That may apply to some forms of religious beliefs, like Pietism for example, that's not true for religion altogether. Religion has rational aspects as well.
Relligion isn't telling completely random things all the time, but proclaiming (arguably) universal answers is not exactly rational either.
Are you saying philosophy should be purely theoretical and not have any practical implications?
Definition of philosophy quoted from the
Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary
phi·los·o·phy (f-ls-f)
n. pl. phi·los·o·phies
1. Love and pursuit of wisdom by intellectual means and moral self-discipline.
2. Investigation of the nature, causes, or principles of reality, knowledge, or values, based on logical reasoning rather than empirical methods.
3. A system of thought based on or involving such inquiry: the philosophy of Hume.
4. The critical analysis of fundamental assumptions or beliefs.
5. The disciplines presented in university curriculums of science and the liberal arts, except medicine, law, and theology.
6. The discipline comprising logic, ethics, aesthetics, metaphysics, and epistemology.
7. A set of ideas or beliefs relating to a particular field or activity; an underlying theory: an original philosophy of advertising.
8. A system of values by which one lives: has an unusual philosophy of life.
Nowhere does it says that philosophy has to have practical implementations. You have picked which personally which philosophies are useful or beneficial to you and implemented them into your life. To give you an extremely negative example of a philosophy that was implemented in the practical world,
Endlösung der Judenfrage (I pick this example because I assume we don't have to argue about it's negativity, and because I think that you, me or anybody and anything either of us would ever think of sympathising with in the world would implement it, not because I want to place any association with the Catholic church).
My point being, philosophy should have practical implementations only if they allow and guarantee absolute freedom (physical and mental) for everybody, not just the minority, not the majority, but everybody.
I'm not making personal attacks here. The inability to adhere to a certain set of principles is indeed often a sign of intellectual immaturity.
Of course when one is younger one's capacity to grasp the world is limited, so thus changing one's mind is to be expected. However, as one ages, they should be better able to grasp what exactly it is that they believe, why they believe so, and so on - at least when it comes to basic principles. This is one reason why Aristotle suggested men should not be involved in politics before the age of 30, because they too often lack the intellectual maturity to truely handle it.
I would call it 'not being close minded and stubborn'. There, you've got my perspective. Start arguing semantics, or stop mentioning it altogether.
I quite enjoy practising politics and debating, and personally think that Aristotle is wrong if he said that.
Yes you admitted to misinterpreting the Church's message. I commend you for that. However, that should give you pause on making anymore statements about the Church's stances. Rather than do that, you seem to persist on anyways.
Because admitting a mistake is a reason to stop arguing altogether right?
Apologies by Pope John Paul II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
:rolli:
The Church deals with eternal truths, so "progress" is irrelevant here. And even if it was, the begged question always is progress towards what exactly? Progress is a means of measuring how far you are in achieving a particular end; it is not an end in itself.
May I interpret this as admitting that the Church is conservative and considers progress irrelevant?
But unfortunately, it's not so infallible!
It stems from the concept that all human life is sacred; and that human life is conceived in the natural process of procreation. Any artifical means of precluding this process is a violation of the Natural Law. Furthermore it also involves the treating of other human life as more a means to an end than as an end in itself - that is it violates the dignitiy of human life.
That's a rough summary. This is outlined in more detail in Humanae Vitae itself.
Here, from a Vatican spokesman:
A.K.A. Controlling the sexuality of people. At least this part is true, you can argue that it is out of a believe that all human life is sacred, but that doesn't change a thing for the people who don't in essence 'just believe' that contraceptions are wrong. (I won't go as far as saying that a human life is not sacred. I consider that to be true as well, I personally don't see why this has anything to do with contraceptives.)
And was pointed out earlier by Dr. Hearst, changes in sexual behavior was more effective than just simply distributing condoms.
As Dr. Hears pointed out: "Recommendations include increased condom promotion for groups at high risk, more rigorous measurement of the impact of condom promotion, and more research on how best to integrate condom promotion with other prevention strategies."
I may have misinterpreted Humanae Vitae wrong, but this direct quote from the link YOU provided me with seems pretty straight forward. So far nobody has proven to me the point that condom promotion cannot prevent AIDS if done right, or that it actually makes the crisis worse.
I've not made any personal attacks on you. I've countered many of your arguments, and am now pointing out that your arguments thus far lack any real basis or significant understanding of Catholic teaching.
If you wish to inquire further about Catholic teachings, fine. But you need to lay off the speculations and conspiracy theories here.
If you feel this is true, educate me! I don't ever want to reject information, but to be frank, it has to be in a format that appeals to my information in-taking side, instead of a format that puts my heels in the hand because I feel you are on an agenda.
Tell me about what the catholic church's teachings are, factual and without bias and I will listen, not argue. I'll ask questions about things that I'm genuinely wondering about, and will not even provide counter points if you don't want to. I think PM is the best option if you are serious about this, so we won't clog up the forums with threads that might get hijacked by cold-hard arguing, like this one. (I feel at least partially guilty.)
If you don't know where to start, with such a vague post as this, start out by telling me 'Why people believe in god', then go along with telling me 'Why there has to be a god, instead of there not being one'. I always found these questions fascinating, and they provide with both a good philosophical basis, as well as practical information about religion.
Finally I do want to point out to you, that I was raised Catholic, made a conscience choice to abolish god altogether, and that when you are saying that I lack a real basis or significant understanding of Catholic teaching, I feel you are stigmatizing me. In reaction I will say I feel that I have a completely different point of view from you and that in my opinion you just haven't been asking the same questions as me about life, we both came to different answers to our different questions. This however does not mean that I wouldn't enjoy coming to a consensus about practical implication of, at least mine, but preferably both, our answers for the part of the world besides you and me (in this thread, practical implications originally being the teaching of Intelligent Design as a science, eventhough the subject of the thread is apparently shifting to condom use

). However far our stances seem apart right now.