I don't dispute that he made his choice, but it was the wrong choice. It was a choice based on an immoral economic system. To now treat him as a symbol, begs the question. — Cavacava
He was anti-slavery ironically. But a monument to him is just blatantly fucked up. — Mongrel
It's not up to me, the town planned to remove the statue....these thugs came in and created holy hell. I don't see any statues of Hitler up in Germany. — Cavacava
Do you think world issues might be solved faster because humans would spend less time in "monotonous labor" or "work"? Thereby allowing a significant portion of the population to engage in finding solutions to current dilemmas in all domains from science to spiritual to politics to psychological and social issues etc. — intrapersona
My point is Christianity is a failure with respect to overcoming human weakness of sin/death/worldly suffering. Just as the vacuum cleaner isn't effective at cleaning dishes, Christianity isn't an effective means of overcoming human weakness. It fails to clean sin and weakness from the unbeliever. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Exactly. That's my point precisely. Christianity cannot remove human weakness from the unbeliever. It is a failure at overcoming human weakness for large numbers of people.
I wasn't suggesting Christianity claimed or needed to do otherwise, only pointing out it doesn't meet the rehtoric of "grand solution to everyone worldy death and suffering." It cannot save the unbeliever. It advocates that human weakness. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Soon we're going to get to an infinite regress of an idea of an idea, etc. This doesn't really work because obviously the number 2 isn't the same as the idea of the number 2. A circle, isn't the same as the idea of a circle. A circle is a concept, in other words, a relationship between a set of points. — Agustino
No, not at all, I presuppose this by just looking at the world. I don't encounter just physical objects in the world. Emotions for example are neither physical, nor are they ideas, and yet one feels them and encounters them. By the way, please be aware that I'm using "being" in the philosophical sense. — Agustino
Why? Human experience of the transcendent is so common - our history is littered with examples of theophanies. — Agustino
It's that when enough members of the society do not understand what truth is and how it works, neither the problems nor the solutions will be realized... — creativesoul
Under this measure, Christianity is an abject failure. It cannot overcome human weakness for millions of unbelievers. Indeed, Christianity is constituted by the presence of human weakness, for it specifies the hierarchy of Christian (strong) and non-Christian (weak). — TheWillowOfDarkness
Number 2 isn't just an idea. An idea is always an idea OF something (an idea of a circle, an idea of a man, an idea of God, etc.). Number 2 is a being, an entity, which is of a different kind than material entities in this world are. — Agustino
What do you mean that "something isn't true"? Again, you're asking these questions, but you don't take into consideration how truth applies to different types of beings - you presuppose it applies in the same manner. — Agustino
Our human experience. — Agustino
Only if we limit ourselves to the "scientific" world. — Agustino
Irrelevant. Those don't claim to be transcendent as Mithras, the gods, and other spiritual realities claim to be. Instead they are empirical matters, which are indeed a matter of verification. — Agustino
Sure, the number 2 also exists, and yet you cannot touch it or see it. (Nor can you "verify" it for that matter). Not all beings exist in the same manner. — Agustino
Again, where does this idea come from? If you tell me they had an idea of Mithras - where the hell did they get it from? — Agustino
No, I don't think I've answered it at all. Clearly there was an underlying experience of trying to relate with a transcendent being/force which was capable of influencing the outcome of their affairs, otherwise they wouldn't think of doing it in the first place, nor would they invest resources to do it - they were quite pragmatic. — Agustino
The reality of the transcendent doesn't only include God, it would obviously include other spiritual forces - angels, demons, etc. — Agustino
And how does the idea of Mithras arise? :s And by the way, the ancients relate to gods in a different way than you imagine. They prayed and offered sacrifices, etc. in the hope the deity would aid them in battle, but they were also aware of the possibility that they couldn't control the transcendent, and it was much the other way, the transcendent controlled them - so the possibility that the gods would lead them to defeat was also real, and accepted as such. — Agustino
They couldn't believe in what he represented without experiencing the world as such. It's that underlying experience that made them believe. — Agustino
What does being real mean? — Agustino
Why the dots? It's true, how else do you think they came to believe in Mithras?! — Agustino
Nope, I didn't say that. — Agustino
Unfortunately, I'm in the same boat, as I have quit and tried tapering off my antidepressant — Posty McPostface
Mithras does represent an experience of the transcendent that was revealed to the Romans. — Agustino
Depends what you understand by having a career. But the point I'm making is that to - say - work for Facebook - the community there will force one to give up on some of his/her beliefs, especially if they want to be appreciated, promoted, etc. — Agustino
How can there be belief if there is no experience? — Agustino
I really don't understand what you mean here. The difference is quite easy to see for me at least, why do you find it difficult? — Agustino
Yes, you can have a career, so long as you give up belief in God. And don't take this the wrong way - belief means action, you cannot believe only in name, for that is not real belief. — Agustino
You can consider the idea of God, but for that idea to arise in society and gain prevalence in the first place (so that you get to discuss it today), the experience of God needs to be presupposed. — Agustino
If we look at the moral codes and cultures of different ancient societies we will see something that is starkly different from our modern, consumer based mass society. — Agustino
Yes, you can have a career, so long as you give up belief in God. — Agustino
Is poor hospitality common in the US? — Agustino
Can you illustrate that?
