Tell that to Heidegger... — Tom Storm
And the worst for perfectly bad reasons. Despite it being a commonplace around this forum, making shit up does not make one a good philosopher....the best philosophers make up new words for perfectly good reasons — Joshs
A fruit tree made me do it.Original sin does, to the extent that eating the fruit resulted in 1. man's ability to identify evil and do evil and 2. his expulsion from the make-believe garden; forced to live in the real world of disease, hardship, sorrow and pain. — Vera Mont
What a lot of nonsense you all talk. I made you and the world and you think I am mean because I didn't make it easy and comfortable for you. As if your everlasting comfort ought to be my priority. Perhaps don't worry so much about me, and learn to make each other's comfort a bit more your own priority, instead of the gleeful bickering. — God
↪Joshs That'll be why idealism, not realism, is so appealing to those with a spiritual bent. — Banno
I doubt you comprehend that my clarification of the theological position is not an argument for or against anything.A fruit tree made me do it. I doubt you comprehend how pathetic your argument here is. — Banno
:fire:This is true where god is fiction and just an enlargement of human tendencies, a wish fulfillment fantasy with all the sins of its creators, hence, genocide, rape, slavery as part of the divine plan. :wink: The result is a god, which like humans, is perfectly compatible with evil and tyranny. — Tom Storm
This is true where god is fiction and just an enlargement of human tendencies, a wish fulfillment fantasy — Tom Storm
If mythology is any indication, the early ones were fine with it. They made up entire deities to personify not only their own faults but larger concepts like death, war, deception, chaos, as well as destructive weather phenomena. In primitive religions, the line between benevolent and malevolent supernatural entities is not at all clearly drawn. And, of course, those spirits are limited in both power and intellect, so that a human can often get the better of them, or reason with them, or appease them.I think early religionists feared to give the almighty any negative qualities. — god must be atheist
I said that, according to the story in the Christians' reference book, evil is not caused by free will itself, but that man's suffering and free will both arise from the original sin. — Vera Mont
The view of the cross as the sacrifice for the sins of the world is a barbarian idea based on primitive concepts of God and must be dismissed.
John Shelby Spong
There never was a time when we were created perfect and fell into sin and needed to be rescued. We are evolving people; we are not fallen people. We are not a little lower than the angels. We're a little higher than the apes. It's a very different perspective.
John Shelby Spong
Well, what else can they be? — Vera Mont
All this does depend on which Christian you speak too. — Tom Storm
So, he's got no use for either testament? Cool.The view of the cross as the sacrifice for the sins of the world is a barbarian idea based on primitive concepts of God and must be dismissed.
John Shelby Spong
What the book says doesn't depend on their interpretation. I was referring to the book itself. — Vera Mont
:fire: :monkey:We are not a little lower than the angels. We're a little higher than the apes. It's a very different perspective. — John Shelby Spong
Fox the fox
Rat on the rat
You can ape the ape
I know about that
And this is the entire point. The book itself is contradictory and messy, and it can't speak. — Tom Storm
Can you point to a church or an individual who, in your judgement, has exactly the right interpretation? — Tom Storm
Myths speak for themselves, and they comment on some aspect of human thought, social development or relationships — Vera Mont
The contrary, literalist campaign within Christianity is actually quite recent. It developed among more or less extreme Protestants after the Reformation – largely indeed in the last century in the US. It was consciously designed as a competitor with science, providing equal certainty by comparable methods. It is thus a political phenomenon, acting in some ways like a cargo cult. It has enabled relatively poor and powerless people to use their Bibles (which the Protestant Reformers had provided) to shape a rival myth of their own. They see this as an alternative to the materialist glorification of science and technology which they have perceived – with some reason – as the oppressive creed of those in power.
