Doctors often use the word death in reference to those who have been brought back, it's perfectly acceptable. — Sam26
with reference to an NDE, it's a near death experience, obviously you didn't die in the absolute sense. — Sam26
Life ending at death is less of a scientific matter and more of a semantic matter. At least initially. — bert1
what strikes you as preposterous about that? — bert1
Are you for real? I eat materislists like you up for breakfast!!!
Your compassion is touching but wrong fella mister! — Ambrosia
Anyway,why you so sure of the end of conciousness when you have zero experience of it? — Ambrosia
There's also the concept of an unembodied mind: — Wheatley
My my,posters are awfully dogmatic about life ending at material death.
One wonders at the "scientific" evidence for such "certainty"? — Ambrosia
dogmatically they cling to the claim even when everyone else thinks they're nuts might be a good place to start, especially when they stand to lose something by saying so and have nothing to gain. — MikeL
The gift of the existentialists to some extent is that modern people could use the same language/customs/rituals of their forebearers but understand them in fundamentally different ways, i.e. give them their own meaning. Existence precedes essence - the past is gone and has no claim to the meaning we make in the present. — Ennui Elucidator
The need someone like Dawkins apparently feels to tell everyone there is no God strikes me as no more appealing than the need others feel to tell everyone there is a God. — Ciceronianus
As far as alternatives to what seems to be our common upbringing in the Catholic faith, for me, the immanent deity of the Stoics has an appeal, or some form of pantheism or pandeism. — Ciceronianus
I think factual correctness isn't and shouldn't be the goal of religion, because its subject matter is largely ineffable (as is that of art). But I think that a religion should be at least reasonable to a degree, i.e. that it shouldn't require those who believe in it approve of and accept assertions, concepts or ideas that are clearly absurd. It's a personal opinion only, I suppose, but I think one of the goals of a religion should be to avoid being ridiculous. — Ciceronianus
Reality is entirely the observer's concept thus without the observer, there is no reality. As simple as that. — RAW
Are you chasing after Truth? After a more complete understanding of Reality? After happiness? — leo
What's so funny? I just started a book (Sapiens) by him. Should I stop? WTF? — TheMadFool
Have you read Buber? — Ennui Elucidator
Harari
— Ennui Elucidator
Israeli historian. — Wheatley
I almost posted the Oven of Akhnai for them, — Ennui Elucidator
. I am simply trying to bring nuance to a conversation... — Ennui Elucidator
There is a famous joke about two men, Goldberg and Schwartz, who are walking to synagogue. They are stopped along the way by someone who asks them where they are going. They casually tell the man that they are both on their way to synagogue.
The man responds, “Goldberg, I know why you go to synagogue. You believe in God, and you’re an observant Jew.” Then he adds, “But Schwartz, you don’t believe in God, why are you going?”
Schwartz responds, “Goldberg goes to synagogue to talk to God, and I go to synagogue to talk to Goldberg.”
The point of the story in this context is that religion is about community at least as much as it is about theology. — Ennui Elucidator
And even atheist Orthodox Jews, but who is counting? — Ennui Elucidator
...using it for the purpose of defining away a substantial sect of Jews... — Ennui Elucidator
...that do not believe the “essence” of their faith is a misattributed god concept. — Ennui Elucidator
I’ve already referred to Maimonides. Go read the 13 principles of faith (which were heretical in his time) and see which of those harkens to Ya. — Ennui Elucidator
I don’t think he cares, but maybe he will read about Jewish pluralism in the modern world. Much easier to simply treat “Jews” as a monolith. — Ennui Elucidator
What sort of evidence would you like? Do you want to read a few chapters laters how god learns things? Or how god makes mistakes? Or god creates evil? Or god kills people for sport? Maybe we can read about the embodied god that walks or the disembodied god that needs to be carried from place to place. The descriptions of “God” in the Bible are inconsistent and evolving... — Ennui Elucidator
P.S. The Greeks screwed it up for everyone. — Ennui Elucidator
Christianity is not Islam, Judaism, or the Israelite understanding of God. — Ennui Elucidator
Because the intolerance of the Jews was limited, and primarily local (to Israel). Rome for the most part tolerated the Jewish religion because their weird, peculiar, god usually was just that--their (the Jews) weird, peculiar god. The Jews weren't inclined to compel everyone to become Jews (unlike Christians, who wanted all to be Christian). — Ciceronianus
That's the very essence of Christianity. — DanLager
People who claim to be Christians have been trying to reconcile the preposterous with the rational for a long time- — Ciceronianus
The effort to make Christianity "reasonable" requires the rejection of its claim to exclusivity and of the claim that Jesus is God. — Ciceronianus
Giving moral guidance...wrapped in an intriguing story of a hero living out those believes — stoicHoneyBadger
what if the goal of a religion is not to be factually correct, but to give people moral guidance, thumos and social cohesion? — stoicHoneyBadger
The typical voter who identifies as a party member, though removed from the functioning of their actual party and probably not dues paying, is not in a position to change power by merely winning one election, regardless of the significance of such office. — Ennui Elucidator
Not that I am pro-parliament. But supporting one of the two parties seems the only rational choice unless you want to be a protest vote. — Ennui Elucidator
The fault is ours, the electorate's. There ARE third party candidates, but nobody supports them at the polls. The reason for this is that American politics is largely preventative: in a climate which has seen centrism fade from view, and the right and left become increasingly polarized, we don't vote for a candidate or a platform, we vote AGAINST a party and it's platform. Democrats won't cast their vote for a green party candidates largely because they are terrified of the Republican candidate winning. Republicans won't cast their vote for a Libertarian candidate because they are terrified that so doing will result in the Democratic candidate winning. That seems to be the nature of our politics in America, and so the conundrum in which we find ourselves.The two parties have rigged the system, including outright legislation, that makes it difficult for a another camel to get his nose under the tent. — James Riley
