Yes I obviously agree with God creating the world such that virtuous living leads to flourishing. The God of the philosophers is a phrase used by Pascal to represent what philosophers usually mean by God - something abstract, instead of Real that you can encounter right now. The Christian God for example is a personal God - you can have a relationship with God, indeed it's that relationship that makes all the difference. Whereas the God of the philosophers isn't a person - it's a "force" or something similar. The problem with that is that such a god means absolutely nothing to you in the end but an abstract concept - a story.I wonder what anyone would have against the God of the philosophers. I like the idea of a God creating the world such that living a virtuous life would lead to flourishing as a human, and everything else is pure speculation. — anonymous66
No, at least not all of them. St. Thomas Aquinas, or Augustine for example certainly don't turn God into an impersonal force. But Averroes does turn God into an impersonal force (first cause).Do you include the scholastics and neo-scholastics in that assessment? — Aaron R
The Stoics, for example. Or Plotinus.Which philosophers turn God into an impersonal force? — Aaron R
Ah, but you forgot my favourite 'type' of atheism - serene atheism, in which the problem of God simply... isn't one; in which the only proper orientation to God is sheer indifference, where God's 'existence' or 'non-existence' are not even problems, beneath consideration, a triviality: "A tranquil atheism is a philosophy for which God is not a problem. The non-existence or even the death of God are not problems but rather the conditions one must have already acquired in order to make the true problems surge forth" (Deleuze, Dialogues). Put otherwise: the very idea of a God is a grammatical mistake - it doesn't qualify as a coherent object of serious reflection - either positive or negative. — StreetlightX
I think a personal God requires revelation, and the Abrahamic religions are the only religions where there is any sort of historical revelation. Such revelation implies communication, and communication necessitates two or more persons. The difference between the Abrahamic faiths and the other religions is that the Abrahamic faiths are historical - they represent a continuous story and march through history, in opposition to Buddhism, for example, which is static and unchanging in terms of history.I think this is an interesting question. Is the Christian God the only really personal God, due to His human incarnation? On the other hand, the Islamic mystic Rumi sometimes refers to God as "the Friend", and seems to be in love with Shams-i-Tabrīzī as an incarnation of the living God. So, is the notion of, and the feeling for, a personal God implicit only in the Abrahamic religions (as distinct form Hinduism, Buddhism, Daoism, etc) and explicit only in Christianity? — John
I wonder what anyone would have against the God of the philosophers. I like the idea of a God creating the world such that living a virtuous life would lead to flourishing as a human, and everything else is pure speculation. — anonymous66
What happens after we die? I don't know, no one does... there are several different stories. Which one appeals to you? — anonymous66
Many atheists suppose that rejecting the expression X is enough to convince someone that the-truth-pointed-at-by-X is nonexistent, but this is a clear error. — Mariner
That and the clichés are getting as overused as their unsubstantiated, oft-repeated, charges of logical fallacies with whosoever they discuss 'God' with. — Ali Abubakr al-'Afari
And if they can, that's also that. — Mariner
Your original comment was very vague. — Sapientia
I don't know about other philosophers. but I know a little about Aristotle's beliefs, and Socrates', and Plato's and Seneca's and Marcus Aurelius', and Epictetus'. And it seems to me that their beliefs about God led them to live pretty good lives. The God these men describe sounds pretty real to me.Yes I obviously agree with God creating the world such that virtuous living leads to flourishing. The God of the philosophers is a phrase used by Pascal to represent what philosophers usually mean by God -something abstract, instead of Real that you can encounter right now. The Christian God for example is a personal God - you can have a relationship with God, indeed it's that relationship that makes all the difference. Whereas the God of the philosophers isn't a person - it's a "force" or something similar. The problem with that is that such a god means absolutely nothing to you in the end but an abstract concept - a story. — Agustino
So, it looks like Christians have this great text... they just can't be sure what it's really saying. — anonymous66
That looks to me very much like "heads I win, tails you lose."It is good to quote Kierkegaard about that, though. The man who thinks he does not live in despair is in the most despairing condition
You obviously believe that Christianity IS The answer. Not everyone agrees with you. — anonymous66
No, it's not their beliefs about God that caused them to behave as they did. It was their beliefs about man and his place in the world that determined their behaviour - in other words their ethical beliefs. So yes, they lived good lives - "good" here being a relative term - because they were virtuous. Could they have lived better lives? Perhaps more joy? Greater hope? Or is virtue the "peak" of what's possible?And it seems to me that their beliefs about God led them to live pretty good lives. — anonymous66
That's not true, Jesus never intimated that his God is any different from the God of the Old Testament. Many people have this notion of Old Testament = violent God, New Testament = loving God. But that's very misguided. First, the NT mentions hell more frequently than the Old (which barely mentions it). The Revelation of the NT is quite likely a lot more brutal than anything described in the OT. The Holy Ghost killed Ananias and his wife Sapphira for withholding money from the Church and St. Peter on the spot, etc.Even Jesus seems to be saying that God wasn't actually the way He was as presented in the Old Testament. — anonymous66
They are attractive, but they are very individualistic. They're not communal the way religions are communal. Religions involve a religious community of believers who share the faith together and agree to live by certain common principles and ideals.Deism looks pretty attractive. Stoicism looks pretty attractive. Revealed religions? Not so much. — anonymous66
Really? I encountered Deists in the UU church I attended. And, ever heard of Stoicon? I went last year, I'll probably go again this year. There is a thriving community of Stoics online. I suspect the same is true of Deism.They are attractive, but they are very individualistic. They're not communal the way religions are communal.
Oh.. Sounds a little like Stoicism.Religions involve a religious community of believers who share the faith together and agree to live by certain common principles and ideals.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.