Intellect is not a Property of Matter

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I recommend that the TC read Mortimer Adler’s Intellect: Mind over Matter for a definitive and thorough, yet easy to understand answer to this question.
Adler was a great teacher. he could take the most difficult ideas and present them in a way that a bright high school student could understand them. I once got–by accident–a film about Epictitus. I showed it to my calculus class–it was the Friday before a holiday, so what the heck. They loved it!. He was terrific.
 
I found your earlier thread on this question, and would say that I agree with the comments provided by Jen. The only things I can add are these:
First, I was attending the 10:30 Mass at Blessed Sacrament Church in Washington D.C and heard a sermon that I believe mentioned the Eucharistic miracle that Dr. Gomez was concerned with.
I don’t know the name of the priest who gave the sermon but the date was 6-6-10.
Second, I found this book title on Amazon when I searched under Ricardo Calderan Gomez.

Misterios DE La Iglesia (Mundo Magico y Heterodoxo) (Spanish Edition) [Paperback]
Carmen Porter (Author)
I don’t read Spanish very well, but I think this translates to Mysteries of the Church: The World of Magic and Heterodoxy.
Interesting. Can you forward me the link to the book? He mentioned that he wrote a book, but I was not able to find it. He’s supposed to be a reputable person in the field, so I thought you might have heard of him. If you can find more info on the priest who gave the sermon, that would be great. I’ll see if I can contact him and try to get some more info.

I guess I must have missed Jen comments. I’ll search through my post history right now…

EDIT: Just found the book. Odd. The author isn’t Gomez. :confused:
 
I think if you look at the available science you will see that one of the better hypotheses out there right now is that homosexuality is a manifestation of heightened maternal fertility (see here, for a intro to the topic if this is new to you). On this model, the data indicate that gay men are a by-product of above-average reproduction. If you are into human reproduction, gay men are your thing, it seems. This works because evolution is a population dynamic, not an individual dynamic, and nature is filled with cases where individuals in the population have ostensibly neutral or ineffective features but which actually promote genetic success in the population.

The vast majority of female bees are workers, and sterile. That seems positively anti-reproductive! But only on a simplistic understanding of biology and reproduction. The worker bees are key to the overall reproductive success of the hive in serving the needs of the queen bee.

If gay males are produced where reproduction is in high gear, from the most fertile mothers, would you say their presence was somehow “hostile” or “indifferent” to reproduction? I think one would have to restrict oneself to clumsy, simplistic thinking about human biology to hold to that.

Ah, it’s a contemporary animus, as well…

-TS
Rather more difficult to study human beings than bees. One can describe much of the motions of bees by differential equations. Ditto, the movements of economic markets. Human beings, you have to get down to cases. because one is dealing with persons.
 
Rather more difficult to study human beings than bees. One can describe much of the motions of bees by differential equations. Ditto, the movements of economic markets. Human being, you have to get down to cases.
Decidedly. But that’s consonant with the point I’m making – the Catholic line here appears to be that each individual must fit some rigid template, biologically. Nature discredits this idea. If gay males are produced as the result of extra-fertility and fecundity on the part of females, the homosexual males, as part of the population, are a “victory marker” for the triumph of reproduction and propagation of the species (and this ignores the other evidential aspects available, like the nurturing resources for other offspring gay males in the tribe may represent, even if they aren’t reproductive themselves, but “assist” in the success of others).

That’s just a little more sophisticated and nuanced that the simplistic level homosexuality is commonly approached on by religion – “God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve”, nyah, nyah, nyah. Once one looks at humans as they occur in nature, and not as mythic archetypes from Genesis, the analysis gets a lot more complex, but derives from the evidence, from the facts of human biology.

-TS
 
That’s a kind of Orwellian rendering of “evidence”, don’t you think? I understand my experiences as subjective evidence, but that those are evidence in a different sense than evidence obtained through objective methods. And it’s this latter sense that we observe to be strikingly successful in separating fact from fiction.
I can simplify this quite a lot.

My original comments were exploring the bias that can be observed in the denial of evidence which supports theism.

So, they really weren’t directed towards you, but to other Catholics who may observe the same biases at work. It’s pointless to discuss the flaws inherent in scientism and atheism when one is dealing with various filters which block the flow of information.

