In most cases turf, flags, resources, are all held on behalf of an ideology which usually takes itself very seriously, whether it be Islamic State or the United States. — Tom Storm
I made no assumption about an author's intentions, abilities or desires. I only presumed that they meant to communicate something to other humans. If they made up a story just to entertain themselves, it wouldn't be written down, and if nobody liked it, it wouldn't have been passed on and recorded.Some of the assumptions here - 1) that authors always have a specific intention and can convey it; 2) that an author doesn't want a range of interpretive possibilities; 3) that it is possible for people to arrive at a single interpretation based on a single authorial intention. None of these seem demonstrable. — Tom Storm
I could have sworn that's what I said I was doing.And how do you demonstrate what the author's intention is? Again, interpretation. — Tom Storm
My own interpretation is the only one I feel either competent or authorized to report. — Vera Mont
What is all this? I was talking about the war between science and religion. — Alkis Piskas
Didn't someone have to tell, sing or write it first? If so, they presumably did that to communicate something to someone else.I would maintain that myths do not speak for themselves - they do not 'speak' until someone gives them a voice by deriving a meaning from them - whether that be a pauper, a professor, or the Pope. If a myth seems to comment on human life, it is because someone hearing or reading it has determined the commentary. Interpretation. — Tom Storm
Of course. (Keeping in mind that The Bible isn't a single book but many and most of them were unavailable to the Catholic laity until recently. So they depended on the New Testament and whatever the priest told them, while the conservative Protestant sect leaders leaned heavily on the Old Testament for their fire-and-brimstone revivals.)Incidentally, in relation to Christianity it is interesting how interpretation has evolved over time. The idea that the Bible can be read as some kind of positivist text is a recent one. — Tom Storm
And this is the entire point. The book itself is contradictory and messy, and it can't speak. — Tom Storm
Can you point to a church or an individual who, in your judgement, has exactly the right interpretation? — Tom Storm
All this does depend on which Christian you speak too. — Tom Storm
So, he's got no use for either testament? Cool.The view of the cross as the sacrifice for the sins of the world is a barbarian idea based on primitive concepts of God and must be dismissed.
John Shelby Spong
This is true where god is fiction and just an enlargement of human tendencies, a wish fulfillment fantasy — Tom Storm
If mythology is any indication, the early ones were fine with it. They made up entire deities to personify not only their own faults but larger concepts like death, war, deception, chaos, as well as destructive weather phenomena. In primitive religions, the line between benevolent and malevolent supernatural entities is not at all clearly drawn. And, of course, those spirits are limited in both power and intellect, so that a human can often get the better of them, or reason with them, or appease them.I think early religionists feared to give the almighty any negative qualities. — god must be atheist
I doubt you comprehend that my clarification of the theological position is not an argument for or against anything.A fruit tree made me do it. I doubt you comprehend how pathetic your argument here is. — Banno
Somewhat disappointing. The book is better.But this bit leaves one wanting to see the film...
In mainstream Christian theology the "devil" is one of at least (assuming they are numbered incrementally) 665 other beings — Banno
So there are things that god does not do on purpose? Unforeseen consequences to his acts? He's not omnipotent, or he's not omniscient? — Banno
Can we really take Yahweh as anything but violent, petulant and egomaniacal? — Tom Storm
Man was given instruction to produce children in a sacred covenant of marriage and to live simply without extravagance. — Outlander
That chapter is largely neglected, as Christians prefer the second version.Gen 1:28 And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.
It's not supposed to, not directly. Original sin does, to the extent that eating the fruit resulted in 1. man's ability to identify evil and do evil and 2. his expulsion from the make-believe garden; forced to live in the real world of disease, hardship, sorrow and pain. (Gen 3:15-19)To the point, "how does freewill explain <insert suffering here>", — Outlander
Thanks. Wow! That's a lot of homework! — Alkis Piskas
Yes. The Christians did themselves a great disservice when they promoted their god right up out of all probability. Are you familiar with the Peter Principle? Might be a bit outdated now...The issue I have with logical arguments about a omnipotent/omniscient/can make contradictions true God can be seen using an (imperfect) analogy. — PhilosophyRunner
Jehovah made sense as a local tribal god, like Thor; his magic was restricted to slinging frogs and burning bushes. Then Jesus came along, casting out demons, curing leprosy and shoving God up into the Kingdom of Heaven. Then Constantine set about imposing him on all the subject peoples of the Roman Empire, which meant rolling all the characteristics of their local gods into the RC's one big god (no wonder he split into three!)people in a hierarchy tend to rise to "a level of respective incompetence":
Yes, but your students are in your imagination. — Bartricks
Sez who, where?2. God did not create evility. — god must be atheist
Humans are free to choose God, any of the other gods, or Satan. They didn't create anything.3. Humans have free will and they created evility with their moral displestitude. — god must be atheist
According to Genesis, the serpent existed, back in Eden. It is reputed to have been an incarnation of Lucifer, who shows up much later in the bible, but the serpent of Eden is just a clever snake when God curses him to be the enemy of woman.The devil exists. — god must be atheist
Genesis 3:14 And the LORD God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life:
But it's by no means a solid foundation.Many Christians believe the Devil was once a beautiful angel named Lucifer who defied God and fell from grace. This assumption that he is a fallen angel is often based on the book of Isaiah in the Bible, which says, "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How art thou cut down to the ground, which didst weaken the nations.”
