09-16-2007, 08:46 AM | #431 |
Bob Dole
|
Just wanted to add my two cents to the Council of Nicea topic brought up a couple pages ago (can't find it).
There are two real reasons why we accept the Bible being put together how it's put together. Since we acknowledge it as the inspired word of God, we assume he allowed the council to happen, put the right people there at the right time, and had them put the book together as he saw fit. But in addition to that, the Bible is 66 books written by 40 authors over a course of 1500 years. And yet none of the teachings or prophecies in any of the books (taken in context) contradict each other. Also, POST 3000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!1!!OMG!LOL!!111oneel eventyone!!!!x->0sin(x)
__________________
Bob Dole Last edited by Bob The Mercenary; 09-16-2007 at 08:50 AM. |
09-16-2007, 10:47 AM | #432 | |||
Gigity
|
Quote:
As for them not contradicting themselves, well, honestly some parts do, frankly. And Bob, come on man, when in history has the powers that be not tried to manipulate the populace into their own rational. If god allowed the council of nicea, then he allowed the crusades, and the inquisition, all the way back to the apple. Oh and Neyo, the apple is referring to sex. The tree of knowledge, was carnal knowledge. It really goes back to the fact that men, in that time, were disdainful of women. They had no sense of modesty before, no children before, so if you take it as allegory, that makes sense. Quote:
So not only did they divide us, there is a direct reference to Polytheism in the bible Quote:
__________________
Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust
|
|||
09-16-2007, 10:59 AM | #433 | |||||
Everfree
|
Quote:
God had decreed, at some point, somewhere, that men were to spread the world over, yadda yadda yadda. So, clearly, this doodad wouldn't fly in Godtown. Population: Me Therefore, for violating the decree of God or whosiwhatsit, he stomped on their toys and told them to go stand in the corner (s of the earth). And so that they wouldn't talk and joke with their friends in time out... er... I mean, gather in one place on the earth so easily, God fiddled with their talkymabobs. That's the story. It's still kinda'... off, but at least it's off about the correct things, rather than a whole new set of made-up things, which are more derived from the principles of Greek Tragedy than Biblical Morality. [And The Space Pope came in with this before I did. It takes me too long to write this crap...] Quote:
Besides that, the whole thing never seemed, to me, to... I don't know, fit properly with the rest of Biblical works. It has all the earmarks of classical creation myths the world over. Being made of clay accounts for everything from Native American to early Greek. It contains a paradise area (which is suspiciously lacking in Greek, but not in most animistic versions) and an explanation for why things are as hard as they are, via some manner of terrible Aesop. And let's not forget the talking animal and superfluous explanation for why that animal behaves as it does. Not to mention conspicuous explanation for what and why "the sun" separately from "light". Most Creation Narratives (occasionally just separate traditional narratives, admittedly, but they addend the creation of something that might well have simply been in the original narrative) take it upon themselves to explain the sun separately from the creation of everything else. Occasionally, it's made as its own, separate pre-creation being: typically a God. More often it's the result of some action, like theft of fire or guardian of easterly lands or what have you. I have no idea what this means, but there it is. Quote:
It's actually, there, starting to look like Adam and Eve got the good side of that deal, if that's their alternative. Of course, I already felt that way, so who knows? Still, I've often wondered about the assumption that God didn't want people to think... then why did he even put the Knowledgefruit in there anyway? Of course, my mind just goes back to the allegory thing, so it doesn't have to make sense. Quote:
In any case, there, the serpent is just a serpent, as I've heard. Not Satan, just a talking snake. However, it's also possible to consider that it was an act of Satan, but since Satan cannot act against, or even independently, of God's will, it was something God wanted done. I think the Satan-in-God's-court model can also be folded into Christianity to produce a new kind of idea: God was perfectly willing to allow Man to think... it was just not the kind of thing that was going to make us happy, and therefore, Satan would propose it. Knowledge won out, and here we are. Quote:
I know of this construct because it appears in the early formulation of the Philosophy of Science. Or, to be more accurate, Scientific Metaphysics. Scientific Metaphysics assumes the universe is logical because it seeks to examine the universe with logic. It assumes the universe is logical because, if the universe is illogical, there'd be no way to tell. Science would be required to approach it by applying logic to the functioning of the universe, and there would be no way to tell what you get. It could, in fact, appear logical from any standpoint, and then just change because it felt like it. It could (as much as this is somewhat like attributing a mind to the universe, and this is not my point) simply prevent you from obtaining a clear, or even true understanding of how the universe functions, because you are governed by its nonsensical laws. It also