In your case, you volunteered that you have a Calvinist background. From that, its easy for me to see that your atheism is a function of Calvinism.

Your thoughts about God are informed by Calvinism, and the God you reject is the Calvinist-God. The theological system that you fear and oppose is the Calvinist system – and you react against the subjectivity, blind-faith and determinism of that system.

I find that fairly easy to see when I simply propose that any human discussion requires a minimum of trust and you immediately misconstrue that to mean that Catholicism is basically the same as Mormonism. It’s a knee-jerk response, built on the fear of your own past.

I offer this personal approach because I think its necessary. Your version of atheism cannot be understood unless a person understands Calvinism.

So, it’s really pointless to directly address the problems of scientism without first breaking through the twisted theological foundation that you absorbed.
 
Only in a negative sense. Calvinism was, even from the gradeschool years of Sunday School as I became old enough to understand “TULIP”, a repulsive set of doctrines … I couldn’t believe it.
As I said previously, these are the biases that you bring to the topic. Your understanding of God comes from this foundation. You happened to reject the teaching you were given, but that in itself is important. Your encounter with religion, at a young age, was an exposure to “a repulsive set of doctrines”.

So, you begin your learning by rejecting. You reject the cardboard version of God that Calvinist doctrine proposes.
OK. Happy to share, but wasn’t trying to make my bio the central theme here.
I also wish that your bio wouldn’t be the central theme, but that was the point I was making. I have no way to know what you know or don’t know about Christianity. When I see you claiming that Catholicism is basically the same as Mormonism, and that Mormonism will “win”, then I have nothing to build a discussion on.

Again, you approach the topic of God with the knowledge you have. You reject the version of God that you understand, and the faith system that you know about.

I’m not arguing whether that is right or wrong but am merely pointing out to my fellow Catholics that you approach the topic with a bias, which is obvious to observe.
Does a Calvinist background sound implausible to you, somehow.
No, what seems implausible (without any other information) is that you have any understanding of Catholicism beyond what you know of Calvinism. Again, the point is that if I take a skeptical view, you are a liar first. Everything you assert must be questioned and you need to provide some hard evidence to prove it.

It’s not just a boring discussion that results from that, but an impossible one.

The point is that skepticism is not applied consistently.
In Minnesota, where I gew up, in a Baptist General Conference church (see John Piper for a fairly famous example of such a position – he’s a BGC Calvinist from Minnesota), it was (and is) quite common. I can’t think why that would be hard to accept for you.
You can’t think what it is hard for me to accept an assertion, just after you praised the virtue of skepticism? Again, you provide no evidence but just various claims. This is just a very small example of how human communication works. I don’t question your various claims, but I start by considering that you’re telling the truth and that you’re a reasonable person.

You’ve argued, on the contrary, that I should start by considering you to be a liar, or a person who is deluded.

If that was the case, there’s nothing that you told me that I can validate beyond merely the fact that you’ve said it.

The point is not for you to post your Baptismal certificate and give sworn testimony from family members about your background (I could still find reason to deny the truth of such things), but to recognize that trust is inherent in the discussion.

If, however, you dimiss a person’s testimony as being a lie or a delusion without investigating it at all, then it’s evidence that there is some pre-existing bias at work.
Great. But if I told you I had walked on the moon, without a space suit, just in my jeans and a t-shirt, would you still trust me?
How about if I wrote a letter that said I have more than 500 witnesses to my moon walk? Trust me now?
These examples indicate that you’re distancing yourself from the topic and trivializing the evidence that you have to work with.

It’s like the classic: “Believing in God is no different than believing in fairies and flying teapots”.

Now you compare your statement that you have a letter with 500 witnesses.

This says it fairly clearly. I know enough about people to know that a person that makes that claim is an outright liar. That’s about 99% of the time. There may be 1% who have been deluded – by drugs or mental illness, and are not technically lying.

So, when you hear, on this forum, that someone has been convinced through internal evidence that God answers prayer – your immediate response is that the person is lying.

So, you have a forum of Catholics who simply lie about such things. They pretend that they have letters signed by 500 people and they openly claim things which are absolutely false. They simply fabricate their posts. When they post their convictions here, they’re simply making it up.

