace the source as rational, autonomous beings following a synthesis between us and consciousness of the world,
The uncaused cause & the noumenon, are both unknowable but not forgotten, they are still needed as necessary perspectives in our empirical faith in pure reason & our religious faith in freedom, liberty, equality, et al. They create their own 'space', I think. — Cavacava
Evil is what it means to be human; without the possibility to do otherwise, man could not be free. — Cavacava
PS Congratulations! — Cavacava
I think it is a waste of time - and rather silly - to imagine that the puzzle of the orgin of space and time can be solved by playing around with words, as if reality is governed by idioms of the English language. — keithprosser
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