Comments

  • Was Jesus the best Buddhist?
    My worry is that it seems like Christianity’s necessary condition for salvationtryhard

    Not all Christian traditions are concerned with crass notions of salvation. There are some much more mystical theological expressions such as the Apophatic tradition.

    I wouldn't be worried. Religious syncretism is as old as humanity.
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    This is what I am getting at. How much of what you say sheds light on the "Basic Questions for any Kantians"?Fooloso4

    Possibly not all that much but it is interesting to read about Prauss. I have a superficial interest in idealism in general - in appreciating its attractions and logic.
  • Jesus and Greek Philosophy
    An answer to your question requires some scholarship and one of the first steps would be separating whoever Jesus the man was (around whom a complex myth was constructed in the decades/centuries after his life) from the religion of Christianity, which borrowed freely from traditions as the Romans spread the nascent faith around their territories. The Gospels date from 30 to 80 years after the life of Jesus, are by anonymous sources and not by eyewitnesses - they can almost be considered to be fan fiction.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    It appears that anyone can be a philosopher, it is a way of perceiving life in general.GBG

    This is a muddy and unsophisticated view which has been refuted in this thread whenever it has come up. Which is not all that often since it is a pretty reductive account. It's not 'perceiving life in general' - it is thinking about matters philosophically and with rigour.

    Most philosophy appears to be the home of the academic and highly educated with the constrictions that that would imply.GBG

    Or the well read, who may have little formal education. Autodidacts. Almost impossible to be a philosopher without knowing the traditions and having an understanding of the mistakes or achievements already well understood.

    After all you have to be on the outside looking in so see the whole picture.GBG

    Clumsy. If you are 'looking in' you are clearly not seeing the whole picture - you are looking into an enclosed space. To see the whole vista you need to be looking outside at the view

    I am not yet over encumbered by other philosopher’s ideas and thoughts.GBG

    If you are an absolute genius there is a small chance this may be possible, Generally speaking it is unlikely that you or anyone you know will have an original philosophical idea that hasn't already been explored many times, untangled and redefined. Expertise cannot be underrated. Philosophy builds on the accumulated wisdom of others.

    But I think Bertram Russell wrote that Science is fact, religious belief is DogmaGBG

    You need to do better that "I think" in philosophy. Check your source. And it is Bertrand Russell.

    I think most people from all backgrounds think philosophically about the things that happen in their own lives and with social media their thoughts and ideas are easy to seeGBG

    That is called reflection, or having an opinion, it is not philosophy. What is their position on the problem of induction? Intentionality? Husserl's notion of epoché? The Gettier problem in epistemology?

    And if Philosophy is the bridge between Dogma and Science, and today’s largest religion is social media the you only have to look at Twitter etc to see our new latter-day Philosophers in the making.GBG

    Ideologists, sophists or influencers with worldviews are not philosophers. There's a big difference between opinions and philosophy. Having an opinion on life no more makes you a philosopher than going on an overseas trip makes you an ethnologist.
  • The problem with "Materialism"
    Freud's oceanic sensations generally refer to the 'feeling' some people have of eternity and oneness with all reality, amongst other descriptions. Perhaps a sense of the numinous to others. I've met plenty of physicalist atheists who claim to feel this very thing when in nature or listening to, let's say, Bach. Not sure it necessarily translates to belief in the supernormal. Personally I think people generally have an emotional need for whatever belief they hold and retro fit the reasoning for it by way of post hoc rationalisations.
  • Is the World Cruel?
    I can become a vegan, but I would have to damage other DNA based organisms to survive anyways. And I'm not alone. The earth is filled with living organisms preying on one another to survive. All of them must. Is this system based on cruelty, or is cruelty a silly notion that melodramatic humans make up? Is there something else at play?Ree Zen