We can extend this. The 2000 year history of the Catholic Church shows thousands of prominent, well-educated, celebrated, intelligent (in some cases to a genius level), influential or admired people who make the same claims. Others go farther and explain their mystical experiences. Some of the world’s greatest literature gives detailed explanations of mystical theology – from those who actually experienced God working in this way.

So again, the immediate response is that all of these people are lying. They’re claiming to have a list of signatures from 500 witnesses to their moon-walk.

All of these – Augustine, Jerome, Benedict, John of the Cross, Catherine of Siena, Teresa of Avila and hundreds more are just lying.

They have no integrity at all. They just fabricate a story.

So again, I’m not trying to convince you of anything on this topic. I’m merely observing your response and pointing out what I see as a very strong bias against the evidence.

It’s evident on a human level – where you engage in discussions with people who you think are liars.

That, in itself, says a lot about how you are forced to approach the discussion.

And that was the point. You cannot fully engage yourself in looking at the evidence because you’ve concluded that everybody is lying to you.
 
The same bias I hold against myself.
Ok, but there’s no way for me to access that information. It’s part of your own subjective world.
If “personal internal evidence” makes an existential difference, we are all living in isolated universes from each other, each an “island of truth unto ourselves”, a kind of postmodernist fantasy.
You’re making a sweeping claim against evidence that you use in your own daily life.
What would that evidence look like?
I’d expect you to explain that to me because I have to assume that you consult such evidence in order to overcome your skepticism in any discussion. But obviously, you use your own personal internal evidence to decide whether is it worth engaging in this discussion.

To deny the value of that kind of evidence is to deny that intuition has ever had any existential value at all in human existence.

I can see you, or any atheist, making that denial – but it would only more convince me that atheism truncates and distorts the human experience.
I’m not sure how that could be satisfied. On internet forums, it’s just assumed as a starting point, so that civil discussion can happen at all.
Exactly. People engaging in the discussion suspend whatever skepticism they claim to possess. They start by accepting that the other person is telling the truth, not that the person is lying. Skepticism would make any discussion impossible.

Again, I’m not arguing that you have to accept the Christian paradigm simply because I said so.

I’m just pointing to the bias that is evident. You trust the person to engage in the discussion – and with that, you suspend your skepticism towards the person.

You find no reason to call the person a liar, until (apparently) the person makes a statement about what he perceives is the efficacy of prayer.
 
I can simplify this quite a lot.

My original comments were exploring the bias that can be observed in the denial of evidence which supports theism.

So, they really weren’t directed towards you, but to other Catholics who may observe the same biases at work. It’s pointless to discuss the flaws inherent in scientism and atheism when one is dealing with various filters which block the flow of information.

In your case, you volunteered that you have a Calvinist background. From that, its easy for me to see that your atheism is a function of Calvinism.

Your thoughts about God are informed by Calvinism, and the God you reject is the Calvinist-God. The theological system that you fear and oppose is the Calvinist system – and you react against the subjectivity, blind-faith and determinism of that system.

I find that fairly easy to see when I simply propose that any human discussion requires a minimum of trust and you immediately misconstrue that to mean that Catholicism is basically the same as Mormonism. It’s a knee-jerk response, built on the fear of your own past.

I offer this personal approach because I think its necessary. Your version of atheism cannot be understood unless a person understands Calvinism.

So, it’s really pointless to directly address the problems of scientism without first breaking through the twisted theological foundation that you absorbed.
Hmm, well I do claim to be quite familiar with Calvinist theology, but I’m more fluent and experienced in Arminian theology, and then Catholic theology after that. Calvinism really just wasn’t interesting me after getting out to college, now more than twenty years ago.

Even so, my rejection of Calvinism was sectarian, not atheistic. I rejected it, but in favor of an alternate stream of Christianity – Arminian Protestantism, which held firm for most of my adult life. And for the last three or four years of my Christianity, I was a “proto-Catholic”, reading, studying, arguing, going to mass, talking to priests, etc… It was actually the Catholic doctrines which I held to when I finally realized that all of that was an exercise in fooling myself. When I rejected and abandoned Christianity as fundamentally without grounds or merit for belief, it was as a Catholic who had just a few months prior been preparing to enter RCIA.