What is a concrete example of a conservative and liberal then being closer than a liberal then and a liberal today? New Nationalism vs. New Freedom? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
The idea of God emerges from the experience of God. The fact that the idea of God has withered away is a sign that something has blocked the experience of God, which until now was present - or more present than today. — Agustino
It's not nigh-impossible. All one has to do is behold their cultures and compare them to our own materialistic one. — Agustino
Certain things are required of you to "have a career", "be accepted in society" (have a family), have friends, etc. The world is so structured to push Godly men to the periphery. That isn't so in all ages, but it is so in ours. — Agustino
Good, how much will you charge to accept me as a patient? — Agustino
Oh, have you been reading Pseudo-Dionysus? That's good to hear! — Agustino
Sure, but even if you personally were a Christian, you lived in a non-Christian world. — Agustino
Your expectations are governed by the modern zeitgeist in which you find yourself. An age governed by spiritual darkness isn't going to be an age where God appears very clearly at all, even to most "believers". Especially while they make their abode on college campuses — Agustino
It's deeper than that, it's that God doesn't rule people's lives anymore, God is no longer a discernible presence as He once was. — Agustino
Their problem was that they weren't even aware that God is dead - that God is not communicating with them. — Agustino
Today if we shall go in the multitudes and mention God, we shall not be heard. They will ignore us. They will look at us as if we're crazy, as if we don't even know what we're talking about. They will not understand the meaning of the word "God". It will be as meaningless as sadakdhald. — Agustino
When I say you have forgotten God, I don't mean just you - I mean our entire age. You yourself are a member of this age, and therefore inherit its problems. — Agustino
You cannot accept the rules of today's world - be a member of it - and believe in God at the same time. — Agustino
For one cannot serve both God and Mammon, one cannot have the mark of the beast on their forehead and yet serve the Lord. The way society is built, it's almost predicated on a rejection of God. To live in modern society, even amongst most believers, means to reject the mystery of God (most of the time). That is why people like Max Picard chose to retreat like hermits on a mountain. Where else could they live in communion with God?! — Agustino
I feel that the time is not right yet. All we can do is wait. But one day the clock will strike 12 and the world will awaken anew. We alone cannot save the world. A human being cannot be the light of an age, regardless of how great they personally are. The time needs to be right. — Agustino
Yes, that is because you do not understand God - God for you could be anything. — Agustino
Yes of course, because you are born after the loss of faith. You are born in a faithless world. — Agustino
So why would you expect to hear God? — Agustino
From your perspective, it looks like there never was a God. That is precisely why it is a forgetfulness. — Agustino
Sure, but there is always the underlying experience of hearing. — Agustino
But really, you're saying nothing new. What you're saying is that God is dead - you cannot hear His voice anymore. Old news. We already know that we live in a culture and world which has forgotten God, and where those who hear God are the madmen. — Agustino
Yes He does. God has the greatest track record anyone could ever ask for. One is willing to suffer for God, because God suffered for us in Jesus Christ! — Agustino
I think it is modern society's forgetfulness of God - or Flight from God as Max Picard would say - that stops us from hearing the voice of our Shepherd. — Agustino
I showed very well the racist things they said and why they were so. — Thanatos Sand
If you didn't see them, you either read the thread poorly — Thanatos Sand
or share their racist views and are racist, yourself. — Thanatos Sand
Either way, I'm not impressed. — Thanatos Sand
Thorongil and Augustino said racist things and stood by them. So, I correctly called them "racists." Since you have a problem with that, I'm glad you don't want to be like me; I certainly don't want to be like you. — Thanatos Sand
Tell me this. If you are in the army, and your general asks you to charge into the open fire of the enemy lines, what will you do? Will you cower in your trench, refusing to listen to your general, preferring to live and die like a coward?! Or will you man up, and overcome your fear? For what can be more crippling and life-denying than fear?
How much more should you be ready to go even to Hell when God orders you, his soldier, to do so? — Agustino
he was, in fact, essentially a [/b][ poet[[/b] not a deep thinker. — John Gould