    Nature does what it does. It is human beings who ascribe values. From some points of view nature could be understood as cruel and violent. As meaning making creatures with an indefatigable drive to build meaning systems and values, humans will always find a way to see in nature a justification for nihilism, social-Darwinism, or evidence of God's glory.
  • Does magick exist? If so, can modern technology be used in the practice of magick?
    I'm pretty sure that's right. I generally think of him as a performance artist.
  • Can literature finish religion?
    Why do you think Kawabata said literature can defeat religion? Is it related to promote a better educational system or the pursue of a free state of knowledge through books?javi2541997

    I imagine there may be a specific Japanese context to this claim. The status of religion in Japan is likely to be quite different to the West's. 'Defeat" is an interesting word. Is literature at war with religion? Not entirely. But there is a banal observation to be made here. If religion is going to be surpassed by other, perhaps 'better' ideas, it is likely to be done via literature. The key ideas in public discourse are still written down and presented in textual form.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    Elbow patches on a jacket?Mayor of Simpleton

    No that's English literature. Philosophy is a comb over and a black turtleneck.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    But why is competence necessary to be a philosopher, why does one have to be competent to be a member of a field?CallMeDirac

    Surely that can't be a serious question? Would you use a mechanic who isn't competent? A plumber? Would you use an accountant who can't add up or use financial software packages? Would you call a person who knows next to nothing about philosophy - epistemology, metaphysics, logic - a philosopher? Or do you not take philosophy seriously enough to consider competence a criterion of value?

    I think we are done here. We're going around in circles.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    Our definitions differ in that you consider mine to simplistic and all-inclusive, and I consider yours arbitrary and with no objective way to determine who deserves a title. Can you provide some way to determine what makes one a philosopher more specific than "to be part of a tradition"?CallMeDirac

    Actually it's your definition which is arbitrary as it sets no criteria or competence at all and therefore is not even a definition. You'll remember you originally said:

    A philosopher is anyone who examines the nature of life and metaphysicsCallMeDirac

    Pretty arbitrary.

    Then you added that it was a hobby and enjoyment was part of it. Pretty arbitrary.

    Unlike you, I am not attempting to define what a philosopher is. I am simply proving feedback that competence and knowledge is a very important component of any potential definition. Defining philosophy isn't easy but I know it isn't just anyone who has deep thoughts about life and being.

    I think this is a good foundation:

    Philosophers are defined by doing philosophy. But how? Competently. Who's to judge? Her peers in the context of the extant philosophical tradition wherein living philosophers (academic or otherwise) dialogue with (the extant works and embodied influences) – perhaps dozens of generations before her – dead philosophers.180 Proof
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    It's been covered here before on this thread but the notion of expertise is important if someone is going to be given certain titles such as a philosopher. It's probably important to be familiar with key questions of philosophy and to know what others have already written about these often highly complex matters. Otherwise you are just reinventing the wheel or, more likely, getting stuck in problems that have long been untangled or resolved. For my money to be a philosopher is to be part of a tradition, not some bloke sitting on the back step musing philosophically.
  • Romance and Friendship: What's the difference
    By your definition, unless someone was sexually attracted to their partner they cannot have a romantic relationship, yet asexual people can and do have romantic relationships.CallMeDirac

    I'll take your word for it.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    A philosopher is anyone who contemplates the meaning of life and metaphysical questions for enjoyment. Anyone whose hobby is contemplation.CallMeDirac

    No. Many serious philosophers do not enjoy the work. They are compelled to enquire and may in fact find the work hard and frustrating.
  • Romance and Friendship: What's the difference
    asexual people still have relationships, people who can no longer engage in sex have romantic partners whether that be from injury or deterioration of bodily functions.CallMeDirac

    As I said an erotic component OR sex. You don't need to engage in sex to have an erotic/romantic relationship with someone. If the relationship is asexual then it is platonic. Anyway that's my view. The subject may be infinitely richer than this.
  • Romance and Friendship: What's the difference
    Generally romantic love involves eroticism or actual sex.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    I was asking you that question and you answered it. :wink: Personally I think almost every human engages in such questions - with or without the bong. To call this philosophy means every human is a philosopher (except perhaps for the brain dead) which makes the title almost meaningless as far as I can tell.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    A philosopher is anyone who examines the nature of life and metaphysicsCallMeDirac

