There is better evidence for these two, than the Bible story. Delusion and spontaneous mystical experience also. Kind of the point. Your motivation for rejecting these (not this specifically, but as a mode of illustrating the short-fall of reason), more reasonable, conclusions, is that they are uncomfortable to you, or you would rather another answer.
That seems to me, to be unreasonable. — AmadeusD
How do we differentiate between hallucination or spontaneous mystical experience and God? Could God not speak through those means? He's described as communicating through dreams. It's silly to ask for "evidence" here because no one knows what that means. What would qualify as evidence? Could you give me some examples? Some criterion? — BitconnectCarlos
Could be aliens. Or we could be hallucinating.
— BitconnectCarlos
There is better evidence for these two, than the Bible story. Delusion and spontaneous mystical experience also. — AmadeusD
how do we understand/frame disability? Such content is revealed to Moses and has deep repercussions. — BitconnectCarlos
I think we can appeal to the traditions/texts themselves to write off certain suggestions. — AmadeusD
The only reason to move on from these suggestions — AmadeusD
But it is a story, like any other. — AmadeusD
I just don't understand foregoing reason to achieve comfort. — AmadeusD
On the contrary, Scripture (Genesis for sure, possibly Exodus?) does very clearly describe God as communicating through dreams. It is characteristic of the Elohist source (E). — BitconnectCarlos
I don't need to. If God communicates through dreams he can also communicate through what we'd call hallucinations. I'd wager hallucination is more likely than aliens. Ezekiel surely hallucinated and saw visions. — BitconnectCarlos
Story doesn't mean false. Neither does myth. It may be embellished. I admit this is where my intuition kicks in. The story, imho, is just too sophisticated to have been written by ancient man inventing something. — BitconnectCarlos
It is superior to any modern treatment of the issue in literature or film that I know of. — BitconnectCarlos
I don't think you're adequately engaged with this exchange.
This does not say anything, whatever, about the claim quoted. That said, I appreciate what you are saying there and would further that point, to say when it runs into empirical problems, there's no good reason to remain with the Scripture. — AmadeusD
This all boils down to your personal discomfort with something. — AmadeusD
Given we have more complex, more morally interesting stories from older periods than the Biblical, I cannot see how its reasonable - which was all I was speaking about/around. Regarding current moral writing, I cannot understand how it's possible this story strikes you with more import than does say Reasons and Persons, or Animal Suffering. Warm fuzzie feelies? — AmadeusD
I don't understand how God communicating through dreams "flies in the face" of his nature. — BitconnectCarlos
Genesis informs us that it is in his nature to communicate through dreams. — BitconnectCarlos
unless you've had some personal experience you'd like to share — BitconnectCarlos
I'm massively impressed by the sophistication of an account of a phenomena/how to frame it. — BitconnectCarlos
Show me a better literary account of disability than the one presented in Exodus — BitconnectCarlos
I would figure the Bible is the greatest work of literature... at least western literature, that exists. I know of no better ancient account of disability. — BitconnectCarlos
wasn't aware the Ten Commandments had changed. What do they say now? Or have they added more, to make up for the five which were lost when Moses dropped the third tablet, according to Mel Brooks? — Ciceronianus
"better" begs the question, by ignoring it. why? Because you are religious and therefore disposed to this opinion. I personally think Enki and Ninmah is a better story. — AmadeusD
Sure. But the reason to think it has some providence other than a human mind? Your discomfort with the potential that a human mind invented it. Standard. But not reasonable. — AmadeusD
In Exodus 4 God deliberately assigns a man with a speech disability the task of talking with the Egyptian head of state and leading a nation. You see, in the Enki and Ninmah account the man with the speech problem would have been assigned a silent profession. But no, not here. God gets infuriated with Moses's insinuation that he should not lead on account of his disability but instead of punishing Moses while burning with anger he helps him by assigning him his brother as an aid. The story not only affirms the dignity of the disabled by affirming that they were created with divine intentionality, but also conveys that those who struggle are not intrinsically barred from certain elite professions like leadership. S tier. Divine revelation. — BitconnectCarlos
