Sorry, but the misunderstanding is entirely yours. You're wrong again as on all your other points. — Apollodorus
You obviously don't understand the Bible and you can find no evidence to support your unfounded and erroneous claims. — Apollodorus
And no, Jesus was not teaching the "Jewish Law", he was teaching the LAW OF GOD. — Apollodorus
That was the whole point of his mission on earth, to reestablish the Law of God which the Jews or at least some of them had departed from ... — Apollodorus
And, of course, the verses from the Hebrew Bible you're referring to, just don't exist. That's why you can't quote them. — Apollodorus
They call it the soul. Why is that answer insufficient? — frank
Nowhere does Jesus teach that he was God's only son. This was a belief that developed later.
— Fooloso4
Really? How late is this then? — Apollodorus
They called him "Rabbi" AND "Son of God". — Apollodorus
The Koran calls him a Prophet. — Apollodorus
I'm sure even you can see that "Son of God" and "Prophet" is not the same as "rabbi" in the ordinary sense. — Apollodorus
so the corroborated testimonial evidence while my heart is stopped and I'm no longer breathing — Sam26
This just doesn't follow, i.e., because I can't explain how it is that people are able to have an OBE — Sam26
If you have an open-mind and are not completely shut off from reason, then you have to say, at the very least that there is something to these NDEs. — Sam26
... not because he was a professional rabbi. — Apollodorus
Christianity believes in Jesus as the Son of God. — Apollodorus
Therefore the idea that he was "a Jewish rabbi" is unsupported by the sources. — Apollodorus
As for "Jewish" ... — Apollodorus
... the authentic teachings of the Christian Faith. — Apollodorus
Where are the sources that say "Jewish rabbi"??? You're making it up as usual, aren't you? — Apollodorus
Peter said to Jesus, “Rabbi, it is good for us to be here.
Turning around, Jesus saw them following and asked, “What do you want?”
They said, “Rabbi” (which means “Teacher”), “where are you staying?”
Where does it say he was a "Jewish rabbi"??? First time I hear of that. — Apollodorus
You're making that up, aren't you? — Apollodorus
This suggests that an essential aspect of Christian love is not as some might assume having an attitude of affection, etc. toward our neighbor or even concern for his material wellbeing,
not exclusive. — Apollodorus
What my whole statement means ... — Apollodorus
Well, Christianity is a different religion, isn't it? — Apollodorus
(Jews and Muslims are also welcome to offer their own views if they have any.) — Apollodorus
It isn't my fault that you don't like Christians. — Apollodorus
And what "Jewish rabbi" are you talking about anyway? — Apollodorus
However, well-being includes spiritual well-being and that is achieved by following the teachings of the Gospels. — Apollodorus
This suggests that an essential aspect of Christian love is not as some might assume having an attitude of affection, etc. toward our neighbor or even concern for his material wellbeing, but primarily concern for his or her spiritual salvation. — Apollodorus
But who is the Christian's neighbor? — baker
So, your conclusion is that because it's an embodied person who does the reporting, it follows that disembodied existence is not true or couldn't happen? — Sam26
how could an embodied person report on something I believe is not possible. — Sam26
Just because someone can't answer all the questions of how it's possible, — Sam26
Yes, it's me that gets hungry and feels pain, etc, and it would be me as a disembodied being who would feel some of the same things. — Sam26
Hess associates Christian love with “sharing knowledge of God with the whole world”. This suggests that an essential aspect of Christian love is not as some might assume having an attitude of affection, etc. toward our neighbor or even concern for his material wellbeing, but primarily concern for his or her spiritual salvation. — Apollodorus
an OBE — Sam26
The only way it wouldn't make conceptual sense is if it's not logically possible to be disembodied. — Sam26
So the language has a word with no meaning and no application. — god must be atheist
... you categorically deny that anyone possesses this quality. — god must be atheist
ergo, you can't know whether you are in possession of wisdom, or else if you are wise, or not. — god must be atheist
Saying you don't know what "wise" is, but you'd know if/when you were wise, is not logical. Inasmuch as it could be true, or not be true, but is not necessarily true. — god must be atheist
since you deny any knowledge by anyone to know what being wise is, you can or anyone else could, be wise, and nobody would recognize he or she is, because there is no knowledge what it is, therefore there is no way of recognizing it when encountering it as someone's quality in real life. — god must be atheist
but i don't think you think that. — god must be atheist
you are not counter-arguing — god must be atheist
Thank you for being lectured by you in a paraphrased form by telling me what I had just expressed. — god must be atheist
But once in a while it would be nice to hear from you, "Yes, you're right." — god must be atheist
Because the word sin appeared in the story of Cain and Abel, one -- at least I think so -- can't deny that the concepts had been already in place before such moment as the concept was named a unique name. — god must be atheist
I appreciate that the Hebrew word for sin was not used, maybe, but the concept was coined right there and then. Is that true, or not true? — god must be atheist
Then the Lord said to Cain, “Why are you angry? Why is your face downcast? If you do what is right, will you not be accepted? But if you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must rule over it.”