    Anyone? Is there no question about the quality or level of sophistication? Is my illiterate cousin Tony a philosopher? He often ponders the meaning of life and wonders if he's in the matrix... as he packs another bong.
  • What Constitutes A Philosopher?
    Should we stop assigning Plato or Aristotle in philosophy classes because most students do not find them entertaining and will not read them?Fooloso4

    I think history will take care of Plato and Aristotle for good or ill, regardless of anything else. Perhaps 'entertainment' was the wrong word? I think @ucarr might mean 'engaging'. Some philosophy can be highly engaging, which for me seems a more redeemable and useful term.
  • Reality does not make mistakes and that is why we strive for meaning. A justification for Meaning.
    Not that this is particularly relevant, I find I agree with you on all counts - re time, reality, imposed structures/'laws'.
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    I'm not sure what you are getting at. Since you say "understood more deeply" I assume you are not inquiring about what the categories are.Fooloso4

    Thanks, yes, poor language use on my part, sorry. I should have written: What has Kant said about the structure of the mind that allows it to make sense of the noumenal world and 'construct' our phenomenal world? I was thinking more about its cognitive architecture, but perhaps this is too big a question. I have just skim read the SEP account of Kant's view of mind and it's very detailed and dense.

    I know this is probably a silly question, but I can't help but wonder why Kant thought the world was divided in this way, between appearances and reality.
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    Nice work. Thanks.

    But this possibility cannot be determined by reason.Fooloso4

    Indeed and not just this question. :wink:

    The manifold of sensations are processed according the structure of the mind, what he calls the "categories of the understanding".Fooloso4

    So this is my understanding too. I am curious about what structures of the mind can mean when understood more deeply.

    Things as they are in themselves are not accessible to us, only things as they are for us. Although they are not accessible to us they are an essential part of experience. In short, they do have physical form.Fooloso4

    Can we say from this that Kant's idealism is a form of naturalism?
  • Jesus Freaks
    You're quite welcome. The subject fascinates me. I think there are still many Christians who don't know aspects of Christianity's history. For example, I know Catholics, or former Catholics, who were surprised to learn Jesus had brothers.Ciceronianus

    Indeed. One of the fascinating things about Christianity is so often the more ardent the faith, the more ignorant the believer. Faith holds everything together for many people. The Bible is not understood or read. Which is why Isaac Asimov said "Properly read, the Bible is the most potent force for atheism ever conceived.' I've certainly met a number of atheists who reached their position after reading the Good Book.

    It's not hard to find evidence for the proposition that ignorance and religion are familiar bedfellows. I've known a number of Thai and Vietnamese Buddhists who have had religious stories told them as children, but have never read a canonical word. Their faith is as threadbare as the faith of any Baptist...
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    There seems to be significant difference and disagreement amongst the positions held by phenomenologists - Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty. I understand Merleau-Ponty rejects Husserl's transcendental reduction and intentionality. I wonder how anyone can tell which reading is faithful and who has the preferred approach? If you say that as a mere reader you can discern each position as intended and from this determine which approach is more helpful, then I must assume your mind is as penetrating and original as the author's.
  • How do I know that I can't comprehend God?
    "X is ineffable". How were you able to assign a predicate "ineffable" to X if you assume that X is ineffable?Zebeden

    It's simple really. We do it all the time - we look at nature and find the impact it has on us ineffable. As soon as you try to use words to describe it you are reduced to cliché and banality. Even Wittgenstein (when discussing morality) said “There are, indeed, things that cannot be put into words.” (TLP 6.522)

    "Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent." (L. W., Tractatus §7). Or should we say in this case - "whereof one cannot speak, thereof one always remains silent".Zebeden

    Wittgenstein said a lot of things and I don't think he is widely recognised as resolving the question of God.

