BlueTuna:
How would you know if there are any Aghori scientists?
I don’t. That is why I said there are not any. And by scientists, I mean someone whose work in the scientific community receives at least moderate recognition. If my statement is too broad, I can narrow down my intention a little: “In the history of science, people of the Aghori faith have not made any contribution to the development of man through the sciences THAT I KNOW OF.” It is really hard to prove a negative, though, could you provide me with the name of an Aghori scientist?
BlueTuna:
I don’t think so. Because these acts are all done in a religious and sacramental context, they don’t devalue, but rather sanctify.
I think you would be hard-pressed to convince anyone of any faith, (even other Hindus) that the religious context alone somehow makes this an elevating rather than demeaning experience. There is a reason why God hardwired us to feel disgust at such abominable behavior. I could rattle off a litany of faiths that agree with me: Judaism, Islam, Bah’hai, Buddhism, Hinduism, Shinto, Mormonism, Wiccans, etc all say: gross.
BlueTuna:
If you don’t understand Shaivism, then you better not talk about it.
YOU brought it up. Am I not allowed to offer a Catholic answer to your statement on a Catholic website?
BlueTuna:
Let me say it again: Shiva alone exists. So you’re not eating people but realising God in an admittedly rather different way.
You said: “They are attributed with eating corpse flesh.” That IS eating people. Most cannibals do not eat living human beings, as they tend to put up a fight. So your statement is illogical. You CAN say “You’re not JUST eating people but ALSO realizing God in an admittedly rather different way.”
BlueTuna:
Why do you fear pollution?
I am just ignorant, I guess. Me and the rest of planet Earth… Speaking of which, have YOU eaten corpse flesh? Why not?
BlueTuna:
Natural sciences are godless sciences. Thank God this detachment of science from religion never really happened in other places. I have no idea how you can consider this to be a good thing.
Read my other posts. The natural sciences would not exist were it not for Catholic culture. Science presumes logical order to the universe and thus, a loving and infinitely intelligent God. Part of science is to use the natural order to understand the nature, so the idea of doing something as counter-intuitive as eating human flesh to understand God’s will is unscientific. Such a culture would not blossom into a force that would change the world for the better with hospitals, universities, observatories, medicine, astronomy, physics, genetics and frontier exploration.
And before you get too judgmental, I would like to tell you that the height and summit of Catholic worship is the Eucharist, where bread and wine are actually (not figuratively nor symbolically) transformed by God into the Real Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. And what do we do with this? We eat it and drink it. Though the substance has been transformed, the accidents (outward signs) remain the same, bread and wine. So that, even though we consume the flesh and blood of our Savior, the process itself is bloodless, and thereby does not offend our senses. And see how it elevates? God sustains us from without and from within. The body we eat is not the dead flesh of a sinful human being but the living flesh of an all-good and eternal God. We have all the good that you claim comes from this Aghori ritual with absolutely none of the bad. The result is a ritual that is much more powerful and much more meaningful. It bestows incredible closeness between God and man, and because we revere God so much, it elevates us as His beloved children.
As far as the detachment of God from science is concerned, the so-called Enlightenment is a topic for another thread…