Add to that, that I invested more energy and time in disciplined study of theology and philosophy of religion in my “getting ready to swim the Tiber” era. The Catholic Church, for better or worse, is at least a relatively fixed target, compared to the mercury-under-your-thumb flavors of Protestantism. That may have been the catalyst for the rejection, though, as there I was at least dealing with doctrines and traditions that were time-honored, “official” and part of a formal, semi-consistent institution over long periods of time. When that all fell over as readily as my Protestant ideas of prior times, it was clear the gig was up.

In Protestant, there’s no way out, you can morph your theology into some new shape at will to gerrymander around any particular problem at the time – you are your own pope. With the RCC, it doesn’t work that way, and there’s no “reshaping the church in to own’s own image”, as facilitated by Luther and his followers.

I think I understand your goal, but reading the above strikes me as “off on the wrong foot” to understand what I’ve held to and rejected.

-TS
 
As I said previously, these are the biases that you bring to the topic. Your understanding of God comes from this foundation. You happened to reject the teaching you were given, but that in itself is important. Your encounter with religion, at a young age, was an exposure to “a repulsive set of doctrines”.
Yes, but also a highly appealing alternative set. My own family’s Arminianism was as pleasing as Calvin was repulsive.
So, you begin your learning by rejecting. You reject the cardboard version of God that Calvinist doctrine proposes.
Yes, but I think that would be the same way you rejected the Calvinist God, or Allah, or any other “cardboard” God that you didn’t believe in.
I also wish that your bio wouldn’t be the central theme, but that was the point I was making. I have no way to know what you know or don’t know about Christianity. When I see you claiming that Catholicism is basically the same as Mormonism, and that Mormonism will “win”, then I have nothing to build a discussion on.
That’s not what I said. I said that if we are going to judge solely on “internal witness”, which is what was being offered as the discriminating factor, then the Mormons own Rome. Catholics can’t compete in the witness department in my experience.

But that’s OK, that’s just to say that’s a bogus criterion in the first place. The Catholic Church has a history and theological legacy that One Temple Square can’t begin to offer, and rich heritage of navel gazing and intuition indulgence that the CoJCoLdS can only covet. 😉
Again, you approach the topic of God with the knowledge you have. You reject the version of God that you understand, and the faith system that you know about.
That’s an odd criticism (if it is one) to me, here. For I am here, learning. And I’m quite knowledgeable on Catholic doctrine and history, and always learning more. I have rejected Christianity, the dominant juggernaut in the cultural in which I live, so it’s important for me to be informed on what it is I’m rejecting. I wish Catholics I get to talk to in real life were so up to speed as many here – they’re not.

I’m not claiming to a be a PhD or a world class historian of the Church, but if you think I’m rejecting doctrine and traditions I’m just not aware of, I think you’re cutting yourself some corners here.
I’m not arguing whether that is right or wrong but am merely pointing out to my fellow Catholics that you approach the topic with a bias, which is obvious to observe.
Yes, and that’s not news. I’m here to promote that bias, or maybe better to say I’m here to defend that bias, as that is a bias toward rational, disciplined thinking and action. I’m an ardent critic of “embracing mystical intuition for intuition’s sake”, solidly biased against that, and for good reasons, I believe.
No, what seems implausible (without any other information) is that you have any understanding of Catholicism beyond what you know of Calvinism. Again, the point is that if I take a skeptical view, you are a liar first. Everything you assert must be questioned and you need to provide some hard evidence to prove it.
No, a skeptical view doesn’t start out with “liar” first. I think you may be confusing skepticism with cynicism. If I say, “I’ve been to the moon”, you’d be reasonable to react to that with doubt; it seems an outrageous claim, on its face. But “I was raised around Calvinism” isn’t a plausibility problem at all. A skeptic bears in mind at all times that people do lie and we don’t know all the motives that may be animating deception, but “liar” would seem far less plausible if you told me you were raised in a Catholic home, or a Calvinist home. Skepticism isn’t nihilism or cynicism.

Turning that around, when I’m scrupulously skeptical, I have no problem accepting the claim that a Jewish rabbi with apocalyptic views named was killed by the Romans for sedition in 1C Palestine. That’s eminently plausible. It may not be true, but I don’t need to reject that upfront, based on what I know of the world.

