How dare you grab my attention just to tell me to stop grabbing yours.
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Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 27th, 2023, 11:17 am As an atheist, I still find myself uttering phrases such as “Oh, my god!”, “God only knows!”, “Heaven help us!”, “Why the hell did you do that?”… I don’t think that this is an indication that I haven’t fully ditched religion; that I still harbor belief in god(s) or hopes of ending up in heaven and not hell when I die. It’s just habit, and an indication of how deeply these expressions, which denote shock, surprise, fear, etcetera, are imbedded in our language. I understand that they just express emotions and that they do not refer to anything that I consider to be unreal such as gods, heaven or hell. By continuing to utter them, I don’t think I’m subconsciously trying to keep a foot in both camps.I think you've asked a thought-provoking question. In considering it, I find it helpful to refer to William James' working definition of religion that he offers in The Varieties of Religious Experience, and which I believe can be applied also to what's commonly called 'spirituality' as well:
On the spectrum of belief in the supernatural, it seems to me that there are atheists like me at one end and, at the other end of the spectrum, there are fully practicing religious believers who organize their lives around religion, some of whom even go around knocking on doors in an effort to convert others to their religion. Between these extremes there are agnostics who just don’t know. I this middle area, I understand that there are also those who call themselves “non-religious but spiritual”. Some of these even say that they don’t believe in anything supernatural and yet they still call themselves “spiritual”.
It may be an indication of my own limitations, but I have trouble getting my head around this section of the middle area of the spectrum. If one does not believe in the supernatural then surely one is an atheist, no? What does it mean, what could it mean, to be a “spiritual” atheist? Is it just trying to keep a foot in both camps? Is there a way to be a spiritual atheist and still maintain a straight face? Are there any spiritual atheists here who could tell us how they manage it?
Were one asked to characterize the life of religion in the broadest and most general terms possible, one might say that it consists of the belief that there is an unseen order, and our supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting ourselves thereto.Like James, I think that this is what lies at the heart of both theistic belief and non-religious spirituality - the sense that there is more to our life than just our mere physical existence and that we are called to something beyond it. Though some people find that they can best give expression to this understanding of an unseen order through participation in religious communities or traditions that involve belief in God, others find it more meaningful to articulate this in other ways that don't involve the concept of gods or religions at all. But I think the essence is the same, and in fact I'd argue that in its most rudimentary form, religion or spirituality is akin to morality: the deep sense that other persons or living beings have rights and that we have duties to honor those rights - these ideas are precisely the kind of 'unseen order' that James is describing and that virtually all humans are naturally drawn to 'adjust ourselves thereto' in one way or another, whether religious or not. Religions are just differently structured approaches to the same questions about how and why we should live. So it does not seem contradictory to me at all for an atheist to consider themselves 'spiritual'. Actually, I'd suggest that the opposite of spiritual is materialist - one who sees no purpose beyond their own material existence - rather than atheist.
Mr. Peirce, after pointing out that our beliefs are really rules for action, said that, to develop a thought’s meaning, we need only determine what conduct it is fitted to produce: that conduct is for us its sole significance.God, however one might define the term, is really part of a set of complex foundational beliefs by which a person orients their life and directs their own moral purpose and their actions in life. For some people, that belief may take the form of a living, conscious and intelligent entity, but for others it may be simply an inner sense of what is right and good. But ultimately, these are the same. With this understanding, one could argue that many more people actually have gods that just those who identify them as such.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑October 29th, 2023, 9:52 amSome claims are true a priori just as a matter of logic: 1=1=2, is indisputably true. It cannot be logically questioned.Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 28th, 2023, 10:31 pm I find it strange how some people think that it's up to those who dispute a claim to disprove a negative. For example, I don't believe claims such as "there is a pink teapot in orbit around Mars". I believe for many sound reasons that this claim is vanishingly unlikely to be true. And if someone then turns around and says, but you cannot prove it's not true, I don't feel it's up to me to prove it's not true. It's up to the person making the extraordinary claim to provide evidence for it. Saying simply that nobody cannot prove it is not true, is no argument in favor of the claim, and no reason for agnosticism on the issue. As I see it, it's the same for claims about gods, fairies, ESP, astrology, etcetera. If people want to convince others of the likely truth of such extraordinary claims the best way to do so is to provide evidence for them. They are never able to do so because there is no such evidence, and just saying, well, you cannot prove fairies are not true, is no argument at all. It's just a philosophically bad move. And it's childish.There's a lot to unravel here, but there are several strands that can be identified and discussed. Perhaps the most fundamental one is binary thinking? You seem to think that if you do not "believe" (i.e. accept) something, you must reject it, or vice versa. Not so.
