What does it mean to be divine? — Fooloso4
Once I saw a Devil in a flame of fire, who arose before an Angel that sat on a cloud, and the Devil uttered these words: “The worship of God is, honouring His gifts in other men each according to his genius, and loving the greatest men best. Those who envy or calumniate great men hate God, for there is no other God.”
It is not because angels are holier than men or devils that makes them angels, but because they do not expect holiness from one another, but from God only.
In Hell, all is self-righteousness; there is no such thing there as forgiveness of sin. He who does forgive sin is crucified as an abettor of criminals, and he who performs works of mercy, in any shape whatever, is punished and, if possible, destroyed—not through envy, or hatred, or malice, but through self-righteousness, that thinks it does God service, which god is Satan.
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The pride of the peacock is the glory of God.
The lust of the goat is the bounty of God.
The wrath of the lion is the wisdom of God.
The nakedness of woman is the work of God.
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The roaring of lions, the howling of wolves, the raging of the stormy sea, and the destructive sword, are portions of Eternity too great for the eye of man.
The fox condemns the trap, not himself.
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The bird a nest, the spider a web, man friendship. — Blake
Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it?
Don’t ask for things to happen as you would like them to, but wish them to happen as they actually do, and you will be all right.
Even those who are agnostic/atheists probably retain some odd fears and ritualistic prohibitions from just being exposed to it in youth. — schopenhauer1
:starstruck:Mild Psychosis vs the Ossified! — 180 Proof
The average (and even not so average) dog has a better experience with the sublime than we would ever have. — schopenhauer1
I've argued elsewhere if sin is doing something against God's will, then it is impossible to knowing sin because God hasn't bothered to make his (or her) will known. All we have is various preachers giving us contradictory stories about what God wants and doesn't want.We have sin. — plaque flag
I've argued elsewhere if sin is doing something against God's will, then it is impossible to knowing sin because God hasn't bothered to make his (or her) will known. All we have is various preachers giving us contradictory stories about what God wants and doesn't want. — Art48
The will of God means either the will of man vested by man with absolute authority, or what happens beyond our ability to comprehend, as in the story of Job. — Fooloso4
I don't know. I think a welltreated dog is more reliably happy, but do they attain the same heights ? I don't see how one can answer with more than a guess, but my hunch is no. We have music. We have philosophy. We have sin. — plaque flag
It is precisely that we have music and philosophy (and other conceptualizing-phenomena) that we don't ever reach the sublime. All this hoooha, to try to reach a state a dog has lying in the sun. — schopenhauer1
If we posit a reason for why we must have children, we have already admitted that we can have reasons, — schopenhauer1
Where we differ is understanding the sublime in terms of relaxation. Allow me a little crudity. Consider the buildup to orgasm. That's excitement before a great relaxation. There is no joy in the tavern as on the road thereto. Actually there is joy in the tavern, sometimes, but the aphorism gets the deliciousness of expectation right. — plaque flag
I suggest thinking of reasongiving as a layer on top of something more doglike and automatic. I think we both agree that our hardware (our biology) underdetermines our mode of being, and that just this is our wicked and tormented genius. We have no essence, to overstate the case. We are what we take ourselves to be. We (as bodies) are vessels for tribal software, including the 'illusion'/convention of the ego that must justify itself before the others in a space of reasons which is equivalently a game of scorekeeping. — plaque flag
It seems to me that you think we can project this scorekeeping structure unproblematically on the species as a global all-inclusion tribe. I do think this is a perverse implication of the quest for justice, but perhaps justice is a dissipative structure --- the kind of thing that helps a tribe flourish and expand. Eliminating evil by eliminating what makes evil evil (the good or value it harms) is...questionable. — plaque flag
Any ankle-biting and gnashing of teeth of the "positivity that humanity's achievements and its necessity in continuing" against the pessimists, is yet more missionizing. — schopenhauer1
I take poison as my icon because questioning the values of longevity and survival seems like a cornerstone of critical thought. Death is leverage. If I must be respectable, I cannot be a philosopher (not in my pet sense of the world.) — plaque flag
Ghetto-thinking, tribal thinking, hunting-gathering thinking, redneck-thinking, middle-class-gardening-with-lemonade-in-bakyard-thinking, and even elitism of academia are all but variations of ignorance leading to cul-de-sacs away from the ultimate cul-de-sac. — schopenhauer1
You know who really loves the idea that you think you are here to "flourish"? The one who makes his living off of your labor. — schopenhauer1
:up:It's like philosophy is always trying to give consolation prizes. — schopenhauer1
I agree, but I don't think antinatalism or my own pour of poison escapes that structure. Zapffe and Cioran are tall strong drinks for bold bad bleak boys. Look at me, ma. No plans. — plaque flag
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