I've heard it many times. It's not polite to say it, though.I am Jewish btw. I have never heard this idea -- that Jews are superior to gentiles -- uttered by anyone. — BitconnectCarlos
Presumably other nations are testing them, testing their claim.If Jews are so superior why are they constantly getting humbled by other nations in the bible?
But what is your point? — unenlightened
When a scientist tells me that "it's all just chemicals/atoms" and apparently expects me to believe it, what are my options?Is it? Or is that an act of faith on your part? You put your trust in it being possible without the case being demonstrated. — Banno
I dare you to tell that to a scientist! I double dare you!Elsewhere, I just wrote this:
Odd, isn't it, that when some folk discover that the chair they are sitting on is composed of atoms, and is overwhelmingly space, they sometimes decide that therefore it's no longer really a chair.
— Banno
The same happens when a Chemist claims that
"there is no love, there are only chemicals in the brain"
— baker
As if love vanished after such explanations.
What does Cal say, and why do you think it's important? Is it something like, stop scrolling through Instagram and go for a walk instead? — Jamal
Digital minimalism is a philosophy that helps you question what digital communication tools (and behaviors surrounding these tools) add the most value to your life. It is motivated by the belief that intentionally and aggressively clearing away low-value digital noise, and optimizing your use of the tools that really matter, can significantly improve your life.
/.../
The bottom line of this general thinking is that a simple, carefully curated, minimalist digital life is not a rejection of technology or a reactionary act of skepticism; it is, by contrast, an embrace of the immense value these new tools can offer…if we’re willing to do the hard work of figuring out how to best leverage them on behalf of the things we truly care about.
https://calnewport.com/on-digital-minimalism/
Notice how I talk about not taking concepts out of their native contexts?
— baker
Oh, yes. How you square this with semantic holism remains unexplained. — Banno
Mental (or semantic) holism is the doctrine that the identity of a belief content (or the meaning of a sentence that expresses it) is determined by its place in the web of beliefs or sentences comprising a whole theory or group of theories. It can be contrasted with two other views: atomism and molecularism. Molecularism characterizes meaning and content in terms of relatively small parts of the web in a way that allows many different theories to share those parts. For example, the meaning of ‘chase’ might be said by a molecularist to be ‘try to catch’. Atomism characterizes meaning and content in terms of none of the web; it says that sentences and beliefs have meaning or content independently of their relations to other sentences or beliefs.
One major motivation for holism has come from reflections on the natures of confirmation and learning. As Quine observed, claims about the world are confirmed not individually but only in conjunction with theories of which they are a part. And, typically, one cannot come to understand scientific claims without understanding a significant chunk of the theory of which they are a part. For example, in learning the Newtonian concepts of ‘force’, ‘mass’, ‘kinetic energy’ and ‘momentum’, one does not learn any definitions of these terms in terms that are understood beforehand, for there are no such definitions. Rather, these theoretical terms are all learned together in conjunction with procedures for solving problems.
/.../
https://www.rep.routledge.com/articles/thematic/holism-mental-and-semantic/v-1
The other is at least our moral inferior, but at the same time an existential threat. Both aspects are essential for our unity; without the other we fragment into internal conflict. The other necessitates, justifies and takes the blame for the burden of suffering entailed by the individual's subjugation to the group, and there can be no group that is not defined in terms of its other. 'Othering' thus becomes a process, the threat of which controls us. If you demonstrate insufficient revulsion and hatred for the other, you may be seen as, and so become, other yourself. This loss of identity is a fate worse than death. Such a fate worse than death gives rise to the martyr - one who dies to maintain their identity. — unenlightened
Me neither. I think it clear we do not know what happens when we die. All the rest is story telling.
— Fooloso4
Totally agree; there seems to be no conceivable way to rationally or empirically justify the idea that intellectual intuition can yield propositionally configured knowledge of such things. — Janus
Solved equally well by the understanding that it never truly existed, but only appeared to exist because of identification with phenomena. — Wayfarer
So wouldn't that give us an account in which the process stoped, as opposed to the substance of body and spirit being split asunder? — Banno
From ignorance as a requisite condition come fabrications.
From fabrications as a requisite condition comes consciousness.
From consciousness as a requisite condition comes name-&-form.
From name-&-form as a requisite condition come the six sense media.
From the six sense media as a requisite condition comes contact.
From contact as a requisite condition comes feeling.
From feeling as a requisite condition comes craving.
From craving as a requisite condition comes clinging/sustenance.
From clinging/sustenance as a requisite condition comes becoming.
From becoming as a requisite condition comes birth.
From birth as a requisite condition, then aging & death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, & despair come into play.
Such is the origination of this entire mass of stress & suffering.
