The book is holy, but the what the priest says, goes. — Vera Mont
“Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye are like unto whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men’s bones, and of all uncleanness.” (Matthew 23:27) — Jesus
My priority remains ensuring that I don't surrender my skepticism and critical thinking to unsupported conjectures and the esoteric imaginings of others alive today or in the past. — universeness
Do you consider dictates that start with 'thou shalt' or 'thou shalt not,' open for discussion, gentle moral guidance, benign advice?4. Pretend not to notice that religious texts, although they do not clearly make the fact/value distinction, are primarily concerned with 'first philosophy' – how one should live, what virtues to cultivate and what vices to resist, and what values to hold to one's heart and live by. — unenlightened
The objectivity of fact only requires justification if one intends to maintain the separation between fact and value. A practice can be held up as evidence in an attempt to justify a fact as objective, — Metaphysician Undercover
The means cannot be truly "factual" if this is supposed to mean objective, because the means are justified by the end, and the end is justified as being the means to a further end. — Metaphysician Undercover
A tyranny? Can you give me an example of what you think their main complaint might be? — universeness
Interesting. The challenge is how do we determine what is intrinsically worthwhile and what is not? This has to be based on a value system which is open to challenge. — Tom Storm
Can you think of anything available to humans that is not natural? I don't know how far this gets us in practice. I tend to think that if we can do it or make it, it's natural... Whether it is 'good' or not is a separate matter. — Tom Storm
Notice though, that this ultimate end is not susceptible to rationality, because it cannot be transformed by rationalization into the means for a further end, and this is what is required to make it rational. — Metaphysician Undercover
World government based on human rights with effective enforcement? As things stand, many people would experience that as a tyranny. But perhaps we wouldn't care?
— Ludwig V
A tyranny? Can you give me an example of what you think their main complaint might be? — universeness
But this claimed 'loss of freedom' would have to be justified in a global system where all stakeholders can take their basic needs for granted, for free, from cradle to grave.Loss of freedom. Being forced to do what they don't want to do. — Ludwig V
To live in time is to live a narrative that is always negotiated, never entirely free or original. This is of course the story that I am telling, and I am illustrating it with a cultural artefact of undeniable power that is also a story of personal identity – an identity that changed the world. — unenlightened
But try telling them that! — unenlightened
Whom? — Vera Mont
I became an atheist directly through the Jesus story. — Vera Mont
But of course the key is to find the right sophisticated interpretive framework to transmogrify the book from a lowbrow literal interpretation to efficacious exegetical insight — Tom Storm
I haven't heard them do so. And I don't see why they'd need to.Marxists would say the same thing about Marx. — Tom Storm
I haven't heard them do so. And I don't see why they'd need to. — Vera Mont
Thanks. By sacrifice I meant the temporary death of Jesus, the 'blood sacrifice'. — Tom Storm
You take away whatever you take away; you interpret however you want to interpret; it says whatever you want it to mean; it's as exactly as profound as you want it to be.
Bah! Good fiction doesn't yield to "textual analysis" - it says what it means to say and you either get it or you don't. — Vera Mont
Neo-Marxism is the name for this school - usually an attempt to provide a more modern, sophisticated account. — Tom Storm
Perhaps the author did not know precisely what she meant when she wrote. — Janus
Their problem, not his. Marx made his observations and wrote what he saw in his own world, in his time — Vera Mont
Not every writer of fiction "drudges out the third draft" or necessarily has anything more than a general more or less vague sense of allusions and associations, — Janus
I call it reading while awake. In some cases, it may be necessary to do it twice, because the author is smarter, wittier, better-informed or more subtle than I am. I never assume he just didn't understand what he wrote.Close reading will always reveal more layers than a single "literal" reading; and that is all I mean when I say "unpacking". You could call it 'excavating' if you find that more palatable. — Janus
Along those lines, generally the interpretation of a poem isn't accomplished by cross examining the poet. — Hanover
Author's intentions are transcended. — Tom Storm
I guess it gets to be important by somebody appropriating it to a timeless cause.The idea that an important text only has one interpretation would be naïve. — Tom Storm
This is an unstoppable process. — Tom Storm
If you don't agree that multiple interpreatations of literary works are possible I think either we must agree to disagree or we are somehow talking past each other, so I'll leave it there. — Janus
I call it reading while awake. In some cases, it may be necessary to do it twice, because the author is smarter, wittier, better-informed or more subtle than I am. I never assume he just didn't understand what he wrote. — Vera Mont
What I object to is reducing the author of a literary work to the unconscious amoeba at the bottom of its evolutionary pond. — Vera Mont
But this claimed 'loss of freedom' would have to be justified in a global system where all stakeholders can take their basic needs for granted, for free, from cradle to grave. — universeness
Thanks. By sacrifice I meant the temporary death of Jesus, the 'blood sacrifice'.
— Tom Storm
That whole aspect of Christianity has never made any sense to me either. — Janus
I think the choice of wording here is needlessly negative. It might instead be put that a classic work may be so fecund in aesthetic possibilities that it allows us to generate interpretive prospects and evolves in meaning and nuance over generations, staying relevant in new ways as culture changes. — Tom Storm
I don't have an issue with that. But there is another point to take into account. Some people talk about "hinge" propositions - ideas around which the debate turns, but which are never the focus of debate. I don't understand the ins and outs of this idea. A related idea is that of conceptual or grammatical propositions. Most people are happy to talk about analytic or a priori propositions. These relate to the language in which debate is carried on or to the ideas that frame the debate.
However that may be, for a debate to occur, there needs to be an agreement about what is at issue and what isn't and what counts as evidence or argument. These things are not dogmas merely because they are not at stake. They can be challenged at any time, but that amounts to changing the subject and that's the difference.
My point is that these are also protected, but legitimately. On the other hand, they can be challenged at any time, and to refuse such a challenge would be dogmatic.
Following this a little further, "dogma" used to mean simply doctrine or principle, but it now has a a value built in to it, so it means something like unreasonable resistance to a reasonable challenge (where what is reasonable can itself be open to challenge). That's my basic point. Unfortunately, one person's dogma is another person's evident accepted truth. So I wouldn't necessarily feel upset if someone called me dogmatic. I might just feel that the discussion was over and about to degenerate into abuse. — Ludwig V
Which complicates identifying someone else's dogma even more! — Moliere
Give me examples from the torah or talmud OR ANY OTHER SCRIPTURAL SOURCE, that you use to guide your own life and the life of your progeny but make sure the example is theistic in content or in 'spirit' and let it be held up to critical assessment by others. — universeness
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