Perhaps colonising another planet would suit you. — bert1
"You" as the general "you"? — god must be atheist
I think wisdom is a set of accumulated insights ... — god must be atheist
So what I didn't make clear is that this is all me. — frank
So from my point of view, you're continually trying to teach me my own argument and nitpicking at the edges. — frank
You had asserted that the infinite backward chain makes knowledge impossible.
Now you're just noting that Plato says the soul does learn. — frank
This would mean an eternal regress to past lives, there could be no life that was not a recollection from a previous life, so no life in which knowledge of the Forms first gained. — Fooloso4
The problem is that if we start with the premise that knowledge is recollection then there would never be a time when knowledge was learned. But it cannot be recollected if it had not at some time first been learned. — Fooloso4
My gripe was that you're tossing "impossible" around a little too freely. — frank
Anamnesis is not part of the myth of reincarnation passed down by priests. — frank
It's Plato's solution to a problem: that teaching is frequently a matter of bringing a person's awareness to what they already know. — frank
Ah yeah, the age-old difference between living philosophically and making a living from philosophy (or philosophers and sophists). — 180 Proof
There are nowadays professors of philosophy, but not philosophers.
Well, not all activities on here are called 'philosophy' are they ? — Amity
Why? Why not an infinite chain of recollectors? — frank
Since the soul has been born into this world many times, and has thus been seeing
the things of this world and the world below, there is nothing it has not learned. No wonder then that it can recollect about aretê and other things, since it knew about these things before; for all nature being akin, and the soul having learned all things; nothing hinders someone, recalling (or, as people call it, learning) one thing only, from discovering all the rest himself, if only he has some courage and does not completely weary of seeking; for the whole of seeking and learning is recollection.
Why do you keep calling anamnesis a myth? — frank
For I have heard from men and women wise in divine
matters…
MENO: Saying what?
SOCRATES: True things, it seems to me, and kalon.
MENO: What was it and who were the speakers?
SOCRATES: Some of the speakers were priests and priestesses, who had studied
how they might give an account of the holy things in their care: Pindar speaks of it also, and many other of the poets are in touch with divine things. What they say is this (consider whether it seems to you that they speak the truth): They declare that the soul of man is immortal, and at one time it has an end, which they call dying, and at another time is born again, but it is never completely destroyed.
I don't think the infinite regress would make knowledge impossible. — frank
It's that Plato's argument implodes, not that knowledge is impossuble. — frank
Once again, you're telling me what I told you. — frank
If your innate knowledge comes from a previous life, then either the chain of people is infinite, or there was an 'Adam' who learned without previous lives. — frank
"Eternal" sometimes means atemporal. Are you familiar with that idea? — frank
Anamnesis is that connection to the eternal. — frank
If your innate knowledge comes from a previous life, then either the chain of people is infinite, or there was an 'Adam' who learned without previous lives. — frank
Nevertheless, the prevailing view of the Phaedo is that Socrates accepts, and argues in favour of, the immortality of the soul, even if he admits he doesn't necessarily understand the soul's destiny. — Wayfarer
Nevertheless, the prevailing view of the Phaedo is that Socrates accepts, and argues in favour of, the immortality of the soul, even if he admits he doesn't necessarily understand the soul's destiny. — Wayfarer
That which is hateful to you, do not do to anyone. This is the whole of Torah and the rest is commentary. Go study it. — Hillel the Elder, 1st c. BCE
Confucius — 180 Proof
Here's the question again: what is it that is reincarnated? — Banno
Yet there have been zero refutations of actual individualist argument. — NOS4A2
I was merely explaining theory of state formation — NOS4A2
... formed by conquest and confiscation — NOS4A2
... tacitly threatening me if I was to act on it. — NOS4A2
you submit what I wrote to contextomy — NOS4A2
... while avoiding any and all arguments I present. — NOS4A2
I never suggested disobedience to the state. — NOS4A2
Your obedience is apparent. But appeals to law and authority mean nothing when that authority is questionable, abused and leads to injustice. — NOS4A2
I never suggested all conquest and confiscation in history was the result of the state. — NOS4A2
So I no longer care about your analysis of what I wrote. — NOS4A2
Your obedience is apparent. But appeals to law and authority mean nothing when that authority is questionable, abused and leads to injustice. — NOS4A2
I don’t want my governments to be efficient and effective—welding people in their apartments is efficient and effective. I just want them to leave me alone. — NOS4A2
Should I meddle in your life because what you do affects others? — NOS4A2
That was my poor writing. I was trying to say your conclusion about my conclusion was absent any example or reason, implying you were guilty of that which you accused me of. — NOS4A2
More examples ... — NOS4A2
Any counter examples? — NOS4A2
