And when I say the things I've been saying it feels kinda wrong, in that I'm speaking from a position of privilege: the privilege of living in a liberal secular society that makes it too easy to take a contrarian anti-militant-atheist line. — Jamal
I don't expect to be able to reason with fundamentalist theists any more than I do with miltitant anti-theists. — Janus
I'll grant that universeness is an ideologue, a fanatical anti-theist, but I don't think I'd call him or her a militant anti-theist. — Janus
I doubt you lost the argument, because I don't believe any cogent or non-simplistic arguments have been presented by the person in question. — Janus
You wouldn't know them. They live in the orange crate I use as a footstool; only I have seen or spoken to them. The upside is, we were in the same isolation bubble, safe from the antii-vaxx militant anti-maskers all through Covid.I am curious as to which "pseudo-friends" you are referring to.
I know he holds strong opinions, and expresses them forcefully. I disagree with some of them to various degrees, but I respect the hell out of his consistency of conviction and his right to express them any way he wants to. — Vera Mont
You wouldn't know them. They live in the orange crate I use as a footstool; only I have seen or spoken to them. The upside is, we were in the same isolation bubble, safe from the antii-vaxx militant anti-maskers all through Covid. — Vera Mont
I do believe I have said - up to four times each - everything I can possibly contribute here, and so it's time to retire from the field. — Vera Mont
:grin: But seriously... there is another variety of dogmatism, which is not quite the same. It starts from exactly the same response - "you must not understand me.", but does argue, properly at first. But when it becomes apparent that the proposition at stake will not be abandoned, (for example, as in ad hoc explanations), the debate is over - unless one can agree on a solution such "hinge proposition" or axiom, in which case a solution has been reached. Those solutions are a bit of a problem.
The key, though, is that proper engagement requires that one put one's own beliefs at stake. — Ludwig V
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
This is an interesting method for determining dogmatism! It is interesting because the content of beliefs isn't referenced at all — Moliere
Now, I'm interested that you think that the content might be relevant. — Ludwig V
Could'nt resist this one Jamal Do you think this statement by Janus makes him a fanatic? — universeness
Some of the conversation here has got me thinking. In my extremely secular milieu, militant atheism seems ... silly. But in, say, the US Bible belt or the Middle East, religion is still a very big deal and causes a lot of problems. — Jamal
He did not equate them, he compared them. — universeness
How would you respond to a fascist that called you a fanatic and a militant due to your anti-fascist views.
I am sure this was quite a common occurrence between neighbours, in 1939 Germany. — universeness
Sure, keep it simple if it's a simple topic or you are addressing simpletons, and don't unnecessarily complicate any explanation. In any case 'simple' does not have the same meaning as 'simplistic'.K.I.S.S (Keep it simple stupid!) — universeness
the second holds as his inalienable right to live his life as he thinks he ought to, and defends the rights of other to live as they see fit. — Vera Mont
I disagree with some of them to various degrees, but I respect the hell out of his consistency of conviction and his right to express them any way he wants to. — Vera Mont
Didn't sway him one iota, while I did revisit my own position on a couple of issues. — Vera Mont
do believe I have said - up to four times each - everything I can possibly contribute here, and so it's time to retire from the field. — Vera Mont
That's true. I'm happy to accept that a madcap interpretation is an interpretation, but only in the sense that a broken watch is a watch. — Ludwig V
You are quite right, of course. But fiction is a particular context. Even so, Aristotle says that a story must be plausible. I think that's too restrictive, yet there's something in it. — Ludwig V
Another example (legal in this case) based on ancient memories of "The West Wing". Suppose a country has a constitution written more than 200 years ago. There is a provision that each geographical division of the country should send to the legislative body an number of representatives proportionate to its population. It is taken for granted that women do not count. It is further provided that slaves shall count as a fraction of a person (say 2/5th). Fast forward to the present. It is clear, isn't it, that something must be done. No-one is a slave any more, so perhaps that provision can be simply ignored. The provision about women was so obvious that it is not even mentioned, so perhaps one could simply include women. But it would be safer to delete the slave clause and add a definition of "person". You might not count that as re-interpretation, but it surely demonstrates that it is sometimes necessary to take account of the contemporary context as well as the historical context. — Ludwig V
Be careful when dealing with many, who claim to be atheists, they often make strange bedfellows with theists. — universeness
