Both secular ethics and religious ethics rely upon the subjective (or intersubjective) preferences of human beings. — Tom Storm
"What you find [harmful], do not do to others."
~Hillel the Elder — 180 Proof
have also described Genesis a myth not to be taken literally. It's not just atheists. — Tom Storm
:fire:Until you can demonstrate -
1) which god is true:
2) which understanding of that god is true
3) which religion is true;
4) what that god wants;
4) which holy book is true,
5) which interpretation of that holy book is true -
you don't have a reliable basis for moral behaviour. What you have is a claim coalescing around a series of subjective interpretations, in search of a totalling meta-narrative. — Tom Storm
This statement, which I mostly agree with, has nothing to do with the post from which you've quoted me quoting Rabbi Hillel's "maxim" (which is almost identical to that of Confucious and the Mahābhārata).You all realize Hillel doesn't just derive his maxims ex nihilio? He was a Jewish religious scholar heavily steeped in Torah. He wasn't just picking out sayings from midair against an atheistic metaphysic. You can't view his teachings independently from the background in which he taught them. I mean you can, but it doesn't make sense. — Moses
Until you can demonstrate -
1) which god is true;
2) which understanding of that god is true;
3) which religion is true;
4) what that god wants;
5) which holy book is true;
6) which interpretation of that holy book is true
- you don't have a reliable basis for moral behaviour. What you have is a claim coalescing around a series of subjective interpretations, in search of a totalizing meta-narrative. — Tom Storm
IMHO the greatest affirmation of the dignity of the disabled occurs in a dialogue between God and Moses beginning in Exodus 4:10. I am disabled. Likely the same disability as Moses. I need a way to frame that, and my experiences/observations are simply not a sufficient answer to that question. Gotta throw in with God on this one. — Moses
At the end of the day, it doesn't even matter whether there's a perfect secular moral system (even it was "objective"). Even if there was, why should anyone care? — Moses
Spend your time how you see best fit.
How do you know that you don't just like the authors of Exodus (various others and editors that compiled it from various sources presumably), and not the actual events? Does that matter to you, or is i the usefulness of the literary devices that enamor you (plot, character, narrative, theme, etc.). — schopenhauer1
At the end of the day, it doesn't even matter whether there's a perfect secular moral system (even it was "objective"). Even if there was, why should anyone care? Born from oblivion, pass to oblivion. Spend your time how you see best fit. Who am I to tell you how to live? I would say the same about religious frameworks if it were not for the fact that all get called to account before God according to Scripture. — Moses
It's not about the authors to me. It's about the bigger picture message. I'm mainly looking for bigger picture themes to extract. It's a truth-claim regardless of whether it was written by the Yahwist, Elohist or Priestly - the three authors identified. — Moses
But the archaeology and non-Biblical historical documents don't conform exactly to the stories. — schopenhauer1
People take that for granted. But that is not necessarily proof that it is actually what happened. — schopenhauer1
Sure they haven't killed themselves but how's their mental health? How do they view their own condition and place in society? That's the real question.
How healthy are they, mentally? IMHO the exodus narrative is the best one for mental health. — Moses
IMHO the exodus narrative is the best one for mental health.
How would archaeology confirm or deny God talking with Moses? What would that even look like? — Moses
Maybe you're right, but mine leads to a happier life if I had to bet. That's why I'm not so much a philosopher anymore. — Moses
I don't even know what proof would be. What would qualify as proof? I have no idea, I just have this beautiful dialogue. I don't even know what talking to God would be like. I'm just massively impressed with the Bible even if we can never confirm all the truth or claims written within it. We have confirmed some of the genealogy though, even as far back as Genesis. There's at least some truth in it, but a lot of it we'll never be able to confirm. — Moses
"Mental health", as assessed by secular, atheist psychology/psychiatry? — baker
Perhaps if one first believed in the Bible, and only later became afflicted with a disability.
But having a disability first, and then trying to cope with it via adopting a religious narrative that was until then foreign to one doesn't seem like a viable course of action to me. — baker
A story depicting an adult male with an imaginary friend is "best ... for mental health"? — 180 Proof
I don't see mental health as a secular/atheistic concept. I see it as a human one. Mental wellness. — Moses
Perhaps if one first believed in the Bible, and only later became afflicted with a disability.
But having a disability first, and then trying to cope with it via adopting a religious narrative that was until then foreign to one doesn't seem like a viable course of action to me.
— baker
You see things however you want; it's not your life at stake. You don't have that task.
Yes in terms of how one ought to frame their disability, I believe the exodus dialogue is uniquely special. You could frame a disability any number of ways, most of which are toxic.
On the contrary. I have tried to make sense of my predicament by turning to religion. It failed. — baker
But from what you've said so far, it appears that you're framing your religiosity in a solitary, isolated way, and it's fully dependent on remaining that way. Are you a member of any organized religion? — baker
Sure. But as long as you live in a secular country, your mental health is going to be assessed by secular/atheistic standards. You don't actually have the feedom to declare yourself mentally healthy on your own. — baker
My mental health has certainly improved since starting on the Bible — Moses
On the contrary. I have tried to make sense of my predicament by turning to religion. It failed.
— baker
I'm sorry to hear that. Did you dive into the text to get the root of the issue? — Moses
I think we can certainly make meaningful observations on our mental health.
My mental health has certainly improved since starting on the Bible. This is mostly just a solo endeavor now. People just need something to ground them. If you're not grounded well you're just going to be screwed.
From what you've said so far, it seems that what you actually have faith in is your own ability. Not in God, not in the Bible, but in yourself. — baker
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