Originally posted by vinteuil
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A courteous, intelligent and informed discussion about religion
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThe trouble with these deliberations on the nature of faith, if I understand things correctly, is that they have always been conducted by theologians for whom the existence of God is a given - it boils down to a discussion of the order of events as between faith/grace/conversion. It's difficult to pursue a discussion with anyone who does not accept at least one of the major premises of the argument.
For what it's worth I'm not religious, and I suspect that at the deepest level 'free will' is an illusion (ie we don't, ultimately, have 'choices') - but that we necessarily believe and act as if we did have free will - I don't think we have a choice!
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Richard Tarleton
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StephenO
Originally posted by doversoul View PostBefore things get too complicated, shouldn’t we keep faith whose definition ff quoted from OED and [religious] faith separately? But if the two are (theoretically) linked in some way, I’ll be interested in hearing about it.
Faith itself is the central problem with circular discussions of this sort since believers (such as me) accept the existence of God but have no way of proving his existence. For us, it's a matter of faith. Almost by definition those who aren't believers don't have faith and therefore need and expect proof, a proof which can't be provided. The logical position would be to say "I don't know" but, if you have faith as I do, you can't do that because you do know. You just can't prove it.
Not sure if that makes any sense at all but...
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cavatina
Originally posted by Don Basilio View PostCavatina: I'm devastated you should think I thought you were in any way discourteous. I can't think of anything I said to give that impression and I apologise if I did.
I remember specifically thanking you for your contribution at one point.
treating fellow human beings as manipulable bets in some inauthentic game of your own devising,
FYI: I'm totally not into clawing and slithering my way to the top of the greasy pile, and am perfectly happy to live in my cat-filled hibernaculum with plenty of time for music, painting, reading, dreaming, and as much navel-gazing as much as I please with the company of a few friends who truly "get" me. Anyway, what kind of "cutthroat" slacks off for two months to soak up every last note of a classical music festival while standing up on the front row? Two years running?
As Schopenhauer once said, "We forfeit three-fourths of ourselves in order to be like other people". And if everything I've written in this forum hasn't told you that I know full well how unmistakably, uniquely, irrevocably weird I am, I really don't know what to tell you.
Back "on topic" we go...just thought I should clear that up.
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I said I’d comment on Richard’s scientific outline of the universe msg 62.
I’m not a scientist or a philosopher, and the importance of my religion is not as a result of intellectual argument, although I find it intellectually consistent. It would be rash for me to try much in the way of scientific argument.
But I will say that Richard’s Newtonian universe may not leave any room for God, but God is not that sort of God, one being among others, even a Supreme Being, rather God is the possibility that anything at all can exist. Richard’s account takes space, time, consciousness existence, as givens, whereas there is the dizzying consideration that they are not inevitable and we can dimly imagine a matrix, ground of being beyond them. So all our language about God, of that matrix, is bound to be analogous. Theologians and mystics have over again stressed the unknowability of God. (Gregory Palamas’ made the distinction that we can never know God in his essence, only in his energies.)Last edited by Don Basilio; 10-08-11, 16:22.
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StephenO
Originally posted by Don Basilio View PostBut I will say that Richard’s Newtonian universe may not leave any room for God, but God is not that sort of God, one being among others, even a Supreme Being, rather God is the possibility that anything at all can exist. Richard’s account takes space, time, consciousness existence, as givens, whereas there is the dizzying consideration that they are not inevitable and we can dimly imagine a matrix, ground of being beyond them. So all our language about God, of that matrix, is bound to be analogous. Theologians and mystics have over again stressed the unknowability of God.
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Originally posted by Don Basilio View PostGod is not [...] one being among others, even a Supreme Being, rather God is the possibility that anything at all can exist.
S-A
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That is a perfectly consistent position to take, s-a, and I don't want to pontificate and have the last word. I don't agree with your conclusions: I'm prepared to wager with Pascal on God for other than logical reasons.
I've said enough for today. I'll leave it to others to comment if they wish.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Don Basilio View PostI said I’d comment on Richard’s scientific outline of the universe msg 62.
But I will say that Richard’s Newtonian universe may not leave any room for God, but God is not that sort of God, one being among others, even a Supreme Being, rather God is the possibility that anything at all can exist. Richard’s account takes space, time, consciousness existence, as givens, whereas there is the dizzying consideration that they are not inevitable and we can dimly imagine a matrix, ground of being beyond them. So all our language about God, of that matrix, is bound to be analogous. Theologians and mystics have over again stressed the unknowability of God. (Gregory Palamas’ made the distinction that we can never know God in his essence, only in his energies.)
I was out at a concert this evening - the Schubert Piano Trio D 897 ("Notturno") twitched the curtain of the noumenon for me, as Schubert often does
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