I was trying to say that not every madcap idea counts as an interpretation. There are limits. The text is flexible, but only up to a point. — Ludwig V
The readers' environment is another one, and of course that may break down into a number of sub-contexts; it may overlap, to a greater or lesser extent with the author's environment. — Ludwig V
This is relevant because when the text is read in a different context different questions, issues, priorities may come up and lead to a need for interpretations that go way beyond anything the author could have meant or thought. But still, it is not the case that anything goes. — Ludwig V
Right, and if all parties could acknowledge that their reasoning is based on premises which are not unbiased, not based on purely rational thought, but on personal preference, it might help folks to understand one another's positions more, and thus lessen the social divisions, which only seem to be getting greater. — Janus
Right, and if all parties could acknowledge that their reasoning is based on premises which are not unbiased, not based on purely rational thought, but on personal preference, it might help folks to understand one another's positions more, and thus lessen the social divisions, which only seem to be getting greater. — Janus
Well, I'd agree that in part it is a matter of personal preferences, but that's kind of the tip of the iceberg, of subconscious factors impacting our reasoning. — wonderer1
Of course! Why haven't we thought of that? You start and show us how it's done. — Vera Mont
What, like atheists? — Vera Mont
What you've never thought that you should acknowledge that your reasoning is based on premises which are not unbiased? Are you unable to do that without my help? — Janus
Oh, right. Oppose universeness. Yah, done that. Lost the argument. Retreated in disarray. Been called Brave Sir Robin by my pseudo-friends ever since. Not an experience I care to repeat.If the militant ideology is anti-theist, then it should be opposed by atheists if they are opposed to militant ideologies tout court. — Janus
No, not that bit! I've got that down cold. It's the rapprochement with bible-thumpers I don't know how to do and am not sure I could stomach. — Vera Mont
Oh, right. Oppose universeness. Yah, done that. Lost the argument. Retreated in disarray. Been called Brave Sir Robin by my pseudo-friends ever since. Not an experience I care to repeat. — Vera Mont
I actually think it should be illegal for parents to force children to go, or not go, to church, although of course that would be a hard law to enforce adequately. — Janus
All of those I've ever encountered with your kind of anti-religious fanaticism were once devout, or at least heavily conditioned by religion when they were young, and I'm betting you fit in that category. — Janus
I already pointed out that 180s argument, by implication, equates fascism with theism, and by extension anti-fascism with anti-theism. — Janus
How would you respond to a fascist that called you a fanatic and a militant due to your anti-fascist views.whereas it is a given that fascism is. — Janus
That's hilariously in character -- Disagree with me? Why, you must not understand! — Moliere
Why must there be such limits? A madcap interpretation is still an interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Incidentally, this is very evident in fiction, one must allow the author to describe the environment, and the reader must allow oneself to be transported to that environment, leaving one's own. In school we start by learning fiction, and it's good practice. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's a luxury for me to say it, but it still looks to me like religion as such is not the problem, but the social and geopolitical situation in which religious divisions take on greater significance than otherwise. — Jamal
On the other hand, even in those circumstances, I can't really see how militant atheism would be either effective or necessary, since for most Muslims, their religion is just what gives shape and meaning to their lives at the ordinary everyday level. It's a luxury for me to say it, but it still looks to me like religion as such is not the problem, but the social and geopolitical situation in which religious divisions take on greater significance than otherwise. — Jamal
But it could also be interpreted not as an exaggeration. What is it to “have reasons”? If it’s to have arrived at the love through ratiocination, or if it means that reasons are somehow constitutive of it, or are the motivation for it, then the statement is accurate. I don’t decide to love someone based on a deduction. — Jamal
It’s a rich insight (though hardly an original one), so try to understand before rejecting. Be curious. — Jamal
So under that interpretation, giving or thinking of reasons post hoc is not what “having reasons” means. — Jamal
Religion's an enabler of those prejudices though innit. Not in the abstract. But would the world have had Qutub without an amenable Islamic ideology? I doubt it. Female genital mutilation without the religious practices that mandate it? I also doubt it.
Being strongly critical of politically ascendent religion is an attempt to create a liberal notion of freedom, which must be affirmed to make more radical freedom possible. IMO anyway. — fdrake
I mean, it doesn't seem fit for purpose in undermining fundamentalism and female genital mutilation; these might be better undermined by variant interpretations of scripture. — Jamal
But being strongly critical of politically ascendent religion is not the same as being critical of belief in God as such — Jamal
I don't believe any cogent or non-simplistic arguments have been presented by the person in question. — Janus
Yeah, do your own research lazy bones/brains, as has been typed many times on TPF, we cannot spoon feed everyone, all the time. There is not enough time to do so.In any case if you can't reason with someone, you can't reason with them, and it's not your fault. For example, if someone says that religion has been and still is a net negative for humanity that is just an opinion unless backed up with data from extensive case studies. If it's just an opinion, the opiniated person is entitled to it, but as I see it are not to be taken seriously if they won't or can't provide convincing argument or evidence to support their opinions. — Janus
Basically I agree with you. But the local religion is also part of the social and geopolitical situation. So perhaps it might be more accurate to say that religion is only part of the problem, or one factor in the problem. Or, perhaps still more accurate, that the local interpretation of the religion is a factor in the problem. — Ludwig V
I think the content of your post that I took the above quotes from is fair enough but I think the assumptions made in your last sentence are inaccurate. You assume I don't understand before rejecting.
I disagree. — universeness
My point is that identifying reasons for falling in love with someone is not post hoc. They are present in your thoughts during the very moments that the experience starts imo, the reasoning is just very fast and 'flash like'. — universeness
You, and imo, Zizek are suggesting that such as 'oh my goodness look at her over there, I think I'm in love!!' has no reasoning behind it. I think that's untrue. It's just that all the reasons are happening at top speed in your head. — universeness
Aesthetically stunning ....... tick
Posture alluring (sitting or walking) ...... tick
Body language ....... tick
These reasons are manifest in parallel thought. — universeness
:up: butyerbumsootrawindae!Yes, that was unnecessary. i was probably just trying to wind you up. It's a Scottish tradition; you can take it. — Jamal
But yeah. Anti-theists and anti-fundamentalists are good bedfellows. — fdrake
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.