Very well, if you intend to battle it out with the sandbag, go ahead.Here I must say that you are wrong, and that I know what my best course of reading consists of. I'm not asking for advice; I'm merely expressing my view on things. You can't appropriate my view. — uncanni
Why are you so aggravated over this? It's merely a lack of symbiosis.I don't buy that for a minute as a justification, as if the sperm were any more active than the egg. Your statement comes from inside the philosophy that I'm trying to stand outside of. The sperm is futile without the egg; the egg is empty without the sperm. — uncanni
There are other and better ways to perform what you wish to do. If you don't study Luria, you merely spare yourself Luria.Why study Luria? If I don't study Luria and other kabbalists, how will I be able to add my voice, present my argument, create a non-sexist, non-gendered Jewish mysticism??? If I can't take the heat, I'd better stay out of the kitchen; but I can take the heat, so I'm in the fray. — uncanni
The reason he, and others before him tend to put it at the front - is because of its active role in conception. It's transmutation versus substance, or in simpler terms - player vs piece.Luria saw semen as the most sacred fluid in the cosmos, but I ask, what good is semen without an egg? The egg and the womb are nowhere to be seen in his mysticism. I'm moving beyond that. Perhaps all God is is Mother Nature on the cosmic level... — uncanni
It would imply that one couldn't discern intervention from no intervention as they would be functionally the same.If God is existence of everything, did God create the laws of existence? I would say the laws are part of everything's existence. Why would/how could God intervene? It all is God. — uncanni
The abolition of gender would involve the abolition of psyche.It is about the current trend, which seems to be massive and wholesale, towards the complete abolition of gender. That is a whole new level of confusion. I do not believe that society can handle that. — alcontali
And what's going to differentiate that sound ground from a belief?One needs to establish a sound ground first — PoeticUniverse
Now you're going to spark another ethics thread, about cross-fertilization and cannibalism.Yes, which according to the guidelines shouldn't be done because they tend to cross-fertilize and cannibalize each other. — Baden
Neither am I; though it doesn't matter.So what are we doing? Theology or anthropology? I'm not interested in theology because I'm not a Christian, Jew, or Muslim. — frank
And I told you, over the last few millenia it's been interpreted and misinterpreted to the extent of debilitation.If we're studying human society, we look to how the text has been interpreted for the last few millennia, and so we know the Devil is most certainly mentioned in Genesis (newsflash: it's the snake) and the word Devil is Persian in origin. It has the same origin as deva, and it referred to the gods of the nomadic people who eventually became the Indians. — frank
It's a practical explanation.Again, you're doing theology, not anthropology. Plus your theology gives rise to the famous puzzle that God apparently set humanity up to fail and then punishes them for it. God the psychopath. — frank
The message of Genesis isn't actually that humans screwed up listening to the Devil - and neither is the Devil implied within the Genesis story. The Devil is a title similar to Satan - in that it means misleader - and it is a title that is implied for many angels, both fallen and not fallen.The Devil (the word has a Persian origin) is an image of primal defiance; the existence of a will counter to God's. The message of Genesis is that humans screwed up by listening to the voice of the Devil and should leave behind a free will in favor of a will united with God's. But a person who is all good in every word, thought, and deed would seem to have no will of her own. So in this scenario the idea of a substantial self is directly tied to wrong-doing. The self is a problem, but not the source of good or evil. The sources are out in the cosmos. — frank
It's also the stance Paracelsus held.This conception of will is similar in some ways to the Stoic version which identifies all evil as a state of disease resulting from straying from the ways of Nature. For the Stoic, evil is always self-correcting because the tree that fails to grow toward the light dies. There's no need to punish it. — frank
Their origin is indeed based on discernment, though their prescription is based on judgement.In both of these outlooks, laws are divine in origin, which means they come from human discernment, not human judgment. We learn to judge by recognizing the truth of the laws. — frank
I would equate the Egyptian version with the Japanese Right way of Being, often conflated with Chinese Taoism.Do you think the Egyptian version is like that? Or different? — frank
Funnily enough I wasn't asking about Aristotle, I was asking you - and without fail, you produce a tangent and no answer.Funnily enough, for Aristotle, who had neither the word nor concept of 'machine', slaves were what he called 'animate instruments' (ktema ti empsychon) or 'instruments for instruments' (organon pro organon) (in the Politics). This was precisely in contrast to the free man, or master, who was distinguished by his use of slaves. One of the things this kind of approach brings out what counts as free or not free is not a metaphysical distinction, but a mobile one: that freedom is not coextensive with man as such, but with some men and not others. — StreetlightX
Neither is it in contrast, nor is that a distinguishing feature - but a proprietary status.This was precisely in contrast to the free man, or master, who was distinguished by his use of slaves.