/.../
Now from the remainderless fading & cessation of that very ignorance comes the cessation of fabrications.
From the cessation of fabrications comes the cessation of consciousness.
From the cessation of consciousness comes the cessation of name-&-form.
From the cessation of name-&-form comes the cessation of the six sense media.
From the cessation of the six sense media comes the cessation of contact.
From the cessation of contact comes the cessation of feeling.
From the cessation of feeling comes the cessation of craving.
From the cessation of craving comes the cessation of clinging/sustenance.
From the cessation of clinging/sustenance comes the cessation of becoming.
From the cessation of becoming comes the cessation of birth.
From the cessation of birth, then aging & death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, & despair all cease. Such is the cessation of this entire mass of stress & suffering."
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn12/sn12.002.than.html
Well, what is your source for reading up on rebirth?I am familiar with them too, but I can't say they make sense to me beyond the fact that they are all logically possible in the sense of not being obviously self-contradictory. That said, I think the Buddhist concept on the face of it is the most incoherent. — Janus
My main objection, or more accurately indifference, to the ideas of rebirth or resurrection, is that they have no significance to this life, and I think this life is all that is important, given that anything beyond it can only remain nebulous. — Janus
I'm rather amazed, though, how philosophers are sometimes willing to bang their heads against walls ...I agree with this and often say that critical discussion has no place in the contexts of spiritual disciplines and religious practices, and even, as Hadot notes in the kinds of ancient philosophies which consisted of systems of metaphysical ideas meant to support "spiritual exercises". But tell that to the fundamentalists!
In any case, this is a philosophy forum where ideas and arguments are presented for critique, so if people want to present their beliefs and ideas here, they should expect questioning, criticism and disagreement.
They refuse to integrate into the society they live in, they set themselves apart.Is there anything particular about their lifestyles that is unappealing? — TiredThinker
Chosen as in "preferred over all others".Yes, chosen to carry out the 613 commandments, only 320 of which are applicable without the temple. Chosen to perform such commandments such as placing a mezuzah on one's door. — BitconnectCarlos
It goes without saying.Religions typically claim supremacy; ie. each religion claims to be superior to others.
— baker
Not something you'd hear in a synagogue if you ever ventured into one. — BitconnectCarlos
Not everyone can convert to Judaism, or at least not to just any school of Judaism.Jews are not here to tell everyone else that they should be a Jew. But one can convert to Judaism if they like and are prepared to take on the challenges.
I think this kind of work is non-Hindu, non-Buddhist. For at least some Buddhist and Hindu schools, remembering past lives is a special knowledge that is only possible after the person has attained certain higher abilities.I think the interesting philosophical question is that the most common reaction to Stevenson's research is that it couldn't be true, that there must be something wrong with him or his methodology, and that it can or should be ignored. — Wayfarer
Of course. There is something to be said about Asian politeness and indirectness ... and supremacy ...Would this include the hundreds of millions of middle-class Indians now employed in call-centres and high technology industries in Hyderabad and the like? I've worked with quite a few IT people of Indian extraction (one of whom always wore a bindu) and, although it didn't come up much, from time to time there might have been discussions of such topics as Hindu beliefs,
and they didn't seem all that reticent to me. They noted approvingly of my interest in Eastern philosophy.
Because of the Jewish claim that they are "God's chosen people".When did some groups start disliking or hating Jewish people? — TiredThinker
They read at least the Bible, as the Old Testament is also part of Jewish scripture.There aren't actually that many Jewish people in the world on a whole. I don't know what threat some people see.
It's like the Tool song: Vicarious — petrichor
I think that before doing any of the demanding technical stuff (programming and whatever else is needed), one first needs to work out a philosophy of using technology to begin with.but even if you have no idea what I've just been talking about, any thoughts about the state of web applications and websites today is welcome. — Jamal
It is possible to make physics do that, though.Physics simply doesn't provide the resources to decide if you will put sugar in your coffee, or not. — Banno
But doing so does away with so many problems!No, I'm suggesting the broader point that attempting to treat of human freedom in physical terms at all is problematic. — Banno
My reason for not believing in any form of personal rebirth or afterlife is not that there is any definitive evidence against it, but simply that I cannot make rational sense of the idea, and I cannot believe something I am incapable of even making coherent to myself. — Janus
You do realize how ironic it is to accuse others of "fascism", when it is precisely what the "good Westerners" are?being openly fascist — Jamal
And it seems that we not only do not know, but have no way of determining the answer; and so we turn to mandating that it is so, instead. We make it up. — Banno
When I die, and that’s obviously not that far off any more, there’ll be one child born to carry on. — Wayfarer
Some children acquiesce and some don't. Not all children are equally well acculturated into the religion they are born to and raised in. For some, it's a traumatic experience (like being beaten by their religious parents and teachers), for some others, it's apparently a fairly joyous one. Families and communities are different and have various approaches to the teachings (esp. in terms of which teachings they emphasize more and in the context of what particular family and social dynamics etc.). (I've known Christians who are apparently really happy about the Gospel. I think that's bizarre. I've no idea how the do it.)But I would hesitate to claim that all children must acquiesce to what they are being taught. — Janus
I think it's similar with religious doctrines. They function as cognitive tools. The point of religious belief isn't merely to hold it, but to do something with it, to have it inform one's thoughts, words, and deeds.Language does not strike me as a good analogy since it is a tool not a belief; one does not accept or reject it but rather one learns to use it.