    Journal entry (11 June 1916), p. 72e and 73e 1910s, Notebooks 1914-1916
    Contexte: What do I know about God and the purpose of life? I know that this world exists. That I am placed in it like my eye in its visual field. That something about it is problematic, which we call its meaning. This meaning does not lie in it but outside of it. That life is the world. That my will penetrates the world. That my will is good or evil. Therefore that good and evil are somehow connected with the meaning of the world. The meaning of life, i. e. the meaning of the world, we can call God. And connect with this the comparison of God to a father. To pray is to think about the meaning of life./quote]
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    But in the "contradiction" between finitude and infinity, one looks for the ground where the finite simply ends, and off everything goes to infinity. Given the finite, the limited, the well structured and familiar, I see no "place" where this can stand apart from infinity. Infinity does not have its termination anywhere, but rather "runs through" all that is. If infinity is taken as a mere extension of the familiar, as in a sequence of negative time moments that has no end or a spatial extension of "further ons" with no end (both Kant denies in any way describes noumena, of course) then all we have is a concept of infinity that is, if you will, finitized, made finite. Pointless to even bother taking seriously if this is the best one can do, and Kant thought this the case. Clearly not what Eckhart had in mind with God. With him there is something entirely Other. And this Other is not the vacuous noumena of Kant.Astrophel

    Thanks for the thoughtful response. Mysticism I am familiar with but I have no idea what the rest of what you say means but will read it again later and see if I can unravel it. I am not a philosopher and the idea of infinity has never captured my attention.
  • Jesus Freaks
    Fire is fought with fire.baker

    Good point
  • How do I know that I can't comprehend God?
    How do I know that I can't comprehend God?Zebeden

    You can take this in various directions. Not being able to comprehend God does not mean you can't talk about God, it just means that when you are, you are fumbling around using human categories and definitions which will always be inadequate or wrong. God is ineffable.

    Consider this - God has no explanatory power. People use God as a way to explain all manner of things - creation, meaning, morality. But what precisely is explained with an appeal to God? Precisely nothing. It is, for instance, incomprehensible to us how God might have initiated creation. To say we can explain creation using God is to use a mystery to explain a mystery.
  • Basic Questions for any Kantians
    Kant doesn't see that noumena is just a term for what is in the phenomenological "presence". Experience itself is thoroughly noumenal. There is an insight here that is elusive, slippery. One way to say it is this: we live an breathe metaphysics. We think of metaphysics as being impossibly remote (like Kant does in the transcendental dialectic) but this is all wrong, simply put.Astrophel

    What a tantalising response. Can you say more about experience itself being noumenal?
  • Jesus Freaks
    I saw that debate and its an old one. Bart has become far more anti-theist since then, check out some of his latest YouTube offerings.universeness

    Bart being anti-theist has no bearing on my point. We were talking about how he views Jesus the man and I have seen most of Dr Ehrman's recent interviews (January 2022) wherein he maintains exactly the same position.

    The most current views on Jesus (even from secular sources) is that he was a teacher of some kind who inspired some big myths. In fact over the past 50 years until now there has been a gradual consensus emerging that the mythicist view is very hard to justify.
  • Jesus Freaks
    If you want to understand what other people understand about the world, you need to make sure you are in the same world they are.T Clark

    Yes, and that particular world is often a patchwork quilt of words and emotions. In his mid 90's I asked my father what he thought about Jesus. His response - 'Jesus is whoever the preacher tells us he is.' Sometimes people don't reside in a world of their own.
  • Jesus Freaks
    That seems to me to be a serious problem.Ciceronianus

    It's only a problem for concrete thinking. There's a vast and venerable tradition of allegorical understanding of Christianity, Judaism and other religious traditions - leading us into the mystical traditions of faiths, which often become wordless and contemplative rather than a focused list of who, what, where and when. The majority of people seem to prefer the list, as there is a special safety in the predictability of believing that a story is literally true. Personally, as someone lacking a sensus divinitatis, the entire matter is 'academic'.
  • Jesus Freaks
    The Jesus of the Gospels seems disposable. Why do they bother with Jesus? This is my question.Ciceronianus

    I used to ask this question. I think the answer is complex and hard for literal minded people like me to comprehend. The gospels are not 'disposable' - this is a reaction to, not an understanding of what is meant - the books suggest a truth above narrative and provide examples and teachings in a form for humans to engage with at their level of understanding.