According to one version of the myth and several versions in later religious tradition. In fact, the probability is that Satan has many precedents in Middle Eastern and European folklore. He can - with little stretch of the imagination - be identified with a number of pre-existing malevolent entities.2. The devil (Satan) is god-made. Humans can't create angels. Satan is a transformed angel. — god must be atheist
That's a direct contradiction - without any scriptural foundation afaik - of the previous statement. He wouldn't have been "transformed" - Christians prefer 'fallen' - unless he made a very bad decision - i.e. to stand against God in an armed uprising. You don't get will much freer than that!3. Angels are not humans; they have no free will. — god must be atheist
Indirectly, if his ex-creature made it. Directly, only if he put it into the world on purpose. There is nothing the big book to indicate which.QED evil (*some evil) has been created by god directily. — god must be atheist
Ford, Edison, Tesla, it was all with money. — schopenhauer1
Some technology, yes. And most of the guys who made useful things in their garage or basement were subsumed by that same capitalist machine, yes; and many were robbed of the fruit of their labour. Yet that still doesn't stop the next genius tinkering, painting, composing, solving equations, dreaming up theories, pouring the content of one test-tube into another, growing a new hybrid - unnoticed, unpaid and unappreciated - just because it is their passion. Humans are curious and creative by nature.In fact, some technology absolutely needed government backing first.. usually from wartime.. then university money, then private sector. — schopenhauer1
Because most agree that there is a problem of evil for God. If I can show how those who think such things are committed to having to agree that this implies it is wrong for us to procreate, then that's philosophically interesting. — Bartricks
There were several unrelated questions in the OP. I addressed one:... a common mistake is not to address the question ..... — Bartricks
But you didn't like the answer, so you marked it 'irrelevant' and told me, as you do pretty much everybody, "You missed the point." The point, I assume, being "It's wrong to have kids!" You could have stated it clearly at the outset.Morally what ought they to do?
How does that engage with the argument I made? — Bartricks
We are unable to affect how the world runs. Therefore we ought to frustrate our desire to procreate. — Bartricks
Except for the times when a system stops working and is overthrown from within, or suffers a major collapse and disintegrates or is overwhelmed by an outside force. People born into the period of upheaval have nothing to become habituated to and are free to experiment, until they empower a new elite who then impose their own system.It is a system that gets entrenched and thus we become habituated beings. — schopenhauer1
Not quite. Technology begins with bone tools, stone weapons, fire and dugout canoes. It is a process of human invention on which each succeeding civilization builds.Afterall, technology came about through this system. — schopenhauer1
Serially and temporarily. Every system takes advantage of whatever technology exists when it assumes power and adds to the body of innovations according to its own requirements. The bronze age produced a lot of war equipment and personal decoration. Agricultural expansion periods improve on farm implement. Exploring/trading systems speed up methods of transportation; industrial periods expand the use of motive power and manufactury. The monetary age creates technologies for instant transfer of funds and information. None of it is necessary to human survival; it's driven by the needs of the prevailing system.Is technology and this way of being necessarily linked (it cannot be any other way), or is it contingently linked? — schopenhauer1
The engineering mind tinkers whether it is funded by financial backers or not, just as the artistic mind creates art, music and poetry, whether it sells or not, the adventuresome mind explores and makes maps; the healing mind devises ways to mitigate pain. All of these activities were taking place in primitive cultures that knew nothing of money and lending.Engineers think of stuff, funded by financial backers. — schopenhauer1
Until the system breaks down. The Greatest Depression, collapse of the web, storms rip apart the electric grid and wipe out the commercial crops, migrants battle locals; cities starve in the cold...Little communes only exist in the wider system, so that's out as a "real" alternative. — schopenhauer1
I am a parasite, a surplus old person, sucking up a pension and contributing only unpopular novels. I can do that, because the relatively benign political regime under which I live has not yet unravelled. It's in the process of unravelling, but might, with a bit of luck, outlast me...You are laborer. — schopenhauer1
Oh well, that happens sometimes.Again, nothing you're saying has anything to do with anything I have said. — Bartricks
Again then: the omnipotent person wants to keep the sensible world operating as it does. The omnipotent person also wants to create new life. It is wrong for them to satisfy both desires. — Bartricks
The war is back? In what way? Have I missed the news? — Alkis Piskas