A broken watch does not do what it is supposed to do, keep time, a madcap interpretation does what it is supposed to do, provide an understanding of meaning. The madcap interpretation is just different, in the sense of being outside the norm, so to make the analogy good, the watch would not be broken, but giving you the wrong time. In theory there would be a way to "translate" the interpretation, like relativity translates different ways of keeping time, because as a translation it must be ordered in some way and not completely random. — Metaphysician Undercover
If it makes sense, it's plausible isn't it? — Metaphysician Undercover
So the ancient person could very well be writing in a way which would appear incoherent to us today. Then the interpreter who tried to put things in coherent terms would be doing a faulty interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
But to allow the condition of the modern society to influence how one interprets the intent of the authors would be a mistaken (subjective, because one's personal position would influence the) interpretation. The objective interpretation would be to look solely for the authors' intent, and not allow one's own intent to influence the interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
A better example probably is the ongoing discussion around the second amendment in the US constitution, the right to bear arms. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore instead of looking to change them it just becomes a question of the intent behind them, and how to apply that same intent today. — Metaphysician Undercover
The objective interpretation would be to look solely for the authors' intent, and not allow one's own intent to influence the interpretation. — Metaphysician Undercover
dogma as a relationship between beliefs, which would be partially content-dependent — Moliere
so insisting that space is infinite, for instance, is dogmatic due to the place that "space" fits within the scheme of reason. — Moliere
Be careful when dealing with many, who claim to be atheists, they often make strange bedfellows with theists.
— universeness
Is there some sort of tribal purity requirement to being an atheist? Am I at risk of losing my atheist card for being friends with theists - for considering fellow social primates to be brothers? — wonderer1
Theists who experience your law preventing them from compelling their children to experience their gods glory by attending their church, would definitely label you a fanatic, you fanatic!Why would thinking that children should not be forced to do what they don't want to make me a fanatic? And why appeal to jamal for support? — Janus
I think @180 Proof is the person who best knows what he posted, it certainly is not you. I suggest you read his posts again and again and again, until the penny drops.He equated theism with fascism and sexism in the sense that what he said assumed that theism is an evil just as fascism and sexism are evils. Read it again. — Janus
Do you actually answer questions or can you only respond by asking other questions which are just really bad attempts to twist my questions?So, you think fascism is, only relatively speaking, an evil? I certainly wouldn't have picked you for being a relativist. — Janus
Perhaps we should lump all madcap interpretations into the same trash-heap. — Ludwig V
I don't quite understand your last sentence. If it means that all interpretations must be mutually reconcilable, that undermines the point of different interpretations - unless the reconciliation is simply the original text, which all interpretations have in common. — Ludwig V
My dream that I can jump/fly over tall buildings makes sense, but isn't plausible. — Ludwig V
Well, as usual, you have a coherent position. Revealing the incoherence of a text on its own terms is a perfectly coherent project. But would you say that Locke anticipated modern physics, or that Berkeley anticipated modern relativity theory? — Ludwig V
But can we always divine the intent of the author? — Ludwig V
But I accept that the intent of the author, so far as we can divine it, is always important in interpreting a text. The same applies to the context in which they are written. But if that's the only correct way to read them, I'm left puzzled by the fact that some texts remain relevant long after times have changed, and we continue to read and discuss them. Your approach seems to consign all historical texts to a museum. — Ludwig V
Fair enough. But the catch is "how to apply that same intent today". That means interpretation in a context the author(s) didn't know about. There's a narrow line there between divining the intent of the author and speculating. — Ludwig V
There's a notion of objective meaning at work there which philosophy would find troublesome, but nonetheless, lawyers seem to be able to work with it, and if meaning is use, that validates the principle, at least in the context of the law. — Ludwig V
No, Mr Atwill was talking about the various clashes he has had with atheists such as Dr Richard Carrier, regarding the veracity of the content of his book. — universeness
If it makes my initial point any clearer for you, Janus, I reiterate that your equating "anti-theism to theism" is as much a false equivalence as equating (e.g.) anti-dogmatism to dogmatism (or anti-supernaturalism to supernaturalism). — 180 Proof
Theists who experience your law preventing them from compelling their children to experience their gods glory by attending their church, would definitely label you a fanatic, you fanatic! — universeness