Didn't someone have to tell, sing or write it first? If so, they presumably did that to communicate something to someone else.I would maintain that myths do not speak for themselves - they do not 'speak' until someone gives them a voice by deriving a meaning from them - whether that be a pauper, a professor, or the Pope. If a myth seems to comment on human life, it is because someone hearing or reading it has determined the commentary. Interpretation. — Tom Storm
Of course. (Keeping in mind that The Bible isn't a single book but many and most of them were unavailable to the Catholic laity until recently. So they depended on the New Testament and whatever the priest told them, while the conservative Protestant sect leaders leaned heavily on the Old Testament for their fire-and-brimstone revivals.)Incidentally, in relation to Christianity it is interesting how interpretation has evolved over time. The idea that the Bible can be read as some kind of positivist text is a recent one. — Tom Storm
Didn't someone have to tell, sing or write it first? If so, they presumably did that to communicate something to someone else. — Vera Mont
I made no assumption about an author's intentions, abilities or desires. I only presumed that they meant to communicate something to other humans. If they made up a story just to entertain themselves, it wouldn't be written down, and if nobody liked it, it wouldn't have been passed on and recorded.Some of the assumptions here - 1) that authors always have a specific intention and can convey it; 2) that an author doesn't want a range of interpretive possibilities; 3) that it is possible for people to arrive at a single interpretation based on a single authorial intention. None of these seem demonstrable. — Tom Storm
I could have sworn that's what I said I was doing.And how do you demonstrate what the author's intention is? Again, interpretation. — Tom Storm
My own interpretation is the only one I feel either competent or authorized to report. — Vera Mont
I only presumed that they meant to communicate something to other humans. — Vera Mont
My own interpretation is the only one I feel either competent or authorized to report. — Vera Mont
Does it, when you're placing a dinner order? Or giving instructions to an employee, or explaining to your wife over the phone where to look for the file you forgot and need her to bring to a meeting? Verbal communication normally has a message that is expected - or at least intended - to convey information from the speaker to the hearer. It's normally that way in written communications, as well. The more open-ended it is the less communication takes place. If they can read into it whatever they like, why bother writing at all? Let 'em write their own!'Communicate something' means open ended interpretive possibilities
I didn't say what matters; only what I'm qualified to report on. Matter - to whom?That's fair. So you are saying subjective interpretations of myth are all that matter? — Tom Storm
I didn't even posit a particular author or intention for this story - it's far too old. Every story must have been told by someone before it could be heard and interpreted by anyone else, that's all. This one probably goes back to long before there were identifiable Hebrews, to the Sumerian culture (The Akkadian one is more violent.)I thought you were saying there was a true version of any myth - the author's intention? — Tom Storm
You can see the echoes coming down a millennium or so, and the notion is further supported by the prominence of rivers in the Genesis creation mythThe origins of humans are described in another early second-millennium Sumerian poem, “The Song of the Hoe.” In this myth, as in many other Sumerian stories, the god Enlil is described as the deity who separates heavens and earth and creates humankind.
What physical record of that literature remains is fragmented, and obviously, other influences must also have entered the oral tradition of nomadic peoples like the Jews, who came into contact with many nations before they occupied Jericho and settled there, so I don't think it's possible to trace any of the stories to a single definitive source.“The Debate between Bird and Fish,” water for human consumption did not exist until Enki, lord of wisdom, created the Tigris and Euphrates and caused water to flow into them from the mountains.
Zoroastrianism was a dualist faith that originated in Persia, and over the years it has influenced a number of other faiths. Even though we may not recognize it today, it has been an influence on a number of world religions, especially on Christianity and Islam. Zoroastrianism is a belief system that stresses how we as human beings were meant to strive for our full potential. A primary tenet of the faith is that righteous and upstanding people will participate in the rewards of paradise, while the evil-doers will undergo punishments in hell. — Jezel Luna
All this does depend on which Christian you speak too. — Tom Storm
3. Humans have free will and they created evility with their moral displestitude. — god must be atheist
1. Assuming that 3 is right, it does not explain the existence of the devil. — god must be atheist
You need to define evil first,
"Evil is lack of good"
If you agree with this definition, then evil isn't creatable — SpaceDweller
How the bloody hell does that even begin to be an argument? — Bartricks
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