You seem to have missed my point entirely. — Bartricks
By what authority do you hold and omniscient, omnipotent being to the moral standard imposed by society on ordinary mortals? You attribute superpowers to a character on whom you then place arbitrary limitations. You posit 'a sensible world' without defining 'sensible'.Similarly then, the omnipotent person has the ability to satisfy both of her desires - her desire for the world to keep operating in the way that it is, and her desire to create life and make it live in the sensible world. But it would be wrong for her to satisfy both desires. One or the other. Not both. — Bartricks
I do not see ‘capitalism’ as the root of all social problems myself. — I like sushi
It's baaaack!.[the triumphs of science and rational thought — Vera Mont]
Yes, at last! The war lasted for too long! — Alkis Piskas
The empathy factors in in people understanding that people of color who live in low-income, high crime areas cannot merely pull themselves up by their bootstraps - and neither could they in the person of color's shoes. — ToothyMaw
You can believe as you please. I asked about exact numbers - and they're not as easy to find or correlate as 'popular wisdom'. I'm saying the statistics that are readily available from law enforcement agencies do not accurately reflect the proportional rate of criminal activity among all ethnic groups. That it would take a much deeper and wider research to discover the actual proportions.I totally acknowledge that the justice system is severely flawed, but I have trouble believing that there are such confounding factors that people of color don't genuinely commit more crimes. — ToothyMaw
I mentioned a few factors. All law enforcement disproportionately targets minorities and the poor. So do prosecutors, because they have political campaigns to look good in. People identified as Black make up 13.6% of the overall population, but 19% of the poor; while Hispanics are 19% of the population and 24% of the poor.I mean, if you can provide a little bit of evidence that there are confounding factors that make it merely appear that people of color commit more crime, I'm totally open to amending my position. — ToothyMaw
Imagine as well that there is a sensible world, exactly like this one. — Bartricks
So, they have two desires: a desire to leave the sensible world to operate in its own manner, but also a desire to introduce sentient life into the sensible world. — Bartricks
And you are not omniscient, but you know that this sensible world is an incredibly dangerous place, full of all manner of dangers and just about every conceivable harm. — Bartricks
I mean, if the omnipotent, omniscient person ought not to introduce sentient life into the sensible world if they are not going to change the sensible world, then your inability to change the sensible world should also mean that you ought not to introduce sentient life into it. Agree? — Bartricks
Your only usefulness to broader society is your ability to both produce and consume. If we do not value these things (in the modern context at least), the system collapses. — schopenhauer1
There is always a reason to act, or else we lie dormant. Amoeba needs warmth and food, swims toward the busy end of the puddle. Self-interest is primal.I was thinking more along the lines of her notion of acting in one's own self-interest preceding all other reasons to act. — creativesoul
I have had a variety of roommates, and honestly it seems to me that all of the best and worst qualities are equally dispersed across racial and ethnic lines, — ToothyMaw
I'm not sure how much empathy is required if you begin with accurate and relevant statistics. What percent of the entire population is what racial designation? (I use designation distinctly, rather than origin or makeup, because the DNA is inextricably mixed)Even though people of color commit more crimes in general, I think people with empathy realize that there are extenuating circumstances and screeching at them about their culture accomplishes nothing. — ToothyMaw
Much, if not most, of the plentiful violence committed by humankind is against God’s animals, their blood literally shed and bodies eaten in mind-boggling quantities by people. [It leaves me wondering whether the metaphorical forbidden fruit of Eden eaten by Adam and Eve was actually God’s four-legged creation.]
I can see that really angering the Almighty – a lot more than the couple’s eating non-sentient, non-living, non-bloodied fruit. I’ve yet to hear a monotheist speak out against what has collectively been done to animals for so long. — FrankGSterleJr
Then a few hundred years later, in Leviticus, He lays out a whole big list of what animal to kill for which minor transgression against Him.And every living substance was destroyed which was upon the face of the ground, both man, and cattle, and the creeping things, and the fowl of the heaven; and they were destroyed from the earth: and Noah only remained alive, and they that were with him in the ark.
but He wanted it sprinkled all over the altar and out on the ground.Leviticus 17:14 For it is the life of all flesh; the blood of it is for the life thereof: therefore I said unto the children of Israel, Ye shall eat the blood of no manner of flesh: for the life of all flesh is the blood thereof: whosoever eateth it shall be cut off.
