Right. But that doesn't really affect my argument. My argument is that we accept that experts/leaders/adults make decisions and perform acts that non-experts/non-leaders/children are not allowed to make, and so the idea that there is a God who does not act like he tells us to act, cannot be considered immoral or hypocritical per se. — Coben
If there is a God who has incredibly more knowledge than us, and presumably perception also, the fact that such a God does certain things that seem immoral to us cannot be ruled out as immoral or hypocritical, since we, if this is the case with God, do not know what God knows. And sure, we limit those powers - though in wartime those limits are far out there: Hiroshima, Dresden and then a lot of smaller acts where innocent people were killed. — Coben
I haven't said anything about holding God to a different standard. If it is true that God knows vastly more than us, God may be doing perfectly. — Coben
I'm not an Abrahamist but I think there are parallels in behavior we accept in humans with extra authority and power. Children are often told not to do things that parents can decide to do in certain circumstances where they deem it necessary. — Coben
Ordering the children around, using force in extreme situations with the children - forcing them to use a seatbelt as a mild example, pulling one forcefully back from the street. Police can use violence, courts can do things to people that others cannot - this would be precisely not vigillante violence, vengeance is mine says the court system (lol) and all that. Military leaders making horrible choices, bombing targets with known or heck intended civilian casualties (WW2) had a lot of that. Individual citizens deciding to bomb the mafia would do prison time. — Coben
Not that any of this need be morally simple, but most of us allow that people with extra skills, positions of power, special knowledge get to do stuff that would be 'sinful' if kids or regular citizens or the unskilled did it. — Coben
You may be confusing peace with pacifism.
Pacifism does not lead to peace. Pacifism only leads to contempt. Peace can only exist in mutual respect, and all respect is ultimately always based on the fear for reprisals.
It often takes a hell of a lot of reprisals to finally bring peace. — alcontali
Just off hand, I can't tell you why God doesn't lead by example. I can tell you though that Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are descended from Abraham, not Moses. It was to Abraham that God made the promise of descendants more numerous than the sands of the sea. Something like that. — Bitter Crank
God did tell one of his prophets, Hosea, to marry a whore.... So what happened? Hosea's wife behaved badly, like a whore -- pretty much what was expected. Why did God want Hosea to marry a whore? So Hosea could understand what it was like being the God of Israel. — Bitter Crank
Well, presumably god has cosmic responsibilities that necessitate actions he cannot otherwise morally justify. Thats what I suspect a religious person might say. An appeal to some greater good, like sacrificing his son (immoral) to save the souls of all mankind. (Greater good). — DingoJones
I have a whole poetic list of such bad examples if you want to see it. — PoeticUniverse
People consciously see what they expect, rather than what violates their expectations
We can never see past the choices we don't understand.
How is a person aware/conscious of their own awareness/consciousness?
How do we perceive our own perceptions?
By choices even including those of both sides. IOW you have to go to war with people in certain situations, even if and in fact because of the fact that you are good.
If going to war and killing people is OK, and Krishna encouraged Arjuna to go to war and not be cowardly, why all the fuss about anger. All the destructive aspects of anger are accepted, but not the emotion. — Coben
If we say that objective truth exists out there but we can't access it or not all of us can access it, then how is that an objective truth? If no one can access it then it's an idea, not a thing, and if only some can access it then it is personal, not objective. — leo
However if we say "There is only personal truth", then we are not stating an objective truth, we are stating a personal truth, and that way we can remain coherent. — leo
2:62. But if one comes back in the mind to the earthly objects, then inevitably an attachment to them arises. This attachment leads to the desire to possess these objects, and the impossibility to satisfy this desire produces anger.
2:63. Because of anger the perception gets completely distorted. The distortion of perception causes the loss of memory (the memory about one’s own achievements). And the loss of memory leads to the loss of the energy of the consciousness. By losing the energy of the consciousness, man degrades.
Sin has a victim and you are ascribing the term of sin where there is no victim. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Infra/ultra-orange?? — Terrapin Station
The energy of a photon is linearly related to its frequency always: — fdrake
You seem to be tying spiritual thinking to matter... — Gnostic Christian Bishop
1 John 2:15 Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The question is this: Are these people who, after the first generation, are no longer volunteers kidnap victims? Prisoners? — Unseen
Do you really want to quit? REALLY? :brow:
Because it's not part of the script. — Shamshir
I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? — unenlightened
The issue was perhaps highlighted my Niels Bohr's argument with Einstein about the existence of 'electrons'.
Bohr argued that there were no 'things in their own right' we call 'electrons', only consistent human 'interactions' with an aspect of the world it was convenient to explain by the word 'electron'. — fresco
What about schools of philosophy that no longer consider themselves metaphysical in the sense of going beyond the natural? — Joshs
"it sounds like you're saying there is a real realm of physical nature and a real realm of human subjective experience, or what we colloquially call 'phenomenological', and that the two are different in their contents and methods of study but equally primordial. We can study the nature of human experience naturalistically, using objective empirical methods of the social sciences, or phenomenologically, via non-empirical philosophical modes of inquiry. — Joshs
:razz: Trick question! :smile: Philosophers since Hume, and probably long before, have struggled with this one, as you surely know. :naughty: :wink: — Pattern-chaser
Science shows us that consciousness is always temporally behind the times — Unseen
and experiments show that the brain has made the decision before the consciousness thinks it has made it. — Unseen
It follows from those things that the consciousness is merely an observer of brain activities. — Unseen
I don't think we can have much more than a layperson's analysis of consciousness. I think it's probably a so-called "primitive" (primary, unanalyzable concept, known directly and in no other way). — Unseen
So, why are we conscious? In addition to humans, evolution also produced plants, and while plants can react to their environment in stimulus/response fashion, there’s no indication whatsoever that plants are aware of themselves as beings. — Unseen
Psychology is the original (or one of them) portmanteau words. — tim wood
In short, some science is done under the aegis of psychology, but by far not all that psychology "does" is science, unless idiosyncratically defined. — tim wood
So if we're going to change evolution/life, "psychology" provides no substantive clue as to how or what. Maybe the devil is in the details - do you have any details? — tim wood
So if we're going to change evolution/life, "psychology" provides no substantive clue as to how or what. Maybe the devil is in the details - do you have any details? — tim wood
But what if some lives are more valuable than others? Can our claims to life be equal then? — Dusty of Sky
Granted this does not automatically mean that the Gods themselves were also just created or made up by humans, but it does beg the question of why it is that Gods only seemingly came about or had any identity in conjunction with the creation of their respective religion. — Maureen
how exactly do you explain the presence of Gods in conjunction with their respective religions when the religions themselves were merely created by humans? — Maureen