If the claim is added that this man rose from the dead after three days being dead, all the reasoning alarms are sounding off in my head. That’s an outrageous, fantastic claim, something that I reasonably can’t accept without correspondingly fantastic levels of evidence and substantiation of that claim.
It’s not just a boring discussion that results from that, but an impossible one.
The point is that skepticism is not applied consistently.
I think you’ve misunderstood how skepticism and reason get applied in situations like that. Skepticism isn’t naïve doubt, but is informed by experience, data, models that work. In that case, “liar” doesn’t stand to reason as a starting point.
You can’t think what it is hard for me to accept an assertion, just after you praised the virtue of skepticism? Again, you provide no evidence but just various claims. This is just a very small example of how human communication works. I don’t question your various claims, but I start by considering that you’re telling the truth and that you’re a reasonable person.
Well, if I followed you around, I suspect you’d be operating by the same principles I advocate above – accepting at face value claims which don’t militate against reason and experience (at least provisionally), but doubting the outrageous ones. If you read that Todd Bentley’s ministry a couple years ago raised twelve people from the dead, you’d reject that outright. It’s only the views you choose to except from this for other, non-rational reasons that you accept. But normally, you process (name removed by moderator)ut just like I do. You just allow yourself special exceptions which I don’t (anymore).

-TS
 
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reggieM:
You’ve argued, on the contrary, that I should start by considering you to be a liar, or a person who is deluded.
No, see above.
If that was the case, there’s nothing that you told me that I can validate beyond merely the fact that you’ve said it.
The point is not for you to post your Baptismal certificate and give sworn testimony from family members about your background (I could still find reason to deny the truth of such things), but to recognize that trust is inherent in the discussion.
If, however, you dimiss a person’s testimony as being a lie or a delusion without investigating it at all, then it’s evidence that there is some pre-existing bias at work.
You’ve totally overlooked the actual content of the claims, so far as I can see, here. And that is the determining factor! We don’t “auto-believe” or “auto-deny” as a universal switch to one position or another. We measure the claims against our model, and react accordingly, if we are reasoning about those claims. The examples you’ve chosen, regarding my claims of Calvinism in my background, solidly demonstrate you do not have a basic grasp of how this works, else you’d not use that as an example.
These examples indicate that you’re distancing yourself from the topic and trivializing the evidence that you have to work with.
It’s like the classic: “Believing in God is no different than believing in fairies and flying teapots”.
Now you compare your statement that you have a letter with 500 witnesses.
This says it fairly clearly. I know enough about people to know that a person that makes that claim is an outright liar. That’s about 99% of the time. There may be 1% who have been deluded – by drugs or mental illness, and are not technically lying.
OK, well this seems quite a contradiction to the above. If you are consistent, you’d say the same thing about the claims of Jesus’ resurrection.

It’s good to note, just to head off bunny trails, that the disciples may well have believed Jesus had been resurrected when no such thing happened, and they were simply mistaken. Lying is not the only option there…
So, when you hear, on this forum, that someone has been convinced through internal evidence that God answers prayer – your immediate response is that the person is lying.
No, it’s not. I don’t think you are lying at all, or being dishonest in any of those claims. I think you do nut understand the self-validating nature of the paradigm you’ve adopted, and this misunderstand and vastly overestimate the epistemic value of your “internal evidence”. It’s not a lie, as much as deep confusion over what makes the “internal evidence” evidence in any serious, reasonable way.
So, you have a forum of Catholics who simply lie about such things. They pretend that they have letters signed by 500 people and they openly claim things which are absolutely false. They simply fabricate their posts. When they post their convictions here, they’re simply making it up.
No, see above, “True” and “lying” do not nearly exhaust all the available options. Supposing one’s brute intuitions are weighty evidence is not dishonest, just confused.
We can extend this. The 2000 year history of the Catholic Church shows thousands of prominent, well-educated, celebrated, intelligent (in some cases to a genius level), influential or admired people who make the same claims. Others go farther and explain their mystical experiences. Some of the world’s greatest literature gives detailed explanations of mystical theology – from those who actually experienced God working in this way.
So again, the immediate response is that all of these people are lying. They’re claiming to have a list of signatures from 500 witnesses to their moon-walk.
Again, see above.
All of these – Augustine, Jerome, Benedict, John of the Cross, Catherine of Siena, Teresa of Avila and hundreds more are just lying.
They have no integrity at all. They just fabricate a story.
So again, I’m not trying to convince you of anything on this topic. I’m merely observing your response and pointing out what I see as a very strong bias against the evidence.
It’s evident on a human level – where you engage in discussions with people who you think are liars.
That, in itself, says a lot about how you are forced to approach the discussion.
And that was the point. You cannot fully engage yourself in looking at the evidence because you’ve concluded that everybody is lying to you.
See above. You’re operating at the poles, and missing the vast middle, where are the reasonable options are.