Hahaha, now you sound like my nonna; I haven't heard that phrase used in a long time! My maternal grandma used to say that whenever I made a statement beginning with "I wish...". Riley, you must be Irish in actuality! When I'd ask her where she got that from, nonna used to say that that saying was "something that the Irish say"....hope in one hand and shit in the other... — James Riley
Perhaps we should consider a return to paganism; or worship of the sun? — Banno
If you are arguing that we're returning to religious based reasoning, your concern would be of a re-enchantment, where we are devolving back into a theocratically and mythologically based epistemology for understanding basic facts of day to day existence. I really don't see mass scale movement in that regard. — Hanover
Here we have the old notion of all cultural phenomena being "cyclical", as if they were resurgent beings. My opinion is that this represents a fallacy of misperception, albeit one fairly common within society...what one might call a "social legend", an example of "pop philosophy" tinged with superstition. One might say that the perception of "cycles of cultural phenomena" is no more than phenomenological!...just like any other phenomenon in the history of histories of human civilizations -- science is cyclical. — Caldwell
Quite true. Violence backed by sufficient force can "defeat" or demolish any human undertaking. Even so, there appears to be little danger on the horizon to scientific inquiry from human violence, at least as far as I can see....violence can defeat science — Caldwell
This, based upon the notion of "cyclicality", appears a fallacious expectation. I would think that the future limitations upon scientific discovery will be the cause of technological limitation, rather than cyclical "decay". Scientific inquiry rests upon the foundation of technology; scientists can only inveestigate what advances in technology will allow. As technological advancement speeds or slows, so scientific inquiry.There is a tipping point after which, it's just all decay. — Caldwell
Perhaps to theistically religious fundamentalism of various types. With theism on a slow retreat in the "western world", though, I think this poses little danger. Here in the States, I would worry more about the future of Christianity than about the future of scientific inquiry. Biblical creationism, despite it's cultural embeddedness in some parts of the U.S., has become no more than a sideshow...a curiosity, and Christianity no more than a cultural tradition largely devoid of belief. Nor would I worry much about science in the Muslim world; quite a number of scientists continue to emanate from South Asia and, to a lesser degree, the middle East. There will always be your Afghanistans, but that situation is more of a failure of culture, of the failure of a culture to adapt to a changing world (or alternatively viewed, the failure of the world to accept the permanence of a particular culture), much as in Somalia, than it is the result of religion. I see no reason to bemoan the future of science in the Muslim world in general....science is anathema to other, equally powerful, schools of thoughts. — Caldwell
Not having thought much about "adultery" in the past, I find myself wondering if our definition thereof is not dependent upon the concept of monogamy. I wonder, how might the above definition be required to change within a polygamous society, there being many societies on Earth (most Muslim, and many non-Muslim African societies, for instance) wherein polygamy is both legal and socially accepted? What should the definition of "adultery" be within the context of a "polygamous marriage"? This question might be somewhat off-topic, as I assume the OP is defining "adultery" in terms of the characteristic "western" marriage. Nevertheless, the question occurs to me...I’ll start by mentioning that I define adultery to be a situation where a member of a romantic couple in a closed relationship, whether married or unmarried, decides to have sexual contact with another person without consent from their partner. When understood in this manner, it seems that adultery produces obvious harm to lots of people... — TheHedoMinimalist
I rather liken Nero to Agamemnon: vain, selfish and ruthless in his pursuit of power. Let us not forget that Nero had his own mother killed, upon viewing her a threat to his political position. Agrippina's famous last words, spoken to her assassin, at least according to the account of historian Cassius Dio: "smite me in the womb, whence came such an abominable son". Grisly stuff, that! Grisly man, Nero.The only person comparable who enjoyed such a life, would be, to myself, Nero(?) — Shawn
I said both patriarchy and matriarchy are made-up concepts based on an uneducated opinion regarding differences between genders. That neither is true or better than the other, it's just a concept made up by us through culture and religious biases, it has no valid grounds in science or psychology. — Christoffer
Oh, absolutely. Anybody who considers questions of human sociology without including the facts of biology by giving primacy to the sociobiological aspect, is quite remiss, in my view. This is particular true because we humans are animals who have largely ceased to behave like other animals, a fact which tends to obscure the importance of the portion of our human mind which we share in common with other animals: the primal mind, the "Id". Even so, that primal aspect lies at the core of our mental complex, and recognition of it's power over us is necessary to understand how men can sometimes be so brutal, so savage. Truly, we have evolved, but we have by no means left "the beast within" by the side of the evolutionary way. Rather, said beast continues being tenuously repressed by the Super-ego, the higher man, and remains thinly covered with a veneer of civility.I am so glad you referred to all social animals. I don't think we should be discussing anything about humans without an understanding of being one of the mammalian species. — Athena