The central thesis is that religion in its "corporate", either/or exclusivist form didn't "fully" manifest in the Western mind until after the Enlightenment. This is especially true for Oriental religions. These have been attempted to be classified by Westerns as "Hinduism" or "Confucianism", etc, when in reality this simplifies things and leaves out the reality of the situation; that nowhere in India was there a unified religious sect that can be seen as "Hinduism" - there are Hindus, but there is no Hinduism. — darthbarracuda
Can you give an example of a belief system that introduces the soul as something without an unquestionable value given to every person? — Jacykow
There are many of the 'religious left', including many Catholic social democrats and intellectuals. Jacques Maritain, neo-Thomist philosopher, and Raimundo Panikkar, distinguished scholar of comparative religon, are both of the religious left. Dorothy Day - Catholic unionist and agitator for women's rights. Many contributors to the Commonweal Magazine. The Dalai Lama has said (somewhat puzzlingly) that he's communist. There are doubtless thousands of other examples. — Wayfarer
Christianity was like that from the start — Πετροκότσυφας
The concept of the soul is one of the most fundamental parts of most religious beliefs and it states that every human being has unquestionable value that cannot be measured. Therefore you cannot compare people using it and, as it is the only meaningful value, makes every person equal. — Jacykow
The words "every" and "equal" sound pretty left leaning to me and the whole concept unites humanity in one group. — Jacykow
Based on what I have read in the field of "religious studies", the term "religion" by no means has a universal definition. — darthbarracuda
Think about what you're saying here: you're asking me if there are any non-selfish benefits to devoting time and energy to the raising and nurturing of another life. — gurugeorge
Interesting, how so? — MetaphysicsNow
Naively, the way to refute the PSR would be to establish that there are somethings that occur for no reason at all — MetaphysicsNow
Is the point that we would then need to answer the question "Why should the mere fact that something occurs for no reason at all refute the PSR" by relying on the PSR? — MetaphysicsNow
How do we know it's true if no proof is required? If it is an axiom, then seemingly the issue resolves itself. However, even assuming that introduces metaphysical baggage, I think. — Posty McPostface
Another way of saying that might be that it pertains to action not being. IOW the act of making babies is neither good nor bad intrinsically, it's objectively good or bad (from whatever point of view - e.g. human beings or dromedary jumping-slugs) depending on circumstances. — gurugeorge
the "Nature" one might wish to protect by not having us filthy humans polluting the planet is also intrinsically neither good or bad, so "it's evil to make babies because muh Nature" isn't an argument. — gurugeorge
And in relation to any given desideratum, procreation has objective costs and objective benefits that can be weighed up. — gurugeorge
I have never heard of relative nothing apart from in this discussion. — darthbarracuda
the lack of belief that gods exist — Jerry
But the more I think about atheism and the atheists I've seen, the less I understand this definition. — Jerry
I think atheism as "the belief that no god exists" is more accurate — Jerry
If by "pulling the rug out from under" you mean something like "negate", the negation of the claim "Only non-scientific claims are unfalsifiable" would be "there exists at least one scientific claim that is unfalsifiable". — jkg20
I'm not a logical positivist by any means, but it seems a little unfair to condemn a whole philosophical movement on the basis of a strawman. — jkg20
Who knows? But, for whatever reason, the unfalsifiable proposition known as Materialism is very popular here. — Michael Ossipoff
Most prominently in his magum opus Being and Time. — darthbarracuda
yet it is still "something" — darthbarracuda
Yet here you speak of it. Clearly we can speak of something about absolute nothing, if we are to say it cannot be spoken of. For this to be true would require that there be something about absolute nothing that makes it impossible to think or speak about. If we cannot speak about nothing, then we cannot speak about how we cannot speak about nothing, because the fact that we cannot speak about nothing is, itself, about nothing, so we have fallen into a performative contradiction, — darthbarracuda
As it stands, Heidegger was acutely aware of the charge that Being, the is, is merely a linguistic copula. He obviously denied and in my opinion thoroughly refuted that view. — darthbarracuda
What do you mean by nothing? — darthbarracuda
I want to know what you mean when you say something is nothing — darthbarracuda
The point I'm trying to make is that "nothing" is still "something", just not the something we are used to in the everyday world of existing things. — darthbarracuda
How do you know what a square circle is, then? — darthbarracuda
Fine, let me ask you this: do you recognize the ontological distinction between a being and its Being? — darthbarracuda
but I wanna know what nothing is — darthbarracuda
Then what exactly is it? You said it yourself: "It is not a possibility." Then what is it? — darthbarracuda
Possibility. — darthbarracuda
That which does not exist and never has is possibility. — darthbarracuda
The hard problem is utterly insoluble because it is based on the presupposition that matter is mechanical. The hard problem can only be dis-solved by considering matter to be fundamentally semiotic. — Janus
That semiotic view would also reconfigure our understanding of matter. — apokrisis
I don't see anything wrong with talking about non-existence. — darthbarracuda
The fact is that some things exist and some things do not, but we can still talk about either. — darthbarracuda
The il y a refutes idealism. — darthbarracuda
i.e. the return-back-to-nothing. We all were nothing before, and we will all return to being nothing shortly - existence is but a sojourn from non-existence. — darthbarracuda
And you totally misunderstand the goal if you think that it's to eradicate crime entirely. — Sapientia
what can we do to determine the fact of the matter? — Michael
Is there some empirical or rational method available to us to show that something either is or isn't immoral? — Michael
So it doesn't bother you that you can't support your claim that X is wrong, or that moral realism is correct? — Michael
it isn't even clear how one would go about verifying or falsifying a moral claim — Michael
what can we do to resolve the disagreement? — Michael
Is any natural event or creature intrinsically right or wrong? — gurugeorge
Procreating is just something people do, something they're semi-compelled to do — gurugeorge
In that sense we ourselves are a possible measure of "good" and "bad" — gurugeorge