You claim a commitment to logic, but seem unwilling to follow it. If you would like to determine whether something is true or false, but have no logically-sufficient reason to justify either conclusion — perhaps because of a lack of evidence? That's the usual reason — then you must accept a third possibility: "maybe"/"unresolved"/"don't know".
And so, if we apply logic — and let's apply no other tool but logic, for simplicity and clarity — to "there is a pink teapot in orbit around Mars", we discover that we have no logically-sufficient reason to dismiss it. But that does not mean that we must accept it. The third option now comes into play: the matter is unresolved, maybe even unresolvable. To accept would be illogical (i.e. not in accord with the rules of logic). To reject would be illogical (i.e. not in accord with the rules of logic). If we accept and abide by the rules of logic, we are compelled not to reach a conclusion, because there is no logically-sufficient reason to do so.
The practical way to deal with all this is to accept the above, but not to feel compelled to deal with a problem that holds less interest for us than other problems do. There are a near-infinite number of 'maybes' that we could choose to consider, and only a few philosophers or scientists to consider them, it doesn't really matter which of them we choose to examine. We have to apply 'common sense'.
So I agree with you, that the pink teapot idea doesn't interest me. And so I choose to set it aside, in favour of ideas that interest me more. But, if I am to remain in accordance with logic, I may not reject it, but only set it aside, and put it back on the Maybe pile, where it should probably remain, gathering dust.
Another strand we could consider is likelihood, or probability, if we formalise our use of a statistical vocabulary. You happily claim that some things are unlikely/improbable — "vanishingly unlikely" — when you have no means or technique that might justify such a conclusion. And again, we return to conclusions reached without logical justification. Without evidence, logic tells us there is no valid argument that could lead to a logically-valid conclusion. And statistics can't work in the absence of data (evidence).
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 28th, 2023, 10:31 pm Saying simply that nobody cannot prove it is not true, is no argument in favor of the claim, and no reason for agnosticism on the issue.The first part is correct; the latter part is not. Agnosticism is the Maybe option, it neither accepts nor rejects. It is the only conclusion that is in accord with logic, when there is no valid argument that would allow a firmer conclusion. And so, in the final words of your sentence, "there is *every* reason for agnosticism on the issue"
FrankSophia wrote: ↑October 27th, 2023, 2:16 pm (I can speak on many religions in this way, because I have looked into each with insight rather than from ignorance)Nobody is a sage.
(I am not religious because taking a position before inquiry is unreasonable)
(I favor philosophy because it provides tools to find out)
(I am a sage because I let go of ignorance)
Never call yourself a philosopher, nor talk a great deal among the unlearned about theorems, but act conformably to them. Thus, at an entertainment, don't talk how persons ought to eat, but eat as you ought. For remember that in this manner Socrates also universally avoided all ostentation. And when persons came to him and desired to be recommended by him to philosophers, he took and- recommended them, so well did he bear being overlooked. So that if ever any talk should happen among the unlearned concerning philosophic theorems, be you, for the most part, silent. For there is great danger in immediately throwing out what you have not digested. And, if anyone tells you that you know nothing, and you are not nettled at it, then you may be sure that you have begun your business. For sheep don't throw up the grass to show the shepherds how much they have eaten; but, inwardly digesting their food, they outwardly produce wool and milk. Thus, therefore, do you likewise not show theorems to the unlearned, but the actions produced by them after they have been digested., Epictetus, "The Enchiridion"
“What’s likely, gentlemen, is that in reality it’s the god who is wise, and that in this oracle he is saying that human wisdom is worth little or nothing ... as if he were saying ‘he among you humans is wisest who, like Socrates, knows that he’s really worth nothing when it comes to wisdom’.”
Socrates, in Plato’s "Apology"
chewybrian wrote: ↑October 29th, 2023, 8:14 pm Nobody is a sage.Stoics believe only the sage is happy, so you're saying they actually mean no one is happy?
The stoics understood that this was a goal to approach which could never be achieved. The oracle told Socrates that nobody was wiser, and he spent the rest of his life trying to disprove this assertion.
I don't recall Socrates calling people stupid or getting angry at them while at the same time asserting that they had no control over anything they did. I don't recall him telling people that they were so unworthy of his time and attention that he should not be required to support his positions. I don't recall Socrates or Epictetus or Marcus or Seneca claiming to be a sage.
FrankSophia wrote: ↑October 29th, 2023, 11:35 am What it you that brought up Advaita Vedanta?Much of what you write here (that I've read) is either quantum physics jargon or Advaita Vedanta (I am guessing) jargon.Nevertheless from my limited knowledge of those I may see the notions you see. Can you express your interesting ideas in everyday language and assist my understanding ?
