But there are also many foundational axioms that are held without evidence. Scientific materialism is one. It is a metaphysical stance, not a testable hypothesis as evidenced by the fact that its proponents keep defending it, even while the scientific notion of matter is in constant flux. — Wayfarer
When you speak of 'evidence' you're already assuming an empirical stance, when the nature of the question may be such that it can't be adjuticated by empirical means. — Wayfarer
Well I'm pushing buttons here, as it's a philosophy forum, best to ask yourself why. — Wayfarer
Yet one of those those who made that voyage became an alcoholic, the other had a life-changing epiphany. — Wayfarer
The "linguistic turn" is basically meaningless. It's a historical construct. Ditto "existentialism," "continental philosophy," "analytic philosophy," and so on. No one really agrees on what these terms mean, and we shouldn't get hung up on them any more than "postmodern" or "post-World War II."
Thinking is what's called for these days -- and that doesn't end. What we need is different kind of thinking, which is defined by the questions being asked. The questions being asked these days should be in response to our current place in time, our historical situation. To ask "what next?" is a good question, but it could have been asked in any period in history, even during what's now labeled the "linguistic turn." — Xtrix
I think the hallmark fo a secure faith is the lack of proselytizing.
— Tom Storm
Why?? — baker
Brass tacks: if you're interested in the text, say something about what you think of it. — csalisbury
To achieve this, power wasn't taken out of the equation but rather transferred from man to a celestial being, god. — TheMadFool
I've come to realise that I accept the divinity of Jesus, although I know many don't, and I wouldn't try and persuade anyone. — Wayfarer
For example, in traditionally Buddhists countries, monks are considered the elite, even though they lead materially very simple lives (or at least, they should, on principle). — baker
Quite right. I wasn't intending to suggest K was earlier than Gnostics or in fact connected. Nor are the Scientologists :smile: I was just saying that the styles are reminiscent.I believe you chronology is a bit off. Kabbalah was developed centuries after the Gnostics — Count Timothy von Icarus
That's why Pagel's book, Beyond Belief, appealed to me, as it confirmed this narrative. According to Pagels, Thomas' gospel was markedly different to the Gospel of John, in that it stressed the experiential nature of Christ's teaching and downplayed the idea of Jesus as an ultimate authority. But the powers-that-be coalesced around the Johannine intepretation - principally, I thought, because it is considerably easier to manage believers. We only ever read about the gnostics through the writings of those who vanquished them, like Iraneus and Tertullian. That is why the discovery of the Nag Hammadi texts was such a revelation. — Wayfarer
I picked up a vibe early that you were coming in with a kind of detached psychological/analytic approach - kind of therapist-used-to-probing-others-while-their-own-views-remain-safely-unspoken - that just felt deeply counter to the kind of conversation I'm interested in. I pushed back accordingly. — csalisbury
Interesting, why are you attracted to this approach to the gnostic gospels (perhaps, mysticism in genera?) I notice you're using autobiographical detail, proper names, and indications of your inclusion in a kind of a sanctified, certified community. What does this approach do for you? — csalisbury
What do you make of the first couple parts? — csalisbury
It could be argued that is a problem of institutionalism rather than any religious indoctrination in particular. — Paul S
Turns out, 80% of depressions can be cured by not having a war where you live. — unenlightened
God is one of those things that should rarely escape from the personal realm. Who gives a rat's ass what anybody else thinks when it comes to your religious/spiritual beliefs? — synthesis
I am asking about how therapy helps in response to the problem of human suffering and asking to what extent it may help? Can it even aid in the experience of nihilism? — Jack Cummins
Re: wondering if a forum distorts one's personality.
What did you have in mind ? — Amity
I am not sure what you mean by this. The dialogues or discussions on any particular topic or book can vary as to the aim, time and energy of the people involved. — Amity
Politicians, in particular, need their self image to be strong. It is important to be seen as a winner, even when all the facts point in the opposite direction. — Amity
Philosophical forums can help shine a light on the reality of our selves, actions and practice and not one that is self-biased, a bit skew whiff. — Amity
Yet it does encourage the reader to think for themselves. — TaySan
wonder how Dan Barker would respond to your comment and Hillel's insight? Barker seems to be much concerned with the many contradictions which he alleges the Bible suffers from. By his reasoning another, more suitable, title for the Bible, the Torah, and the Quran, is "Contradiction" and he wants nothing to do with them. — TheMadFool
But in the highly secular society I live in, this has nothing to do with religion. People just think with their wrong heads. — TaySan
I can be a methodist in certain situations or a particularist in others; there's absolutely nothing wrong in either case. — TheMadFool
But does this mean 2 and 3 are wrong? Or does it mean that how we identify and how we define the concept are two different processes? — Possibility