the ending where not even Ninmah can help the very disabled is a little sad. — BitconnectCarlos
By the way I am not particularly religious (it's been years since I've attended services), just a reader of books. I just call it as I see it. — BitconnectCarlos
Even if so, God is the cause of the everything, which includes our thoughts and imagination. I'd settle for "divinely inspired." — BitconnectCarlos
I have to say, I find absolutely nothing praise worthy in this story. It seems like weirdo childish moralising about things that don't make a huge amount of sense - and works, only in the infantalising context of a pre-school. — AmadeusD
It is realistic. Some people are disabled. Not differently-abled. The blind cannot be surveyors (the the typical sense - don't get hair-splitty). — AmadeusD
As noted before, I see several extremely obvious and pervasive literary problems with the Bible. It isn't a good work of literature unless it's got some Religious reality to it. IN that sense, its chaotic and self-contradictory tense is actually helping me take it more seriously. If there were not these aspects, it would be clearly the writings of a iron age buffoon. — AmadeusD
So, apparently, the scriptures aren't trash. — AmadeusD
THe bible is written by hand of Human, sourced by the Mind of human.
Is it still the perfect piece of Lit? — AmadeusD
Can a stutterer lead a nation? Take on speaking roles at work? It's a grey zone imo. — BitconnectCarlos
One could easily conclude that the stutterer ought to navigate himself to silent professions or professions that involve minimal speaking. — BitconnectCarlos
But such pragmatism is ultimately stifling. — BitconnectCarlos
Think about you would deal with a son who stutters chronically. Should he shy away from speaking roles? Leadership positions? — BitconnectCarlos
It's not always clear where the line is though. Is the stutterer disabled or differently abled? Yes, natural limits exist but we should test them. Strive for better. That is how we uplift. "On Earth as it is in heaven." — BitconnectCarlos
I would recommend reading it with commentary and consider that most public copies are Christian-biased and problematic translations. I don't know which version you've read. You've read the entire thing? — BitconnectCarlos
I certainly don't think scripture is trash. Some are better written than others though. You do know that the English translations are just translations. — BitconnectCarlos
Still an amazing work of lit. — BitconnectCarlos
The followers of pagan gods didn't take the position taken by Jews and Christians regarding God or religion. A pagan didn't claim that the god they were worshipping at any particular time was the only god, nor did they believe that all must worship that god and no other. That wouldn't occur to a pagan, nor was it the position of the Empire in pagan times. — Ciceronianus
and led Christians to kill Hypatia — Ciceronianus
↪Hanover, ↪Athena asked if there were a problem with the "God of Abraham religions that we might resolve with reason. ↪Ciceronianus suggested that it's "not possible to reason with those who believe they already know what there is to know because their God has told them so". I am just pointing to a common root, the place from whence the idea that faith trumps rationality might issue. — Banno
Is there any chance of raising their awareness? — Athena
The Evangelical preachers with modern media have a huge advantage compared to the Nazi party doing surveys and then renting a dance hall to rile up support for the Nazi party. — Athena
I think you are right. — Athena
I had you pegged as an Englishman. — Leontiskos
Ooo I stand corrected. I was looking after my mental health by forgetting the onion eating dropkick ever existed.Not Abbott? — Leontiskos
A couple of generations back, yes, amongst other things. — Banno
Ooo I stand corrected. I was looking after my mental health by forgetting the onion eating dropkick ever existed. — Banno
There is a tone of 'Mercan chauvinism in your posts. But your democracy is broken by far more than a touch of religious thinking. — Banno
My suspicion, and it might be interesting to gather information on this, is that Overt Christianity in democratic political figures is a curiously 'mercan trait. — Banno
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.