The point though is that I do not want to throw all madcap interpretations in the same trash-heap. As I said, the madman still expresses glimpses of insightful intelligence. And different madmen express different forms of insight. So their interpretations cannot all be classed together. — Metaphysician Undercover
Words are tools, and tools have no general "use", as use is a feature of the particular instance where the tool is put toward a specific purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then we have many options in between these two extremes. — Metaphysician Undercover
But when we get to philosophy, the intent of the author is not exposed in this way. This is because the intent of the author of philosophy, the author's goal, or objective, is often actually unknown to the author. We can express it in general terms like the desire for truth, or knowledge, or an approach to the unknown. — Metaphysician Undercover
I was thinking that if there is some truth in the madcap interpretation, it isn't madcap — Ludwig V
No. Tools do have a general or standard use. — Ludwig V
That exactly my bother about the "intent" criterion and why I can't accept the definition of a speech act in terms of intention. Plus there's the objection that "meanings just ain't in the head" - who was it who coined that?. — Ludwig V
I don't think we should use "truth" here. — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't say or imply that non-standard uses of a tool are not uses. On the contrary, they clearly are.Any claim of such a "general or standard use" will miss out on a whole bunch of non-standard usage which is just as real as that contained by the general description. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sorry, I was't careful enough, again. A normal claw hammer is designed and manufactured for people to pound nails (and to pull them out). (There are other kinds of hammer designed to pound other things.) Most people use their hammers most of the time for the designed purpose - they perform better than most alternatives. I agree that's an empirical generalization.Making such a claim, is just a generalization intended to facilitate some argument. "The standard use of a hammer is to pound nails". — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, I understood "in the head" to be metaphorical for "in the mind", which is itself a metaphor. To my mind, so is "in the text". But it is true that the text expresses the author's intention or even is what the author intended to write - curiously even if certain parts/features were not intended, but developed as the text was written. It all gets hideously complicated. I think the rest of that paragraph is OK.You ought not think of meaning as in the head. It's far easier to understand meaning as being in the writing itself, but put there by the author. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. Kant is using "dogma" in its traditional, non-rhetorical use. Which is not wrong, just very unusual. One of my problems here is precisely to distinguish "respectable" dogma from the disreputable kind. — Ludwig V
I certainly agree that dogma is a relationship between beliefs, in that dogma is in some way protected against refutation, with the implication that other beliefs can go to the wall. But that status is attributed by the believer, so I don't see that I can delineate any content in advance. — Ludwig V
Dogma is the bedrock of one's understanding; the bars on the cage of the mind that stop one falling out into the bliss of total ignorance. To imagine oneself without dogma is to imagine oneself as God. — unenlightened
It is a dogma that dogma is bad. — unenlightened
The only avowedly atheist governments I know of are the old Soviet regime and Modern China. One might also include Japan, but not 'avowedly'.
It's a very small sample, but not a great record. the assumption seems to be that dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps it is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'.
Right... if we have reputable dogma then my dogma is good and their dogma is bad. — Moliere
Which is succinct and manages to lay out what's meant. I'm understanding better what is meant by dogma at this point. — Moliere
dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps it is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'. — Moliere
I like unenlightened's first sentence. I don't understand the second.
dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps it is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'.
— Moliere
Dogma includes "certainty", in the psychological sense. But psychological certainty is a trap, precisely because it leads to dogma and there's nothing like power for fostering certainty beyond what's reasonable. — Ludwig V
the assumption seems to be that dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps it is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'./quote]
...I now see is badly phrased and confusing. Let me remove the ambiguous "it" and replace it thus:
The assumption seems to be that dogma makes for intolerance, but perhaps intolerance is more related to power, and dogma is simply 'certainty'.
This hopefully aligns fairly well with your"...there's nothing like power for fostering certainty beyond what's reasonable." — unenlightened
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