-TS
 
“Intellect is not a Property of Matter”

Neither are boolean states, but that hasn’t stopped us from making computers.
 
Yes, but also a highly appealing alternative set. My own family’s Arminianism was as pleasing as Calvin was repulsive.

Yes, but I think that would be the same way you rejected the Calvinist God, or Allah, or any other “cardboard” God that you didn’t believe in.

That’s not what I said. I said that if we are going to judge solely on “internal witness”, which is what was being offered as the discriminating factor, then the Mormons own Rome. Catholics can’t compete in the witness department in my experience.

But that’s OK, that’s just to say that’s a bogus criterion in the first place. The Catholic Church has a history and theological legacy that One Temple Square can’t begin to offer, and rich heritage of navel gazing and intuition indulgence that the CoJCoLdS can only covet. 😉

That’s an odd criticism (if it is one) to me, here. For I am here, learning. And I’m quite knowledgeable on Catholic doctrine and history, and always learning more. I have rejected Christianity, the dominant juggernaut in the cultural in which I live, so it’s important for me to be informed on what it is I’m rejecting. I wish Catholics I get to talk to in real life were so up to speed as many here – they’re not.

I’m not claiming to a be a PhD or a world class historian of the Church, but if you think I’m rejecting doctrine and traditions I’m just not aware of, I think you’re cutting yourself some corners here.

Yes, and that’s not news. I’m here to promote that bias, or maybe better to say I’m here to defend that bias, as that is a bias toward rational, disciplined thinking and action. I’m an ardent critic of “embracing mystical intuition for intuition’s sake”, solidly biased against that, and for good reasons, I believe.

No, a skeptical view doesn’t start out with “liar” first. I think you may be confusing skepticism with cynicism. If I say, “I’ve been to the moon”, you’d be reasonable to react to that with doubt; it seems an outrageous claim, on its face. But “I was raised around Calvinism” isn’t a plausibility problem at all. A skeptic bears in mind at all times that people do lie and we don’t know all the motives that may be animating deception, but “liar” would seem far less plausible if you told me you were raised in a Catholic home, or a Calvinist home. Skepticism isn’t nihilism or cynicism.

Turning that around, when I’m scrupulously skeptical, I have no problem accepting the claim that a Jewish rabbi with apocalyptic views named was killed by the Romans for sedition in 1C Palestine. That’s eminently plausible. It may not be true, but I don’t need to reject that upfront, based on what I know of the world.

If the claim is added that this man rose from the dead after three days being dead, all the reasoning alarms are sounding off in my head. That’s an outrageous, fantastic claim, something that I reasonably can’t accept without correspondingly fantastic levels of evidence and substantiation of that claim.

I think you’ve misunderstood how skepticism and reason get applied in situations like that. Skepticism isn’t naïve doubt, but is informed by experience, data, models that work. In that case, “liar” doesn’t stand to reason as a starting point.

Well, if I followed you around, I suspect you’d be operating by the same principles I advocate above – accepting at face value claims which don’t militate against reason and experience (at least provisionally), but doubting the outrageous ones. If you read that Todd Bentley’s ministry a couple years ago raised twelve people from the dead, you’d reject that outright. It’s only the views you choose to except from this for other, non-rational reasons that you accept. But normally, you process (name removed by moderator)ut just like I do. You just allow yourself special exceptions which I don’t (anymore).

-TS
Well, it is true that if one approaches Catholicism as an intellectual system, it will fail, because Catholicism is no more internally consistent than any other body of knowledge. And it all hinges, as Paul tells us, on accepting the Resurrection. And we can only believe truly if we accept it with the same certainty that when I go from my room here to the next room that I will end up in the kitchen. But, even this, is not as certain as the certainty of the Pythagorean theorem. It is certain to me but not to you. But beyond that, faith is the conviction that behind the veil does lie certainty about everything.
 