My reason for not believing in any form of personal rebirth or afterlife is not that there is any definitive evidence against it, but simply that I cannot make rational sense of the idea, and I cannot believe something I am incapable of even making coherent to myself. — Janus
I think that most people who believe in reincarnation/rebirth don't believe it on account of "evidence". Most of those believers were simply raised into such religions, so it's never been an active issue for them. But I also know Buddhists, some of them even monks of many years, who use Stevenson's work as a basis for their belief in rebirth (which is actually very un-Buddhist).As you know I am not against people believing in rebirth or whatever. Obviously there can be no definitve evidence either way. — Janus
I think it has to do with a nagging concern that can be summed up as "Is this all there is to life?"What I am curious about is why people care about it, since it obviously cannot be understood to personal survival of death. Is it an irrational fear of annihilation?
Notice how I talk about not taking concepts out of their native contexts?, I'm advocating for semantic holism.
— baker
I've been unable to see any such advocation. Perhaps if you were to set it out more explicitly, I'd be able to follow. — Banno
Of course.Unfortunately including sacred cows and the existence of the dalet. If we are to treat Hinduism holistically, such must also be taken into account.
I am well aware of this tension. I actually keeps me up at night.Interesting. There's a tension between placing emphasis on autonomy while maintaining that one is culturally embedded, as you did in your reply to Joshs, ↪baker.
Indeed, and as the doctrine of reincarnation says, this is because most people are under the influence of maya, illusion, where they don't know who they really are.And yet the vast mass of humanity have no such recollection. — Banno
To be clear, I'm not using Stevenson's work as some kind of evidence for reincarnation. In fact, I think it's misleading, I dismiss it. I think it's irrelevant to what Hinduism and Buddhism teach on reincarnation/rebirth.We have a congenital difference, you and I, that leads me to think of you as credulous. I won't be able to show you - it's not just that the evidence is insufficient, but that it is incoherent.
That's a good example of what happens when a concept is taken out of its native context.Population growth also seems to be a problem for reincarnation: according to defenders of reincarnation, souls migrate from one body to another. This, in a sense, presupposes that the number of souls remains stable, as no new souls are created, they only migrate from body to body. Yet, the number of bodies has consistently increased ever since the dawn of mankind. Where, one may ask, were all souls before new bodies came to exist? (Edwards, 1997: 14). Actually, this objection is not so formidable: perhaps souls exist in a disembodied form as they wait for new bodies to come up (D’Souza, 2009: 57). — IEP Immortality
A study of Jewish scripture is in place, to get to know whom you're talking about.I absolutely am not drawing a parallel between ancient Israel and the modern world, but The Final Solution was also intended to root out future generations of the hated Jew. — BC
Such justifications can only fool their like and not atheists like me — universeness
It's not like the civilians get to decide. The people who order the pulling of triggers do.It's doubtful any involved party believes there is such a thing as "innocent civilians". Warfare is essentially tribal: any member of a tribe will do.
— baker
I don't think this is true at all. — universeness
This is where the taboo sets in. But you can read the Bible, the Old Testament in particular, to get some ideas.Perhaps a better question to ask you is why do you think some in positions of authority/power choose to use/fully sanction, butchery and torture, horror and terror, against their enemy? — universeness
That would require that some religio-ethnic group gives up its claim to a divinely special status. Which is not likely going to happen.So, do you think that we can develop responses, that will prevent a group like Hamas, from EVER achieving such a goal, by using the kind of horror and terror tactics they have employed here?
The relevant unit here is tribe, or at most, nation, not species.Horror and terror, imo take on a much deeper and far far more nuanced sense of morality and injustice, when it is contemplated or applied to other members of the same species. — universeness
It's not rocket science.You keep jumping to these extremities of possibility, in an almost knee-jerk manner imo.
In this under 2 min clip from Babylon 5, the character Marcus, talks a little about his Minbari training.
What do you think of his brief mention of 'terror'?