The certain distinction between machine and man - is that man is fully autonomous.Aristotle's analysis of slaves notwithstanding, the takeaway here is that there is no reason to think that man can't be equated with machines, if certain conditions of freedom are not upheld. — StreetlightX
No it wouldn't mean any of that gibberish, you're squeezing in here everytime, to spite something you supposedly don't believe in.But thinking in this way would would mean, once again, having to give up the incredibly stupid idea of free will as some kind of a priori metaphysical guarantee of human freedom, served on a plate to man by God. — StreetlightX
It would require effort to ride a bike, simply reading a tutorial on riding a bike won't do.It would require, again, looking at the world, observing conditions, making at effort at understanding, and acting provisionally and with risk. This no doubt offends the sensibilities of those who think man is in any way special, which can only be a good thing. — StreetlightX
And you being the unthinking knee-jerk decided to respond. Alright.In any case, your questions at this point are just poo-lobbing from the monkey pen. They're unthinking knee-jerks beneath response. If you have something substantial and interesting to say, say it. No one gives a fuck about Egyptian ceremonies. — StreetlightX
Could've fooled me."A remarkable example of classical Egyptian philosophy is found in a 3,200-year-old text named “The Immortality of Writers.” This skeptical, rationalistic, and revolutionary manuscript was discovered during excavations in the 1920s, in the ancient scribal village of Deir El-Medina, across the Nile from Luxor, some 400 miles up the river from Cairo. Fittingly, this intellectual village was originally known as Set Maat: “Place of Truth.”"
Rest of the article details how the Egyptians were likely the progenitors of Greek philosophy. 'Tis good stuff. — StreetlightX
It's not an impossible answer, it's an omission on your part.Have you never been hurt and have you never hurt anyone?
"No" is an impossible answer. — TheMadFool
If I may add, maybe those people are starving as punishment for some crime.If I see starving people around me I would think about helping them before having children, because I wouldn't want my children to grow up in a society that lets people starve. — leo
They are not so certain - they are a paranoid assumption based in a hopeless state of mind.However, the two consequences of birth I described, hurt someone or get hurt by someone, are so certain that we may base a definitive decision on them and the decision should be not to have children. — TheMadFool
What about the option where neither happens?In very simple terms either your child will hurt or get hurt. — TheMadFool
Dying isn’t inherently bad? So murder is ok? — khaled
The whole post is oozing hypocrisy.Yes because it’s my vitality vs theirs — khaled
First off, the choice is only 100% of suffering if you're an utter wimp who can't defend himself and is scared of dying; to add to which - your assumption that it is inherently bad.No and you’re being willfully blind. In the scenario in question the choice is between 100% chance of severe suffering (and death) or a slight chance of severe suffering for someone else. In this case it is permissible to procreate.
His rights don’t outweigh the child’s but they do have some weight — khaled
It's not about if she gets raped, maimed, burned alive, lynched or whatever.Let’s expand on this logic a bit. “If getting raped isn’t worth going through, she can just stop living and spare herself further injury, after all she MIGHT enjoy the experience no? I’ll rape her and give her a chance to make the verdict herself. After all, not raping her would he forcing her to not get raped when she could enjoy it” — khaled
What about if that someone does want to exist?Thus when someone exists without asking to exist, they have been imposed upon to exist. When no one exists, no one has been imposed upon not to exist. — khaled
So your rights outweigh the rights of the child you were so vehemently defending moments ago.For instance, if someone held a gun to my head and said "procreate or I kill you" I think it would be within my rights to procreate. — Bartricks
The problem is that you do have to be above a certain IQ level to see this. — Bartricks