Interesting. Can you forward me the link to the book? He mentioned that he wrote a book, but I was not able to find it. He’s supposed to be a reputable person in the field, so I thought you might have heard of him. If you can find more info on the priest who gave the sermon, that would be great. I’ll see if I can contact him and try to get some more info.

I guess I must have missed Jen comments. I’ll search through my post history right now…

EDIT: Just found the book. Odd. The author isn’t Gomez. :confused:
My assumption is that the book contains information on Gomez, but as I said I can’t read Spanish. The link is simply amazon.com, and all you have to do is enter Ricardo Calderan under author and the book comes up. I guess you’d have to buy it and getsomeone to go through it for you.
As to the priest, you could maybe write to Blessed Sacrament Parish in Wash. D.C. I don’t know anyone there, or have any special connections.
 
Well, it is true that if one approaches Catholicism as an intellectual system, it will fail, because Catholicism is no more internally consistent than any other body of knowledge. And it all hinges, as Paul tells us, on accepting the Resurrection. And we can only believe truly if we accept it with the same certainty that when I go from my room here to the next room that I will end up in the kitchen. But, even this, is not as certain as the certainty of the Pythagorean theorem. It is certain to me but not to you. But beyond that, faith is the conviction that behind the veil does lie certainty about everything.
OK, understand and that’s an answer I can respect. I want to object about the ‘certainty of the Pythagorean theorem’ as an equivocation on belief and knowledege there, but I get your drift (and nothing is as certainly true as the trivial truth of a tautology!).

As clear and honest as this answer is, though, it always strikes me as basically fideistic. Nevertheless, if this was the basic answer from Catholicism, I’d salute it, because it sure does seem to present itself as a coherent intellectual system at many points.

-TS
 
I want to object about the ‘certainty of the Pythagorean theorem’ as an equivocation on belief and knowledege there, but I get your drift (and nothing is as certainly true as the trivial truth of a tautology!).
What is your objection to the Pythagorean theorem?
 
Interesting. Can you forward me the link to the book? He mentioned that he wrote a book, but I was not able to find it. He’s supposed to be a reputable person in the field, so I thought you might have heard of him.
The Spanish custom is to have two apellidos (surnames), the first being more important, so Ricardo Castañon Gòmez would usually be shortened to Castañon (pronounced cast-AN-yon) rather than Gòmez.

From his facebook page I linked to you on the Ante up! thread, his background says he’s a clinical psychologist. If you search for “Ricardo Castañon” on amazon you’ll find he’s written at least three books, all unavailable. I can also tell you that one of his favorite pop stars is Eric Clapton from his webmii page.

The differences between his facebook and the youtube you posted (see my post here), along with the lack of citations on his Wikipedia page and lack of independent reports leads me to strongly doubt his account of the miracle.

You can use google translate to render text and web pages into English (now also from Latin!). It’s far from perfect, but does a reasonable job.

The hyperlink is the skeptic’s friend. 😉
 
Well, it is true that if one approaches Catholicism as an intellectual system, it will fail, because Catholicism is no more internally consistent than any other body of knowledge.
Can you explain in what respects Catholicism is not internally consistent?
And it all hinges, as Paul tells us, on accepting the Resurrection.
Accepting the Resurrection presupposes accepting the existence of God for which there rational evidence.
And we can only believe truly if we accept it with the same certainty that when I go from my room here to the next room that I will end up in the kitchen.
There is no certainty that you will end up in the kitchen! But there is certainty in the fact that you are thinking!
But, even this, is not as certain as the certainty of the Pythagorean theorem.
Which is less significant… 🙂
But beyond that, faith is the conviction that behind the veil does lie certainty about everything.
That is true because faith is the conviction that everything has a **rational **basis…
 
“Intellect is not a Property of Matter”

Neither are boolean states, but that hasn’t stopped us from making computers.
Computers are designed and programmed by human intellect.

Following your analogy, therefore, human intellects must be designed and created by some other kind of intellect.
 
