Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
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If you're not careful, she might throw the bood at you.
What are some of these contradictions that you mentioned. I am particularly interested in what contradictions you believe exist in the bible.
Just because someone says something is bad, doesn't make it bad. This is part of growing up: being able to judge for ourselves rather than having to take the word of a parent. In this story the parent figure is God, who is supposed to be all-knowing. The story was written by people, though, who put into the mouth of all-knowing God the human foible of demanding blind obedience to a lie. Not the first time thatIn the case in question, they were explicitly *told* what was bad, what not to do.
He might very well have included Kali. Keep in mind that many non-Christian traditions believe in some form of reincarnation, in which life and death are a cycle, the essence of the natural rhythm of the world, both literally and figuratively. What does it even mean to destroy death? Human immortality? Life after death in the form of Christian heaven? A new earthly life following reincarnation? Repose in the summerland? Viewing death as an enemy is not necessarily the healthiest and most productive attitude. This author echoes the gist of many other more extensive and documented treatments of the subject. See the Pagels book for one that is much more scholarly in nature, at the cost of much greater length.And Death is the natural end of life, but God is supernatural. "The last enemy to be destroyed is death."
I read "The Wisdom of the Serpent" and my bullshit detectors clogged within seconds.
Too many errors to list; but chronological snobbery; taking scriptures out of context (cutting a phrase in half and basing his argument only on half of it);
speculation presented as fact; presentation of Christian heresy (Gnosis) as being representative doctrine; sweeping human sacrifice under the rug in passing; and linking materialism
(matter and nature as soulless, mechanistic) to Christianity rather than the occult / magic. Not to mention historical inaccuracy -- he actually claims that
giving up animal and human sacrifices gave rise to violence in the arts, and violent crime. And the Hermetic movement being supposedly inspired by Hermes Trismegistus,
but really dependent upon Taoism? Which one is it? (I can't think of anything particularly "earthy" and "feminine" about Tao...mining comes from goddess worship? Srsly?)
The piece as a whole struck me as trying to throw everything he could think of against a wall, to see what sticks.
Most telling, in Williams' work: "Death is not her enemy but simply an aspect of her rhythm." vs. "The last enemy to be destroyed is death."
I'm surprised he didn't bring in Kali and the Thuggees as part of this...
Many feminists do embrace this analogy, since in many pre-Christian and even pre-Judaic religions, the serpent was a symbol of the Goddess and a bringer of wisdom. The author of this piece makes this point, and I think even points out the one legacy of that which has persisted: the snakes on the caduceus symbol representing medicine (healing wisdom). I have long considered snakes a positive and even mystical symbol. Perhaps that is part of why I could never buy Slytherin House as all evil. If that series uses the rat to represent a traitor, a dog to represent loyalty, perhaps JKR used the snake for wisdom after all....for the nonce, you do realize that part of Williams' writing is accusing the essential element of the female as being a snake. I'm sure the gender feminists would just *love* that...![]()
You are approaching theology as though it is a model designed to either be intellectually satisfying, or to have predictive capability.
Theology (on its own terms) purports not to derive as a model by hypothesis / testing / revision, but but reason coupled with revelation;
and to act not through intellectual knowledge, but through the heart, through trust.
The quip is often made that "in the beginning, Man Created God" and Voltaire's line that "if God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent Him":
but theology maintains the opposite: that God, in creating man, was theomorphic.
As an interesting contrast, compare the Greco-Roman deities -- being jealous of humans and competing with one another, killing their own offspring to secure their positions,
having affairs...*those* sound like gods made in the image of man. And the worship of those gods included getting drunk or having sex with temple prostitutes.
If you claim religion is used to justify what people want to do anyway? Hmm, sure.
Compare to the Old Testament: ONE God, not a multitude of Gods corresponding to different geographical areas -- instead of 'sacred groves' and holiness inhering to a *spot*, *mankind* is sanctified:
"Be holy, for I am holy," the Old Testament God says, "For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so my ways are higher than yours"...and instead of commanding drunkenness and fornication
as His worship, the command is to give to the poor, to not defraud the widows and powerless; instructions on ritual cleanliness (including burying feces outside the camp); and wonder of wonders,
The Ten Commandments (granted, our society doesn't do so good on only worshipping God, or keeping the Sabbath Day, and the entire advertising industry kind of screws the entire "thou shalt not covet")...(1)
And the Jewish Law contains prohibitions on loan sharking (usury), restrictions on slavery and indentured servitude, and requirements for witnesses in death penalty cases.
So there is a "test case" as it were, between a God claimed to not have been invented by Man, and gods whom everyone pretty much agrees were man-made.
As far as belief vs. knowledge: there is a difference between intellectual belief in "there is *a* God" and the belief, the relationship, with the Christian God. It is the difference between savoir and connaître,
the difference between "why" (cause and effect, mechanistic) and "why" (teleology, purpose, artistic effect).
(1) Stephen Prager has an interesting piece on the Jewish insistence on monogamy, and what this practice has meant for society.
Dennis Prager -- Judaism's Sexual Revolution: Why Judaism (and then Christianity) Rejected Homosexuality
As I listened to the various atheists I knew that Sam Harris was the most dangerous to religion.
As a neuro scientist Sam Harris had a rigorous logical critique of religion, and as a long term meditator Sam Harris had a deep spirituality. And it is this combination of logic and spirituality that makes him so dangerous.