Yes, I've heard it, but I think it refers to quantities and ratios that reside in physical reality and make the orderly interaction of elements possible - else, no stable structure could exist. I do not believe it refers to measurements and equations but to the quantities and relationships we express as measurements and equations.Most mathematicians subscribe to Mathematical Platonism, which says math is discovered, not invented. — Art48
Those thoughts are the observation (possibly accurate, though non-existence is hard to prove) of pre-existing phenomena. It is the phenomena that are discovered; the thoughts are responses by a human mind. An alien mind might think quite differently about them; a shark's mind not discover them at all, nor miss them.I’d say math consists of thoughts, thoughts such as there is no largest prime number, the square root of two cannot be expressed as a fraction, etc.
Then why do not all the people with similar reception equipment apprehend all these thoughts, the same as they would all feel heat or wetness? A fair percentage of the human population thinks no more about the square root of 2 than do sharks, and hardly any pluck Macbeth out of the ether.Under this view, thought (and emotion) is sensory input and experience. — Art48
Perhaps in Kirshner's defense, a lot of conservatives were strongly influenced by Rand and consider her an inspiration. I find that unsettling, but it's probably no worse than the left wing's attraction to Marx. — T Clark
I'm very much inclined to agree. However anti-government she might have been, and however poor her grasp of economics (and architecture) may have been, she was all about truth-telling and self-making - at least in theory. It didn't stop her little private hypocrisies, but I don't think she would have advocated that chicanery, science denial and treason be excused in public life.I don't think Rand's philosophy supports Trump's actions at all. — T Clark
Ironically though, the Churches and the people belonging to dogmatic religions, are intolerant to other beliefs. — Alkis Piskas
My "uselessness" refers to the those who are not affected, who are the minority. — Alkis Piskas
Different cultural matrices evolve different spiritual bases for their collective morality. A collective morality is necessary for the survival of any social species - ask any meerkat or elephant. For humans, with the big brain, fertile imagination and constant awareness of imminent death, it's easier to devise and to enforce a moral code with the authority of a supernatural entity behind it. But even without a personification of righteousness, the code of right behaviour grows out of the geography and up with the history of a people.I think at the end of the day it doesn't matter what religion one pursues (if they wish to even coin themselves by any dogma at all) because beneath all religions or spiritualities seems to be a common ground. A sacred message about doing the right thing. — Benj96
And how many of our greatest leaders even just within the last few centuries were a force to be reckoned with, inspiring the masses and being assassinated for it? Or at least attempted assassination.
Did they all know the same thing? Were they all compelled by the same truth? I wonder. — Benj96
If voting is not sufficient then what would you advocate for? — ToothyMaw
This is one of the major issues the Domocrats are trying so hard to remedy, against such strenuous opposition from Republicans. You are aware that a faction even wants to rewrite the constitution, to take more rights away from citizens?many thousands of people disenfranchised by Republican state voting legislation and systematic voter intimidation. — Vera Mont
More on who eats whom:Duvall opposed legislation that would have added South Dakota to 19 other states calling for a gathering known as a convention of states, following a plan mapped out by a conservative group that wants to change parts of the United States’ foundational document. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/gop-spends-big-in-state-level-effort-to-change-u-s-constitution....
The campaign against Duvall was part of a more than $600,000 push in at least five states earlier this year by the group, Convention of States Action, and its affiliates in Republican primaries to elect sympathetic lawmakers who could add more states to its column. Much of the money comes from groups that do not have to disclose their donors, masking the identity of who is funding the push to change the Constitution.
A major overhaul is somewhat overdue. What I would advocate for, were I a US citizen, is major reform of the electoral system. It had some serious flaws at the outset that were not effectively addressed by amendments. And the interpretation of those amendments is within the domain of an increasingly political judiciary. And the problem of states' rights, which has been causing cracks and breaches in the union from its inception, has grown into great yawning fissures. Then, there is systemic ethnic discrimination, inequality of access, disparity of influence, the ubiquitous influence of money in all matters political and legal, the lobbies, the vested interest blocs, the corruption, the hostilities and the incredibly poor information available to the voting public.what would you advocate for? Some sort of upheaval? — ToothyMaw
Completely understandable. I don't much like being upbraided, reprimanded and labelled, either. It happens a lot; has been happening for 20 years, and it still annoys me.But it annoyed me. — ToothyMaw
I'd say our experience of a thought is transitory, as is our experience of a tree. But I think the view that the thought existed before it entered our mind and exists after it leaves our mind is defensible and may in fact be true. — Art48
