So, how was this 'ere Trinity created outa nothin'? Can't get 'ead roun' that one.
The Holy Trinity
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Originally posted by Magnificat View PostI don't know VC I found them infinitely more believable than scientists trying to get me to accept that something was created from nothing.
VCCMy boxes are positively disintegrating under the sheer weight of ticks. Ed Reardon
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostSo, how was this 'ere Trinity created outa nothin'? Can't get 'ead roun' that one.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 15-03-14, 11:19.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostHow do you define "created" in this context?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBy seeing "something" and "nothing" as relative, interdependent opposites within the realm of thought: useful and bearing a similar relationship to " " as a map does to a landscape, a Zen Buddhist (or Cornelius Cardew at a certain stage in his life) would probably say.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAh, so produced by the internal workings of a living neural network, thus emerging way, way after the Big Bang and all that did not precede it.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThere is a tradition that the Buddha compared questions about origination with a person shot through with an arrow refusing to have it removed until s/he knows every detail there is to be known about his/her assailant: age, gender, place of birth, religious persuasion if any, etc., if you see what I mean.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostMy use of the word "emerging" was by no means accidental. I am of the viewpoint that all religion was/is emergent rather than immanent.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostYeas, if I understand that to mean evolutionarily; insofar as I understand them (or some of them) Buddhists see Mind as co-extensive, an aspect (or part of the generating energy of) an organismic/environmental unity. They think of us and it as mutually coextensive, with moral and ethical behaviour stemming ultimately from that realisation, (mythologies, like Father Christmas, being a temporary pedagogical gambit for inculcating social values, the map, into the young), and it is only thinking, or the separative condition of language (some more than others) that thinks of us as apart from, as opposed to a part of.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostClose enough.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 15-03-14, 15:38.
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Re: ##25-27 I don't get what S-A's trying to say eitehr!! Perhaps I share with VC a science/maths background and so am failing to grasp the point[s]?
Just out of interest: Oppenheimer chose the name "Trinity" for the bomb's test site in the desert. That's where his interest in Eastern religions led him to make his famed statement after the explosion - "now I am become Death, destroyer of worlds". Science meets Philosophy.
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I have tried to "do" religion. But I feel people who have faith have a sixth sense that I don't have - as If I was born without the organ needed to apprehend that sense. Like someone deaf from birth trying to understand other people discussing music.
I love liturgy. I can be deeply moved by it and by people's prayer requests - by their plight, their distress and their helplessness in the face of loss, illness, death and the thousand ills that befall mankind. I embarrassed myself at evensong in St Albans Abbey some years ago by being a sobbing wreck listening to Howells' Collegium Regale after reading some particularly poignant petitions on the prayer board.
But God and Father Christmas are very much the same substance in my mind. And I simply don't understand what is meant by the word "spiritual".
It's just blindingly obvious to me that religions are a load of tosh made up by slightly unhinged people. This week's IOT only served to strengthen that belief.
I wonder if there's an IOT to be done on the history of atheism?
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