Yes, but I think that would be the same way you rejected the Calvinist God, or Allah, or any other “cardboard” God that you didn’t believe in.
Here you’re changing the topic to what my beliefs are and how I arrived at them. But that, to me just confirms the bias that I’m looking at. You don’t know how I arrived at the Catholic belief or how I view other religious claims. Again, I’m just pointing to your own pre-suppositions (if you will) and how that bias affects your view of the data.
That’s not what I said. I said that if we are going to judge solely on “internal witness”, which is what was being offered as the discriminating factor, then the Mormons own Rome.
I’ll try again. “Internal witness” was not offered as the “sole discriminating factor”. I was not even engaging in an argument to try to convince you. I was observing that there is evidence from internal conviction and noticing how that evidence is treated by the atheists we encounter on CAF.

In your case, you distorted what I said and immediately started talking about Mormons.
Why?

Again, I view that as a driving factor in your views on faith. Instead of recognizing that honest people can arrive at rational and logical convictions based on personal evidence (of the kind you use yourself on a daily basis) – you conclude that I’m arguing for Fideism and you go off about how Catholicism is a mental-virus that kills off rationality.

That’s an extreme reaction, as I see it. So again, I ask why would an otherwise balanced and thoughtful person jump to that kind of conclusion?

Let me take it farther … even in the battle of Fideism and the mention of Mormonism, we do have another, slightly more international, body of believers who embrace blind-faith fideism – namely, our Islamic friends. Mormons don’t deserve a mention in that context.

So, I’m trying to put the pieces together. Your reactions to various religious systems – whether attraction or repulsion, provide evidence for how you view God and belief.

This has nothing to do with trying to convince you of anything.
I was remarking, for the sake of fellow Catholics, that there are biases (and you happen to be a test case, but it’s true for any atheist) which we should understand. That can help us communicate with you. It’s a matter of trying to understand your motive and trajectory.
That’s an odd criticism (if it is one) to me, here. For I am here, learning. And I’m quite knowledgeable on Catholic doctrine and history, and always learning more. I have rejected Christianity, the dominant juggernaut in the cultural in which I live, so it’s important for me to be informed on what it is I’m rejecting. I wish Catholics I get to talk to in real life were so up to speed as many here – they’re not.
That’s important to know and I appreciate the insight. I have little idea about what you know, what aspects of Catholicism you reject or why you reject them. Most atheists come here and demand that Catholics must “speak the language of atheism” to them and they reject anything that’s written in our language. How are we supposed to know which of the many languages of atheism you speak? Some embrace scientism fully. Many will not accept that there is “any evidence at all supporting Christianity”. Some do not accept historical evidence (documentary evidence) as valid (how do you know that Julius Caesar existed?). Others accept that various “gods” exist, but they are non-theist. Others accept that there are immaterial essences.
Yes, and that’s not news. I’m here to promote that bias, or maybe better to say I’m here to defend that bias, as that is a bias toward rational, disciplined thinking and action. I’m an ardent critic of “embracing mystical intuition for intuition’s sake”, solidly biased against that, and for good reasons, I believe.
Ok, that was the point I was getting at. You approach the data with some bias and accept or reject various statements before investigating them because your bias drives your conclusions.

If you’re here to defend a bias, then that is different than wanting to learn about and explore a topic. In order to learn, I think you have to be open to information and perspectives that conflict with your own biases.

True, you can still learn by seeking to defend your convictions, but I think you run the risk of denying various claims and closing off opportunities to investigate them.
No, a skeptical view doesn’t start out with “liar” first. I think you may be confusing skepticism with cynicism. If I say, “I’ve been to the moon”, you’d be reasonable to react to that with doubt; it seems an outrageous claim, on its face. But “I was raised around Calvinism” isn’t a plausibility problem at all.
This seems good. I’d react with doubt, not because I tested the empirical data, but through an intuition. I’d trust your claim on Calvinism through an intuition. I look at the probability. Why would I accept that you were raised around Calvinism without evaluating or testing any data?

Again, we do this daily. We consult internal evidence gathered personally over time.
Probability – I can look at the population and geography. You mention Minnesota. Are there hard-core Calvinists there? Yes - there are your 500 witnesses signing letters about how you went to the moon.

So, there’s the evidence and support. You made a claim and I accept it.
 
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