    Jesus can be seen to fit into in a bodhisattva story tradition. These day I'm more inclined not to resist or disparage this way of viewing things but find it fascinating that this is how humans make meaning. As long as Jesus isn't used as an excuse for fag hating; life denying, bad politics and the setting off of bombs (and let's face it this is where literalists have often ended up), I don't mind how his story is understood.
  • Jesus Freaks
    You see, this is my point. I'm quite certain that Christian philosophers theologians see Jesus differently than I do. I suggest, though, that they see Jesus differently than most Christians do, differently from how he is described in the Gospels.Ciceronianus

    Well yeah - this is part of the problem with many subjects. The Baptists down the road from me see a very different figure from the Catholics next door. The name Jesus is about all they have in common.

    I have a friend who is a Catholic priest and he sees Jesus as a metaphor and an invitation for contemplative prayer. He has almost no interest in the story as fact - it is a teaching aid, like most holy books. The issue is people hold different levels of understanding - a shallow or deep faith. The same could be said for science, with its dogmatic materialists and more nuanced naturalists.
  • Jesus Freaks
    The number of highly qualified people in the field of theology, biblical study etc who now say there never was a historical Jesus, continue's to grow and grow.
    Prof Bart Ehrman
    universeness

    Saw your correction - Bart Ehrman specifically does not belong to this group - he disagrees with the mythicists, as they are known and specifically debated against Robert Price. From Erhman's blog Oct 2016

    I started this thread by indicating that the majority of my 30-minute talk was devoted to explaining the positive evidence that I think shows beyond reasonable doubt that there was indeed a man Jesus of Nazareth.

    I think the more reasonable position on Jesus these days is that there was a human being who was killed and who inspired the myths. I think the general view, even amongst atheists is that the mythicists position is vulnerable.
  • What is it to be Enlightened?
    Thanks, some very useful perspectives here well summarized.
  • What is it to be Enlightened?
    Science, mathematics, logic, phenomenology. Any discourse which depends on observation and reason, and does not depend on authority. Any discourse, that is, that is in principle at least, defeasible and endlessly revisable, and wherein expertise can be gained by understanding clearly defined ideas, principles and observable or self-evident facts.Janus

    I like what you said, but couldn't it be countered that these ostensibly defeasible disciplines also develop their orthodoxies and may be resistant to new ideas or approaches they view as outliers and heretics?
  • What is it to be Enlightened?
    iberation from ignorance and union with the Ultimate are central to Platonism.
    — Apollodorus

    I think that language belongs much more to Plotinus than to Plato, and even more so to later Christian Platonism. Do you think you might tend to evaluate Platonism from a Christian Platonist perspective?
    Wayfarer

    To be honest, before I started this OP, I had a view that enlightenment was probably understood just as @Apollodorus has so succinctly described.

    The area I find most interesting at the moment is the idea of this liberation from ignorance. Or the attainment of divine knowledge (what is the best term?) In the tradition that @Apolloduros has described, is it generally understood that union and knowledge are always concomitant?
  • Is "no reason" ever an acceptable answer?
    I always find it sad (OK, and a bit funny) to see atheists contort themselves in an effort to deny the reality of the Creator. Atheism is an irrational worldview.

    Nothing personal, just an observation.
    Photios

    I always find it sad (OK and a bit funny) to see theists contort themselves in an effort to prove the reality of a creator. Theism is an irrational worldview.

    Nothing personal, just an observation.