And as Sam invites us to join him in logical analysis and meditation in his new book Waking Up: Spirituality Without Religion it looks like perhaps I was right.
I'm agnostic but I've actually been looking into Buddhism lately. I don't know enough to actually claim to be a Buddhist though.
I personally believe in the power of humans, rather than the power of gods. I always thought that instead of being concerned about a gods judgement, I'd rather abide by my own. I want to do good things but I don't feel that I need anybody to tell me how to achieve this. However, there could always be a possibility, I just don't know.
I'm also a big believer in individual power and spirituality. Finding inner peace within yourself and living well due to personal satisfaction, not by superficial or materialistic success. I love to try and bring harmony and happiness to others, it makes me happy. This is what brings me solace, not religion.
I know not everyone would be happy with that kind of life philosophy but that's okay. Just do whatever makes you happy.
I haven't read the Bible myself, feel free to correct me if I'm wrong to assume the Bible contains a contradiction within the confine of it's own story line (disregarding the factual contradictions in relation to science (such as the virgin birth of Jesus)).
I assume some are contradictions between the old testament and the new testament.
Contradictions in the Bible poster | Contradictions in the Bible | Project Reason
The actual image (you can zoom in);
https://sciencebasedlife.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/biblecontradictions-reasonproject.png
Perhaps this too,
A List Of Biblical Contradictions
Do you contest the claim that there are contradictory/inconsistent statements in the Bible?
Is it better for scientists to be the subject of ridicule rather than suspicion?Part of this is the myopic and blinkered contrasting of good science or good atheism versus bad religion which is unfair at the very, very best but I also think it is a consequence of vogues and fashions in thinking, virtually any and all suspicions of science has disappeared from contemporary society. Mad science or mad scientists are in the popular imagination the endearing and quirky Sheldon Cooper type and not some terrible Dr Mengele or human caterpillar type.
Is it better for scientists to be the subject of ridicule rather than suspicion?
Science is nothing more than a methodical approach to understanding the natural world, intended to allow repeatible prediction of or influence over future events. Though modern formulations of the "scientific method" are - well - modern, humans have been doing this one way or another since we have existed. It is part of human nature.
Why would the product of human experience, interpretation and understanding be anything other than a precisely that?
A human, all too human product.
Science doesnt possess the sort of internal consistency that you are suggesting religion should, certainly not over historical time and science does not possess anything like the time line of religion which has existed from very beginnings of human consciousness, in fact playing an important role as a driver in the development of human consciousness itself.
Any history of science which is not going to be merely a set of simplistic or reductive observations about research methodology, ie testable, falsifiable hypothesis as theorising, is going to include things such as phrenology, mesmerism, animal magneticism etc.
Part of this is the myopic and blinkered contrasting of good science or good atheism versus bad religion which is unfair at the very, very best but I also think it is a consequence of vogues and fashions in thinking, virtually any and all suspicions of science has disappeared from contemporary society. Mad science or mad scientists are in the popular imagination the endearing and quirky Sheldon Cooper type and not some terrible Dr Mengele or human caterpillar type.
Would the highlighted have been a better situation for humanity?I'm not sure about your question, I dont believe superstition is a good thing, I actually see religion as an alternative to superstition though so we may differ on that point, it depends on your view of religion I guess.
As to whether or not scientists be subject to ridicule, I dont think that would be helpful to anyone, why do you suggest that? And why is it matter that you either have superstition or ridiculous science? That sounds like the choice of no choice really.
I think that science does indeed comprise methodology but it also involves a philosophy, ie that things can be knowable in the first place, that there is something to know, that there is a reason to know, that there is objective truth and it is knowable and then a lot of myriad things which follow from all that as first principles.
Maybe that is human nature and maybe it isnt, there is an argument to be made that a lot of cognition and consciousness is compensatory, ie that drives being obstructed or channelled differently by external events, ie war, famine, contest, defeat, victory etc. resulted the growth of cultural explanation, story telling and narrative. If everyone had been able to live without any challenges compelling growth then we would still be idyllic herd animals of a lesser nature than we are today, its one other literary or not literal interpretation of the Genesis story as leaving this paradisical early state, perhaps a "fool's paradise" but a paradise all the same.
I'm an atheist, though I went to a Christian school and have many friends of other faiths so I think I know enough about religion to discuss it. I realise that other people are religious but I will not silence my lack of belief out of 'respect' for their belief.
Marx said it well that religion is the 'sigh of the oppressed creature' -people look to religion for hope that even if their life is shit now, maybe if they follow a load of rules now, after they die it will be better. So many religious beliefs and theories have been proven incorrect by modern technology. Creationists fighting to keep teaching about evolution out of schools are lying and impeding progress. Hopefully one day everyone will be educated well in the true facts of the universe and religion will die out. Every surge of scientific discovery is suppressed by religion and it has contributed to many problems facing the world today- sexism, homophobia etc. Plus the amount of religiously-justified wars and attacks.
Although it can help some with moral guidance, people should decide for themselves instead of blindly following rules (which has never helped anything) If the only thing stopping someone from raping is the idea of hell, rather than not wanting to hurt someone in that way, is that good? ...
“I have grown tired of the articulate utterances of men and things. The Mystical in Art, the Mystical in Life, the Mystical in Nature this is what I am looking for. It is absolutely necessary for me to find it somewhere.†Oscar Wilde
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Please tell me what other gods you worship. Don't bore me by saying that you are an agnostic. Please accept my apologies if you have already mentioned this and I have missed it.