It’s an occupational hazard of theoretical physicists to be opposed to religion, e.g. Steven Weinberg with his view that:
With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil—that takes religion
As if Marxists in China and elsewhere never commit atrocities…
It’s an occupational hazard of religious people to believe hell is
a place of fire and incessant torture:
The
most common description of the levels includes the Chamber of Tongue Ripping, The Chamber of Scissors, The Chamber of Iron Cycads, the Chamber of Mirror, Chamber of Steamer, Forest of Copper Column, Mountain of Knives, the Hill of Ice, Cauldron of Boiling Oil, Chamber of Ox, Chamber of Rock, Chamber of Pounding, Pool of Blood, Town of Suicide, Chamber of Dismemberment, Mountain of Flames, Yard of Stone Mill, and Chamber of Saw.
listverse.com/2013/09/04/10-fascinating-descriptions-of-hell/
I’m delighted you referred to my previous discussion with Touchstone who has never answered my final post on that thread:
Touchstone forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_khaki/viewpost.gif
It doesn’t though, and you’ve got abundant exposition from me as why that’s clearly not the case, here. The “self” doesn’t become any less meaningful, real, or valuable because it is reified through matter and energy.
Code:
Even to refer to the self as "it" is to devalue "it"! (I'm not criticising you in particular because it is common parlance).
The self (person) becomes less meaningful, real, or valuable if it is “reified” because he or she:
- no longer has a raison d’etre or objective purpose in life.
- is **depersonalised **as the result of being reduced to impersonal processes.
- is devalued by being seen as an accident in the history of the universe.
- is relegated to the status of a product of events rather than an independent agent.
- lacks identity, unity, continuity and responsibility by ceasing to be an enduring entity and becoming what Hume described as “a bundle of perceptions”.
That is actually an accounting for the self, and materialism does this, in a way that your theism does not, and cannot.
The “accounting” amounts to an elimination of personhood.
A materialist provides a model that accounts for the self in natural terms, phenomena that are empirically grounded.
I have pointed out several times that we have direct, irrefutable experience of our thoughts, emotions, and decisions - which are found
within ourselves, not in what we
infer from what we perceive. Try as you might, you cannot escape from yourself as a conscious person in a private realm of your own, utterly distinct from that of anyone else. Why should your five senses be a more reliable guide to the nature of reality than your own thoughts and feelings? Your senses are useless if you cannot use your power of reason.
Your superstitions, by contrast, are no account at all, any more than “the gods must be bowling” accounts for thunder.
Your
substitions account for absolutely nothing because the irrational, purposeless energy to which you ascribe everything not only remains unexplained but does not explain the most important aspects of life - truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty and love - which you are forced to reduce to “efficacious concepts”. And those efficacious concepts turn out to be no more than electro-chemical patterns which have mysteriously acquired the power of insight into themselves and other electro-chemical patterns… I use “no more than” advisedly because you not only** derive** our minds from them but you also **equate **all our thoughts and feelings with them.
By way of contrast all that we consider most precious is related to
personal reality, the highest form of existence of which we have knowledge - and the only form of existence of which we have
direct knowledge. Our most inspiring and valuable experiences are related to persons, not material objects. We’re concerned less with the physical dimensions of people than their spiritual and moral attributes.
Your “self”, in contrast to a materialist view, is an utter, impenetrable mystery, entirely magical.
Is matter not an utter, impenetrable mystery, entirely magical? In which respects is it more intelligible than your own mind? Would you use scientific analysis to choose a wife? How would you measure the value of friendship and love? And what in your opinion are the most important things in life?
Perhaps you would like to answer those questions, inocente?
BTW I prefer a superstition to a substition because it is related to being superhuman rather than subhuman…
