Do you think philosophy has an unhelpful tendency toward superlativism - that passes through common sense, but then just keeps on going? — karl stone
"Are you prepared to give up beef to save the world?" No. I'm willing apply renewable energy technology so that I can eat beef guilt free. And lots of it! — karl stone
I wonder if you're aware of Enemies of the Open Society by Popper. — karl stone
I have shown that there are legitimate limitations on the rightful authority of science, insofar as, beyond sustainability, no implication can be said to be compulsory. Does that solve your problem too? — karl stone
The human is one that must self-deceive at all moments that there is something to do, somewhere to go, and something to be. — schopenhauer1
Yeah; but, I have you to cheer me up with some Skinnerian behaviorism. — Posty McPostface
Great, another idea I want to endlessly post about. — Posty McPostface
we are in a constant state of having to believe that any move or decision is one even worth making. — schopenhauer1
By this I mean that we have to deceive ourselves that what we are doing is meaningful — schopenhauer1
you do have to understand that philosophical pessimism is also a respectable field of study into human nature. I don't quite get your gripe with it though. — Posty McPostface
My idealized dream is to live alone in some forest away from people — Posty McPostface
What do you say to the misanthrope, that I am? — Posty McPostface
I have read and indulge in a fair share of philosophical pessimism and Schopenhauer. — Posty McPostface
but, the misanthropy feels like it's getting more and more debilitating or increasing in magnitude in my ability to interact with other people. — Posty McPostface
There are no convincing arguments for or against God's existence... — StreetlightX
But in a great deal of modern philosophy, there is an assumed conflict between faith and reason... — Wayfarer
Seek out a way of looking at things - a perspective - that embraces both. — Pattern-chaser
That's not really what I'm saying. What impressed me when I was given the Eastern books that I mentioned - Watts, Suzuki, etc, very popular in the 1960s and 70s - was that there was something in them that simply *wasn't* found in religion, as such. — Wayfarer
But I still believe there is a fundamental distinction between the 'believe-and-be-saved' attitude (which is especially characteristic in Protestantism) and the 'experiential realisation' approach which you find in both Eastern and also 'new age' movements. — Wayfarer
I think the fundamental issue in Western culture has been the role of dogmatic authority in religion. The way it has been formulated, you were told either ‘believe and be saved’ - or you were outcaste and damned. — Wayfarer
So since The Enlightenment there has been a strong (but often tacit) element of "Anything But God" underwriting philosophy; the 'confict thesis' comes out of that. But the causes of this attitude are often suppressed or forgotten, resulting in a kind of pathological distrust of anything that sounds religious — Wayfarer
Anyway, long story short, I enrolled in Comparative Religion at University. I formed the view that the experiential side of spirituality, the search for enlightenment, which is still preserved in those sources, was lost or suppressed early in the Christian Era. — Wayfarer
But to answer your question - the original impulse behind philosophy as such, was just this kind of quest for individual enlightenment, but through reasoned analysis rather than devotional religion — Wayfarer
not to hijack the thread — Jake
Please, this is not fair. Just like teachers, sports coaches and (school) bus drivers, the clerical profession is infiltrated by paedophiles when they can, to gain access to children. None of those professions bear the blame for this; the paedophiles are the guilty ones. — Pattern-chaser
Just as a haiku is limited to 17 syllables. It concentrates the mind. — Pattern-chaser
In any case, in any of the traditional schools of wisdom, there is an understanding that the mind has to clear itself of obstructions and hindrances so as to see the true ‘object of knowledge’. — Wayfarer
But we have lost sight of that, for complex historical reasons, the main one being the reduction of everything to language and symbolic abstractions. — Wayfarer
What you - again not just you - are caught up in, is the Enlightenment reaction against ecclesiastical religion. — Wayfarer
Isn't there supposed to be a meaningful difference between theism and atheism? — S
One problem (on every board, not just this one) with many of the longer threads (hundreds of posts) is that they are often generated and dominated by a small number of people who appear to be having an ego-contest. So everything ends up revolving around the agenda that these people set, — yazata
The gods were invented and their supporting literature was composed by mortal men who worked subtle and plain themes into compelling, inspiring, (sometimes readily) believable tales whose themes have endured for at least 5 millennia. — Bitter Crank
As someone who has been a member of this forum, as well as the old forum we inhabited, for many years, and as someone who was a moderator here for a couple of years, I feel that I've got a pretty good grasp of these things, and don't need them pointed out to me. — S
So, to boil all of that down, basically, you say we don't know, we're ignorant, and ignorance can be good. — S
But the question then is obviously what do we know and what don't we know, how much do we or don't we know, what is the extent of our ignorance, what are we ignorant of and what aren't we ignorant of, and of that ignorance, what counts as the good kind and what counts as the bad kind. — S
It's justified through reason. It's more reasonable to go with a theory with far superior explanatory power than a theory with nothing going for it which clashes with everything that reason has lead me to believe. Reason has lead me to believe that this isn't a world where anything goes, full of contradiction, that makes no sense whatsoever. — S
But you're not really challenging me, because I already have that challenge. That's there by default. I've already considered my position, and this is where I'm at. Now, you might have noticed that I have yet to abandon it. Perhaps consider why that is? Could it be that, instead of being ideologically or emotionally attached to it, which is how you're spinning it, rather, in my reasoned assessment, I have found it to be better than the alternatives? — S
I do have pretty incredible hair. — Michael
If no pretending is necessary, then how am I supposed to act as though I have no dog in the fight when I do have a dog in the fight? Wouldn't that involve a kind of pretence? — S
I've told you that I'm not interested in trying to pick apart my own position singlehandedly. I don't need you or anyone else for that. But you keep pressing for me to do what you want, irrespective of what I've said. — S
Yes, you've challenged me to challenge myself, so that you don't have to. — S
It just means that I'm now more wary of what you moderators might do to a discussion of mine. — S
It's worthwhile to note that the forum has been bombarded with new threads promoting theism or atheism recently, which is very annoying to those that see such interminable arguments as borderline philosophy at best. — andrewk
So through a reduction to absurdity, I can demonstrate that a rejection of a God which can violate the law of noncontradiction is justified. — S
I accept that I could be wrong, but if the law of noncontradiction can be violated, then anything goes, literally, as per the principle of explosion. And that's a really big problem. — S
So being intellectually honest involves being intellectually dishonest by pretending that one doesn't have a dog in the fight when one does have a dog in the fight. — S
So present a challenge. Or quit pestering me. — S