plays into the principles of experimental symmetry: which is that, we assume that physical processes work the same at point A as they do at point B. The same for times A and B. This is, in part, because we haven't seen any (recent enough to matter) indication that anything else is true. But, if it were true, and the laws of physics could change depending on where in space you are, there'd be no, legitimate way to tell if the laws of physics are the same everywhere... or just kinda' the same. And testing the different areas may not be able to yield insight, because we don't know how vastly different laws will affect our ability to test, or our results when we test. To be, perhaps less obtuse, if: A. We are governed by the laws of the universe, and B. The laws of the universe make no friggin' sense, then: C. There's no way to tell what we'll see or how we'll interpret it. There is, actually, another model of perception-proof universe that I like to, affectionately call, Rational Universe: One Inch to the Left (after a That 70s Show episode). Which is to say: that universe is rational, but anything your tests and logics don't produce "the universe", but actually an ostensibly identical version "one inch to the left". Effectively, all your science works, but gives you insight only into an odd construct of the base-universe's laws, rather than how the actual universe works. I call it "rational" because it could still very well make sense, and science itself would still work... it just wouldn't actually give insight into the real universe's causes and workings. And these universes may seem contrived, to you, but that's only because of social conditioning. There's no reason to think a rational universe is more likely than any of these. There's no reason to think we live in a rational universe instead of either one of these. Rational universe is not the default, but it is our assumption. It's our assumption for the same reason that Rational Man is the Economist's assumption: it's useless to even bother with anything else. And God damn it we feel like bothering!
__________________
FAILURE IS
LEARNING TO ACCEPT THOSE THINGS I CANNOT CHANGE Last edited by The Kneumatic Pnight; 09-16-2007 at 11:14 AM. |
|||||
09-16-2007, 12:04 PM | #434 | |
for all seasons
|
Quote:
Just the whole God going "Hosnaps, I can't have these fuckers doin' all their thinking and like, cogitating and shit all over my nice pretty garden" and kicking everyone out, that kind of struck me as... I dunno.
__________________
check out my buttspresso
|
|
09-16-2007, 12:29 PM | #435 | |
Everfree
|
Quote:
So, instead of all the events happening, as they would in modern narratives, God comes down and bitches at you. And while it may seem like a giant father-figure coming down and spanking you for breaking your own toys that he has no vested interest in, what it actually is, is nature taking it's course. And what does nature do? It bitchslaps you. For no reason! And, to this extent, I feel it works.
__________________
FAILURE IS
LEARNING TO ACCEPT THOSE THINGS I CANNOT CHANGE |
|
09-16-2007, 04:07 PM | #436 |
Sent to the cornfield
|
Well Neyo asked for a link (but it's early so I'll take the easy option!):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goedel. Our claims about the nature of God fit into mainstream maths and physics. It's not addressed often because it's not all that useful to discuss ( like post-structuralism in the arts) but its always there and looming. It far from a christain copout. Surely you are making the copout, by instead of trying to understand God's nature (if that's possible) you are just assuming He acts and thinks solely like a human? As for things about Eve's eyes being open etc, as those above have stated, it mostly about carnal knowledge etc not about the ability to actually think. Before they eat the apple Adam and Eve can talk and can function so at least have some measure of thinking ability. As for the god going apeshit, well I'm mostly a latidunarian so my ideas are far from mainstream ( I'm not too sure how others interpret this) but I've always seen ideas of God's emotions and actions pictured in ways we can understand, which may be accurate or may not. |
09-16-2007, 05:27 PM | #437 | ||
Self-proclaimed "atheist"
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: The Ottoman Empire
Posts: 64
|
Quote:
He acts like a human, sometimes like a jealous lover or sometimes like a fascist dictator or sometimes like an irrational mindless hateful destroyer. He says to love your neighbor as yourself and then gives countless commandments of hate and loathing. Quote:
__________________
The LORD said, "If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other." - Genesis 11:6-7 |
||
09-16-2007, 05:28 PM | #438 | |
Data is Turned On
|
Quote:
Why are you making claims, if no claims can be reliably made? I mean there's no rational reason why this collection of ancient texts should be considered reliable accounts of their supposed subjects to begin with, but if you're going to start on the assumption that there is, you might not want to throw out all of the parts where it actually describes the psychology of its main character. It sorts of calls attention to the problem of how the narrator is aware of an alien, supernatural intelligence. If the narrator is unreliably reporting why Babel was scrambled, why couldn't they unreliably report what did the scrambling? The emotional state of the deity is as confidently stated as its identity. And so on. Not that I prefer for the religious to be all literalists.