Every Seguna has particular attributes, transcending this reveals Nirguna Brahman... this coincides with the same inquiry into the self through neti neti, and thus there is only nirguna.
This is jivanmukti... liberation from maya, matter.
Belindi wrote: ↑October 30th, 2023, 8:47 am Much of what you write here (that I've read) is either quantum physics jargon or Advaita Vedanta (I am guessing) jargon.Nevertheless from my limited knowledge of those I may see the notions you see. Can you express your interesting ideas in everyday language and assist my understanding ?Seguna means with attributes, it is an important concept within Advaita.
(BTW I conscienciously Googled Seguna and discovered no philosophical, or physics ,information.)
Lagayscienza wrote: ↑October 30th, 2023, 9:44 am I don’t pay any heed to religious doctrine or dogma. I hate it, and it's one of the reasons I hate organized religions - especially the Abrahamic sort. However, I do feel an affinity for forms of Advaita Vedanta that deny gods and souls. As I understand it, the central thesis of my form of Vedanta is that gods and souls are entities that don’t exist. There is only “Absolute Reality” or “Ground of All Being” which is an unchanging, eternal, reality beyond all human description or comprehension.I don't know what your "form of Vedanta" is, but the central thesis of Vedanta is not that gods and souls do not exist but rather that the ultimate reality, often referred to as "Brahman," is the foundational and unchanging reality that underlies everything, including gods, souls, and the entire universe.
FrankSophia wrote: ↑October 30th, 2023, 8:27 amI can't know the subjective experience of others, but I suspect there is a lot of truth to that. I don't really feel happy by studying and practicing philosophy. I'm just less angry, sad or afraid, and I function better and achieve most of what I set out to achieve. I could project that experience onto others, but that doesn't seem fair. The only people I've known that *seemed* truly happy to me were my grandmother and great aunt. I attribute this to their true belief in their religion. They never displayed their beliefs or tried to use them for power or prestige, or tried to argue that their beliefs implied any duty or restriction on anyone else. Yet, it seemed to me that their belief brought them a peace of mind few others seemed to have.chewybrian wrote: ↑October 29th, 2023, 8:14 pm Nobody is a sage.Stoics believe only the sage is happy, so you're saying they actually mean no one is happy?
The stoics understood that this was a goal to approach which could never be achieved. The oracle told Socrates that nobody was wiser, and he spent the rest of his life trying to disprove this assertion.
I don't recall Socrates calling people stupid or getting angry at them while at the same time asserting that they had no control over anything they did. I don't recall him telling people that they were so unworthy of his time and attention that he should not be required to support his positions. I don't recall Socrates or Epictetus or Marcus or Seneca claiming to be a sage.
FrankSophia wrote: ↑October 30th, 2023, 8:27 am Would you like to discuss how your position relates to men like Diogenes instead? Most of his best stories are of him making Plato look like an idiot...Diogenes is interesting but not a valuable measuring stick for me. I sometimes recall, for example, that he discarded his cup when he saw a child drinking from his hand. I don't follow by discarding my coffee mug, but I use his example to make me feel that small 'sacrifices' like cooking at home rather than eating out are not so much of a burden that I can't bear them. Epictetus lived very simply but did not flaunt his simple lifestyle or take it to extremes as Diogenes did, and I prefer his example.
FrankSophia wrote: ↑October 30th, 2023, 8:27 am If you're right though I can just move to a different label, the most accurate I've found is brahmavadhut.I'm disputing the concept, the sentiment, the very idea that one should claim that they are wise, not the choice of the label. It seems to me that the wise seldom if ever claim to be so, but rather let their ideas speak for themselves, and worry little if others see them as wise or not. In fact, I suspect that a wise man would not consider himself wise. This is what a seemingly wise man says to me which seems relevant:
"If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid with regard to external things. Don't wish to be thought to know anything; and even if you appear to be somebody important to others, distrust yourself. For, it is difficult to both keep your faculty of choice in a state conformable to nature, and at the same time acquire external things. But while you are careful about the one, you must of necessity neglect the other., Epictetus, 'The Enchiridion'"I read your conversations with Pattern Chaser and Lucky, and I did not wish to be drawn in. They seemed to be playing the role of the true philosopher, while you seemed to play the role of the interlocutor which Plato would set up against Socrates, or Arrian would set up against Epictetus. This idea that you think you are a sage was simply to much to bear, so I've given you my opinion, for what it's worth.
Stoppelman wrote: The goal of Vedanta is to attain self-realization or by recognizing the identity of one's individual self with the supreme reality.Yes, that's it.
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