People are more reslient than official psychology and the media give them credit for.How can we better defend a population against the nefarious use of horror and terror?
But for that, people would need to give up their religious or national identities. Which isn't likely going to happen.I think the answer lies in learning how to be much better at surgical removal, as opposed to being very good at using a blood axe or a large bludgeoning war hammer, on anyone who has the same or similar religious/race/societal etc, profile, to your perceived 'enemy.' Is this not happening in Gaza right now?
Really? They didn't mostly just suck up to you in order to get good grades, recommendations, etc.?As a classroom teacher, of over 30 years, I had many such positive 'mutual trust' experiences with individual pupils.
Wrong how exactly?Could she have had better results and outcomes, if she had taken wiser actions?
— universeness
And what would such "wiser actions" be? Submitting to the Romans?
— baker
There was no notion of nationhood in the Island of Britain, during the days of Boudica. She is described as leading the Iceni. I doubt that is what they even called themselves. Iceni is a Latin/Roman name.
Many other local tribes joined her resistance against the Roman invaders, yes, probably to protect their own areas, resources and people, but, the fact that their tactics were ultimately totally defeated by Rome, for me, demonstrates not that they were wrong to resist Rome but that their method of doing so, proved wrong headed.
What lesson might that be? That's it's better to preserve the life of your body than your identity?That's the main point I am making, and the main question I was asking, is, did Boudica make too many mistakes, because her leadership was blindsided by her need for personal vengeance against Rome? Is there not an important lesson for us all to understand about such stories, even though they are mostly mythical and based on the unreliable reports, produced mainly by historians, who came from the side of the victors?
As long as natural resources are limited and hard to obtain, probably not.Can we not establish a better way to combat these abuses and deliberate attempts to manipulate human fear? — universeness
It's doubtful any involved party believes there is such a thing as "innocent civilians". Warfare is essentially tribal: any member of a tribe will do.You lose the moral high ground, every time, if you kill the innocent along with the guilty, imo. — universeness
As for statement of intent:I have heard people describe what they would do to punish those they hate most. It normally lies somewhere on a rage from slow vivisection to tortured every moment of every day, ETERNALLY, in hell-style imagineered manifestations. Has such intent, ever been sated? Those who have tried, always end up destroyed themselves, after they have achieved their vengeance, or during the pursuit of such. They never achieve 'closure,' do they? — universeness
Let death seize upon them, and let them go down quick into hell: for wickedness is in their dwellings, and among them.
As for me, I will call upon God; and the LORD shall save me.
Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray, and cry aloud: and he shall hear my voice.
He hath delivered my soul in peace from the battle that was against me: for there were many with me.
God shall hear, and afflict them, even he that abideth of old.
https://biblehub.com/kjv/psalms/55.htm
One can learn and unlearn horror.
/.../
Terror, on the other hand, is too overwhelming a condition to be unlearned. One can become desensitized to terror, but this is not a desirable goal.
Terror and horror can be similarly bad experiences, except that horror does not normally involve actual physical threat. Terror IS threat, both physical and psychological. — BC
Listen to my prayer, O God,
do not ignore my plea;
hear me and answer me.
My thoughts trouble me and I am distraught
because of what my enemy is saying,
because of the threats of the wicked;
for they bring down suffering on me
and assail me in their anger.
My heart is in anguish within me;
the terrors of death have fallen on me.
Fear and trembling have beset me;
horror has overwhelmed me.
I said, “Oh, that I had the wings of a dove!
I would fly away and be at rest.
I would flee far away
and stay in the desert;
I would hurry to my place of shelter,
far from the tempest and storm.”
https://biblehub.com/niv/psalms/55.htm
Are we always doomed to respond to the nefarious use of horror and terror tactics, by resorting to the same or similar horror and terror tactics, in our pursuit of vengeance? Can we do no better than that? — universeness
What was it do you think that made Viking and Mongol warriors okay with being "horror-ible"? — schopenhauer1
How important do you think it is for all of us to understand what's really going on, better than we do at present? — universeness
Health and happiness are impossible without wealth and power.I didn't advocate for health and happiness - of course I would, if it were a question of advocacy. But I do think they're more worthwhile goals than wealth and power, if those are the available options. — Vera Mont
That's a false dichotomy, focusing only on the extremes.As previously noted, this is an opinion. If you believe that being ill, anxious and miserable are preferable, that's also an opinion.
Societies that focus on health and happiness go in a well-known direction:So what do people in those "more equal" societies do with all that social trust, health, wellbeing, etc.? What do they use them for? There has to be some purpose to them.
— baker
Since I don't believe life has a purpose beyond itself, or that quality of life needs justification, that question simply has no meaning for me, no matter how many times it's repeated.