mathematics is an exercise of the human intuition, not a game played with meaningless symbols. — Intuitionism in the ontology of mathematics
Belated response here. I think I'm following this - Fitrah is an axiom.According to Islamic theology, human beings are born with an innate inclination of tawhid (Oneness). — Fitrah in the ontology of Islam — alcontali
I am trying to express myself - as much as possible - within your framework. Here is what you said a while back:Once you say "transcendental", you are already outside the system itself. What does "transcendental" even mean within a formal system? — alcontali
Religion also proclaims the transcendental origin of this system of rules, necessarily from outside its formal system of rules. — alcontali
Well no, we're not coming up with new rules, we're only coming up with commonalities. As you say:Now if the leaders of all the religions of the world could get together and come up with a set of rules of morality that they could agree upon? — EricH
That sounds too much like an attempt to do design by committee. — alcontali
Here's a task that would be well suited to a person of your capabilities. Figure our how to map moral rules into the Coq Proof Assistant - start an open source project and allow people of all faiths to enter their moral rules into the database and look for intersections. So in the simplest situation, religion X may have moral rules {a, b, c, d} while religion Y has moral rules {d, e, f} - so there is a common moral rule "d".Religions all have the same function and therefore are more similar than different. It's like with competing brands of cars. No matter who builds the car, it still has to do approximately the same things as any other car. So, the similarities will always be more striking than the differences. — alcontali
I was going to continue along the main line of this discussion, bu your take on this is fascinating - I've never heard this line of reasoning before. I know there's no chance of dissuading you, but let me point out a few problems with this position. I hope you will at least consider them before rejecting them.I am not interested in violating the Church's intellectual property by abusing it for unlicensed purposes. — alcontali
Now back to the main line of this thread. I am on your side with this one but for very different reasons. I will not use any religious text as the foundation for a system of morality, since - as you eloquently put itI will be forgiven if I refuse to use the Bible as the foundation for a formal system of morality. — alcontali
Now we only know each other through our writings, so I hope this does not come across as critical - I'm going to ask you to do something that may be hard for you. I would like you to put yourself in the position of a person who has no religion - but is sincerely trying to evaluate them as objectively as possible. . .Religion also proclaims the transcendental origin of this system of rules, necessarily from outside its formal system of rules. — alcontali
By choosing a religion, you are choosing a system of rules that specifies what behaviour is right and wrong. — alcontali
This is one of the reasons I responded to you in the first place. Religions are far more that simply a system of rules. I wish I were a more eloquent person - I'm sure there are better ways of expressing this next thought:
There are "features" unique to each religion which drives their particular set of rules - and there are major areas on the metaphorical Venn Diagram of the set of all features of all religions where there is no overlap between 2 or more religions.
This lack of overlap is the source of a significant portion of conflict in our world today.
BTW - I admire your knowledge of math theory, I wish I could understand it at your level. Please treat this as a metaphor. :smile: — EricH
We seem to be looping around in this particular thread of the discussion. Even tho I have zero belief in an afterlife, it pleases me to hear religious people say this. It tells me that I am dealing with a reasonable person - albeit one who has some beliefs that I find very strange :smile: But I'll try one more time. IF the statement I quoted above is correct then I should have a very pleasant afterlife.you are not going to burn in hell merely for guessing it wrong. — alcontali
This is one of the reasons I responded to you in the first place. Religions are far more that simply a system of rules. Our legal system - while not perfect - provides an excellent road map on how to live a good decent life. If I obey the laws of the USA & my state & municipality, I'm pretty much there.By choosing a religion, you are choosing a system of rules that specifies what behaviour is right and wrong. — alcontali
It is silly to believe that religious affiliation on earth will be the only thing that will matter on That Day. Absolutely nobody seems to believe that. — alcontali
But if any one follows any religion other than Islam after Mohammed (pbuh) became the prophet then no chance to go to heaven as stated clearly in Quran: وَمَن يَبْتَغِ غَيْرَ الإِسْلامِ دِينًا فَلَن يُقْبَلَ مِنْهُ وَهُوَ فِي الآخِرَةِ مِنَ الْخَاسِرِينَ And whoever desires other than Islam as religion - never will it be accepted from him, and he, in the Hereafter, will be among the losers. [Quran 3:85] — islam.stackexchange.com
Yes, certainly. It is your choice. — alcontali
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST...that the existence of gods is impossible;
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST...that gods are needed to explain existence;
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction... — Frank Apisa
But I have to ask, how many truths has he spoken? — NOS4A2
The term “lies” implies an intention to deceive. — NOS4A2
Again I don’t look to politicians for truth. In fact I think it would be idiotic and naive to do so. What I want is leadership and results. — NOS4A2
It's a fascinating part of history. Here's a good starting point.The unified Jewish kingdom only existed in the mythical period of Saul, David and Solomon. — David Mo
I'll loop around one more time here. You seem be implicitly acknowledging in this sentence that there are (or should be) some rules to govern who should own the land.If these perverse foundations of law became widespread — David Mo
Firstly - and this is a minor point - these are not legends. There is a clear historical record that there was an autonomous Jewish nation prior to being taken over by Rome.What seems obvious is that claiming rights from two thousand years agobased on legendswould turn the international map into a chaos of claims and struggles. That is the main idea. — David Mo
Absolutely - that's why I used the word superficiallySuperficially.
You cannot make casuistry with this problem. You have to analyze different contexts. — David Mo
The problem I have with your comparison is that it seems to have things backwards. In your comparison you are equating the Sioux with the Israelis, i.e. the Sioux are not allowed to reclaim their historic homeland. My point was that we should be equating the Sioux with the Palestinians - they are the aggrieved party. Apologies if I was not clear on that.I was just pointing out a blatant similarity. — David Mo
Absolutely. But if there are no guidelines/rules/laws at all, then there will be no way to resolve these issues. There has to be some agreed upon structure that all parties can agree upon for discussions to take place. Otherwise it's simply might makes right - the winner makes up the rules to justify their actions.You cannot make casuistry with this problem. You have to analyze different contexts. — David Mo
Can the descendants of ABC fight and kill the descendants of DEF?
If yes, then for how long? — EricH
Even if the Jews lived in Palestine 2000 years ago, their right to occupy Palestine does not exist. No more than the rights of the Great Sioux Nation to occupy Dakota — David Mo
Concerning existence as a predicate, if existence were a predicate, something that does not exist would have the predicate of non-existence, i.e. the negation of the existence predicate, but that is not possible because something that does not exist cannot have any predicates at all. — alcontali
To millions (billions?) of people around the world, it is an empirical fact that God is real.It depends on the context. In religious law, it is an axiomatic belief. — alcontali
This statement (and many others like it) are are exactly the sort of explanations used by people of science to demonstrate to believers that their belief - that God's existence is an empirical fact - is incorrect. These attempts are rarely successful.In science, it may apparently look like an empirical question but the falsificationist boundaries of science do not allow for a question that cannot be tested experimentally. — alcontali