Atheists don’t seem amazed at how believers see some things as exactly they do, but also still see God. Atheists seem to think if someone doesn’t agree with them, about God, then that person isn’t really reasoning, which is amazing to me in itself - like willful blindness (which is a metaphor and a paradox but apt nonetheless). — Fire Ologist
There is no actual interest in or curiosity about gaining some sense of what an experience with faith and God are to people who actually have faith, and who pray to God. — Fire Ologist
And, despite all the offers to discuss God and uses of “God” in their sentences, they already seem to know that God cannot exist, whatever “god” refers to anyway. — Fire Ologist
With no curiosity, most atheists seem to immediately see our reason was a facade; our authentic, irrational, childish selves actually annimate all of our now debased arguments. Any sort of distinct “faith” and actual “god” that the believer experiences can have nothing to do with it. — Fire Ologist
I get wisdom out of many seemingly irreconcilable places and people. That always amazes me. There are clearly many smart people around here that don’t see God. When they see other things I see, I am amazed at how perfectly they can see them without seeing God. — Fire Ologist
I did not enjoy The Great Gatsby. — Jamal
Bjelke Petersen's press statements...."feeding the chooks". In reference to giving the press a purpose. — kazan
it's amazing to see how Adorno, for example, connects the most abstract theories about epistemology and metaphysics with practical concerns. — Jamal
So when Marx says the philosophers have only interpreted the world and the point, however, is to change it, Adorno interprets this as meaning that the point of philosophy is to change it, not that we should stop philosophizing and man the barricades. — Jamal
In many discussions I hear people always dive into details and see the discussions go south.
How important are details?
Copilot told me: “ It’s like painting with broad brush strokes while occasionally adding a few fine lines to bring the image to life.” I think its metaphore is spot on. — Jan
I don’t get it. Tom doesn’t claim that faith is inherently irrational in that post or the couple of subsequent posts. — praxis
A babe uses "mum", understanding who mum is, and yet cannot provide a definition. Definitions are secondary and derivative, not foundational. Use is at the centre of language. — Banno
I would say that intuitions are certainly feelings and the question would be as to whether they are anything more than that. We think an intuition is true if it "feels right". I wonder how else we could gauge its seeming truth. We can theorize further and posit noesis, direct knowledge, innate intelligibility and so on, but we have no way of testing those theories. — Janus
Again, I agree entirely. I put stock in my own intuitions, but I would never claim that anyone else ought to believe anything on account of what I believe in following my own intuitions. So, the point for me is that intuitive knowledge is not amenable to intersubjective corroboration. — Janus
I would say that the amount of material goods one needs will tend to vary by culture and time. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or perhaps a better way to put it is that they take on special relevance in a culture where they are almost required for membership and recognition. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or perhaps the list of material goods you have mentioned are simply not the most important things for happiness? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Isn't this precisely what people like Laotze and St. Francis thought they were doing by telling people to stop following worldly ambitions, helping others? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm one of the most fortunate people in the history of the world. — T Clark
I do not buy into the idea that it is simply due to plumbing convenience as we do not find toilets, baths or showers in kitchen areas. — I like sushi
Interestingly you see bath tubs in kitchens in old New York apartments. I remember seeing the painter Francis Bacon's apartment in London and it had a bath in his kitchen too. — Tom Storm
What's dawning on me is not at all romantic: it's the fear of God's judgement which is said to occur at the time of death. (That struck me recently when I watched a feature on Mt Athos, in an interview with the head monk.) In Buddhist terms, no God is involved, but Buddhists have just as vivid a depiction of the hell realms as well as the other realms which await one in the next life. That scares me a lot more than the idea that death is simply the end — Wayfarer
Me, I'm wrestling with it. I think a lot of what is said about it is obviously mythical, but it remains, for me, at least an open question, and something that nags me, now I'm in my 70's. And that if it turns out to be real after all, it could be the ultimate in rude awakenings. — Wayfarer
Some of our understandings may turn out to be incomplete or even wrong, to be sure. Is that what you mean when you refer to "true comprehension"? — Janus
You mentioned "complexities beneath our experiences"; by that I take you mean things we cannot gain cognitive access to? — Janus
So, when I say we obviously comprehend the world, I'm only speaking in an everyday sense — Janus
Animals comprehend their environments through forming habits too. Habit is a sign of comprehension, in other words. — Janus
I don't think we can infer unmediated access to a noumenal reality; I don't even really know what that could mean, and I certainly don't think it could be important. — Janus
I don't know what you mean by "suppressing our metaphysical assumptions" ̶ did you mean "supposing"? — Janus
We find the world to be comprehensible, so I don't see a need for any assumptions in that matter — Janus
We feel the sunlight and wind on our skins. We feel the force when we throw objects or wield a hammer or strain to walk up a steep hill and in all our bodily activities. — Janus
G.K. Chesterton has a great quote here: "The whole modern world has divided itself into Progressives and Conservatives. The business of Progressives is to go on making mistakes. The business of Conservatives is making sure they never get fixed." — Count Timothy von Icarus
We don't need to make assumptions, in the sense of holding some metaphysical view or other, to do science, and I count science as part of philosophy. We don't even have to make assumptions in order to critically examine metaphysical assumptions. — Janus
This forum, to me, is not really the place to account for God and suffering, as that would take Bible quotes and histories of saints and in the end, we will only be able to answer how God allows suffering by asking God, so if there is no God to you, there is not only no need to ask the question, but no need to think there would be an answer discoverable through our own reason. — Fire Ologist
Sure, it's perfectly good way to use the word, and my own preference. But I hope you also agree with me that "how to use the word correctly" (assuming this could even be determined) is much less important than understanding the issues various philosophers are raising when they talk about being, truth, structure, logic, et al. Who knows, it might turn out that the word is dispensable entirely, but the questions raised under its banner won't therefore go away. We might just need more perspicuous ways of talking about them. — J
I envision a system that elects leaders, that discards political parties entirely, and where we vote for ideas and not ideologies, empty dogma, or just the parties themselves. Our democratic system, while good in theory, doesn't actually work, because nobody is taking responsibility and nobody can be held accountable. We point fingers, we change political parties or representatives, but the fundamental issues remain. What good is politics if it doesn't serve the common man? — Martijn
Q
The only way that Q can be true is if P
therefore, P
I suggested that the issue is it's reliance minor premise; that there may be other ways, unimagined by ourselves, in which Q can be true that are not dependent on P being true. — Banno
I find it interesting that you associate this sort of thing with Peterson. Nietzsche has tended to be more fodder for the left, and I think the "death of God" tends to get rolled out more often by post-structuralists, or at least Continentals more generally, than anyone else. The "political right" has, by contrast, tended towards "God never died in the first place" (or "if 'God is dead and we have killed him,' nonetheless he is risen!"), holding up living traditions as a counterpoint to modernity. — Count Timothy von Icarus
My response all along has been the special pleading of religion as evil, not denying it can be evil. — Hanover
If we should examine each of the tens of thousands of bullets suspended in air, now in midflight, and place each under the microscope to decipher what anger is embeded in each of them, I'd suspect that remarkably few have thoughts of God and ancient theologies within them — Hanover
The hail of gunfire in Ukraine, for example, is a better example of mass destruction than 9/11. What intention do you suppose is impregnated in those bullets, the advancement of Christianity, Judaism, Islam? That doesn't seem right. Probably a drive for natural resources, the rebuilding of a fallen empire, or a a diversion from a failing economy? Secular interests that is. — Hanover
I simply believe that anything we find 'normal', including all our behaviours and attitudes, are shaped by the stories we tell ourselves. — Martijn