__________________
6201 Reasons to Support Electoral Reform. Last edited by Archbio; 09-16-2007 at 06:04 PM. |
|
09-16-2007, 05:51 PM | #439 | |||||||||
Dr. Ivo Robotnik
|
Quote:
It's like, visiting a town where every other day the citizens' toes are smashed with a board, and being all like, "What the deuce?", and having the townspeople all confused that you're confused about it, because it's normalcy to them. Or something. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Also, I fully realize that it's entirely possible that God is beyond act and thinking human. It's just that, this gets into the realm of "mysterious ways", and I, for one, do not believe that to be a convincing argument. The problem is that, it can be applied to so many contexts... "Wow! I won the lottery... twice! That God sure is mysterious and stuff!" "My whole family died tragically in a horrible aardvark attack! But it's ok, because God planned it! And God works in mysterious ways." <- It's about this point that I have to get the kill-stick out. By the way, I really hope that that last example just grated at your thinky bits. Here's a person who lost everyone they loved, but, yo, is cool, cause, like, the Big Man thinks it's best, ya know? Quote:
Quote:
Hypocrite. The point is, God's an emotionless bastard that wanted us to obediently follow his every command, even though what he really wanted was for us to think for ourselves, but he couldn't just give us the power for whatever reason, so he made it look like it was some big ol' accident. Or, you know, it could mean that the story is false, and God doesn't exist. But, you know, what do I know? EDIT Ninja'd twice. I wanted to say this: Quote:
And: Quote:
Last edited by neyo the king; 09-16-2007 at 05:55 PM. |
|||||||||
09-16-2007, 06:29 PM | #440 |
Sent to the cornfield
|
Ah sorry. I didn't mean to portray that God has emotions but that he is represented as having emotions.
I'm been trying to avoid using post-structucal terms but I think I shall have to. God is signified as an emotive being because this is the way our discourse is structured. Anything outside that discourse is fundamentally nonsensicle to us and can't be concieved, let alone written. It doesn't matter who wrote the text as authorship is limited by the signifiers (and thier signified) that exist within the discourse of the reader, thus making it actually impossible to reconstruct the original nature or the purpose of the text or its author. The best we can hope for is to deconstruct the text and hope to seperate the signifiers from the signified and attempt some measure of discourse analysis but this can never work fully. Thus our answer can never be beyond where we started. A cop-out? This is a fundamental principle of history. Quantum uncertainity is a fundamental principle of physics and chemisty, showing that we can never know the full answer. It is a principle that arrives from dealing with systems and if you deny it then your claims have no basis. So why do I make any claims at all? A very valid question. Because while we can't be certain we can be attempt to be at least reasonably accurate. While I can't be sure that the witchcraft trials of the 17th century operated under the antithesis of protomodern discourses with premodern discourses it is useful for analysis and seems reasonable accurate. While I can't be certain my potential energy maps for my chemical systems are accurate I can be sure I'm reasonably close. So we can reasonably close to answers without being entirely accurate. This breaks down, however, when we deal with metasystems as the entirety of our thought is within a system/range of discourses and if we try to extend it outside that then we are thinking about things in a non-sensicle way. It's like applying the laws of our universe to a different universe where they may or may not apply. How then do I get to the existence of God? Well I don't. It's not something that can or cannot be argued and I can't prove it, just like you can't disprove it. What I have a problem with, however, is those who are trying to apply rationality to him when rationality is merely a way that humans think and structure our thought and there is no basis for assuming that God acts in rational ways. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|