
Moderator: felix dakat

omar wrote:How about you present those religious feelings and expose them to the same standards you have used for those "cargo" religions? Just what exactly do you believe?
The Watcher wrote:And yes Felix, I just defended you. you see, I am Neutral after all.
felix dakat wrote:I can't believe in any conception of God that I can understand.
James S Saint wrote:Felix conspicuously disfavors Christianity, and thus probably favors any competitor.
It is one thing to support what you believe. It is another to attack or attempt to persuade against what you do not believe.
In a strictly logic oriented or scientific sense, there is nothing wrong with attacking any theory. But this isn't Science. And even if it were, what is the point in attacking one with persuasion tactics if you don't have a specific other with which you wish to replace it. But then if you DO have such a wish, then like is accused, you should not be moderating as such imbalances the table of just pursuit of truth.
The issue is one of being a true altruist (the willingness to go by the exact rules regardless of preferences). But being an altruist is currently a social taboo.
James S Saint wrote:felix dakat wrote:I can't believe in any conception of God that I can understand.
Emm.. huh?
You can't believe in the concept that reality has actual unimpeachable rules, that somethings are simply impossible?
felix dakat wrote:I don't know what that means. Why believe in a concept at all? Eliminate the middle man [the concept]. Concepts are idols. Go straight for the reality itself. That's the ticket.
James S Saint wrote:felix dakat wrote:I don't know what that means. Why believe in a concept at all? Eliminate the middle man [the concept]. Concepts are idols. Go straight for the reality itself. That's the ticket.
In other words, you don't know what the word "concept" means.
Okay, maybe I should use a different wording;
You can't believe that some things are simply impossible?
I'm saying skip the concepts and get in touch reality itself. But, of course, you use my words as an opportunity to play a game of One Up-One Down, cuz that is how you roll. Always nice talkin' to ya James. Those are wants, not beliefs.Just what exactly do you believe?
I want to be a Christian in my heart. I want to be like Jesus in my heart.
I can't believe in any conception of God that I can understand.
Let me figure this out:
'...Meister Eckhart would not even admit that God was good....Eckhart's position was that anything that was good can become better, and whatever may become better may become best. God cannot be referred to as "good", "better", or best because He is above all things. If a man says that God is wise, the man is lying because anything that is wise can become wiser. Anything that a man might say about God is incorrect, even calling Him by the name of God. God is "superessential nothingness" and "transcendent Being"..."beyond all words and beyond all understanding. The best a man can do is remain silent, because anytime he prates on about God, he is committing the sin of lying. The true master knows that if he had a God he could understand, He would never hold Him to be God.' (Andrew Davidson, The Gargoyle, pp.140-41 [from Wikipedia])
phyllo wrote:I would say that Felix is hostile towards religion but so what. He is well qualified to moderate it. This isn't a Religion Forum, it's an Atheist Religion Forum. It's a place for the atheists of ILP to go and attack religion directly. If you post here then be prepared for the usual talk about brainwashing, delusion, pink unicorns and imaginary friends. A theist who wants to constructively discuss religion and spirituality has to find another internet forum.
Flannel Jesus wrote:a christian who's hostile towards atheism is at least as, and probably a lot more, unqualified to moderate a religion subforum of a philosophy forum than someone hostile towards religion. i've seen forums with mods like that. yuck.
felix dakat wrote:The Watcher wrote:And yes Felix, I just defended you. you see, I am Neutral after all.
Thanks Watcher. I need all the defense I can get. If you are God, I don't believe in you. Does that make me an atheist?
omar wrote:Hello Felix,
--- I want to be a Christian in my heart.
O- What exactly does that mean? Falwell was a christian. Is that what you want to be in your heart?
--- I want to be like Jesus in my heart.
O- And believe in a God that requires a human sacrifice to save us. Doesn't matter that it was one of His persons that He let be crucified, but the principle that this had to be the way. Is any salvation paid by the life of an innocent worth it? But since he was resurrected, then we must ask whether the immense suffering of an innocent...is that sort of means ever justified by the end?
--- I can't believe in any conception of God that I can understand. That could be the definition of negative theology which is what you say you practice.
O- I know what I practice, but just like I can defend Christian orthodoxy, which I don't believe, I can also attack negative theology, because, at the end of the day, it is MY CHOICE. If I hold this belief it is not because it is the only tenable belief or the only belief that stands up to scrutinity. Not at all. Rather it is a conscious choice one has to make. In Franz kafka's "The Trial" there is one scene where the protagonist sits in a Church waiting for someone. Eventually he gets up, tired of waiting, and begins to walk out, but before he makes it out he hears his name loudly. He pauses for a second and realizes that he might as well pretend he didn't hear or walk out regardless. Let me use the text:
"At the moment he was still free: he could walk on and leave through one of the three small dark wooden doors not far from him. That would mean he hadn't understood or that he had understood but couldn't be bothered to respond. But if he turned around he was caught, for then he would have confessed that he understood quite well, that he really was the person being named, and that he was prepared to obey."
This could be a metaphor of the jewish community confronting the Catholics, but you can use it even in our collective dilema.
Negative theology has many levels. It can be the basis of agnosticism or an ingredient of orthodoxy, as it was, at least for a time, for Augustine. But in itself it is the stance one takes, that one chooses, that determines the scope of our negativity and not a necessity in itself, as it is illogical to think of what is not only.
Those are wants, not beliefs.
:-k Let me figure this out:
If you understand it then you don't believe it.
If you don't understand it then you might believe it.
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--- I want to be a Christian in my heart.
O- What exactly does that mean? Falwell was a christian. Is that what you want to be in your heart?
--- I want to be like Jesus in my heart.
O- And believe in a God that requires a human sacrifice to save us. Doesn't matter that it was one of His persons that He let be crucified, but the principle that this had to be the way. Is any salvation paid by the life of an innocent worth it? But since he was resurrected, then we must ask whether the immense suffering of an innocent...is that sort of means ever justified by the end?
No doubt mine is on a lower level. Lately my mysticism has given place to skepticism. But these kinds of changes are dynamic and can change with significant life events or depth experiences. I try to stay open. Intellectual foreclosure = spiritual death.Negative theology has many levels.
I understand. Thanks for the explanation.Understand? No? No problem.
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