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Pieman333272
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That under nihilism, if life stinks, quit.Obviously he’d be ready for a new one, no? What point are you trying to make?
That under nihilism, if life stinks, quit.Obviously he’d be ready for a new one, no? What point are you trying to make?
I don’t get it: why not get a new car? What does nihilism have to do with it?That under nihilism, if life stinks, quit.
AT was using the car as an allegory for human life under nihilism.I don’t get it: why not get a new car? What does nihilism have to do with it?
This is more or less my experience -I can do better than your question stipulates, because back when I was a Catholic it actually was proven to me that the God I believed in could not possibly exist. I took these actions:
By way of point, think twice before rethinking any beliefs that work for you, no matter how stupid other people say they are.
- Examined other religions for an acceptable God-concept. No cheese in those tunnels.
- Before considering atheism, I checked for scientific explanations of a few simple paranormal experiences I’d had. Was told that I did not have those experiences.
- Studied some more physics, thought, why not develop a different God concept derived from physics theory and knowledge? Did that, then made the mistake of sharing the idea with atheist and religious physicists, and a Catholic theologian.
- Studied more about the paranormal experiences I didn’t have. Learned that lots of people had them. Modified my God-theory accordingly.
- Wrote a book and got it published. It became a best seller (in Brazil and Holland). Parts of it have been used in philosophy courses about the nature of consciousness. Went financially and socially bankrupt.
- Studied reincarnation theory, learned how to hypnotize so as to experiment with regression work. Ooops! Modified my God-theory accordingly.
- Studied neuroscience. Modified my God-theory accordingly.
- Started writing another book, found a fundamental flaw in my thinking, shared by all religions and science. Burnt the manuscript. Modified my God-theory accordingly.
- Started another book. No agency or publisher will consider taking it on.
Just out of curiosity, how did you derive a moral system from a logical system?My morality is based in logic not fear of the after life.
No he wasn’t; he was using the car as an example of something that really is valuable but only for as long as it is valued.AT was using the car as an allegory for human life under nihilism.
Are you saying that Buddhists don’t have rules of right conduct?? What kind of Buddhism are you into? Mahayana? Therevada? Zen? Can you give some actual examples of what you draw from these various ‘theologies,’ what it means to say that you are “mostly eastern (very buddhist)” in your theology?I don’t totally know if I believe in “god” at all. Some days I do more than others haha-
I have more proven to myself what I find incorrect and thus most of my beliefs are pulled from more than one theology- because I find some truth in a lot of theology - rather than total truth in one - Instead of black and white wrong and right ‘rules’ of conduct so to speak I life by principals of behavior … how to handle myself - rather than this is always right this is always wrong -
I guess I am mostly eastern (very buddhist) in my theology -
Haha… To put it simply - certain things that were taught to me as black and white right and wrong did not logically make any sense.Just out of curiosity, how did you derive a moral system from a logical system?
Yes. And if you like raising a family and pitching in in the community, devote yourself to that; and if you like collecting stamps, to that; and if you like collecting and playing videogames, to that; etc., etc., etc.Right. So as Eclogue suggested, if you like sugar and sexual pleasure, devote your life to that; or if you like cars, to that; or if you like the ‘aryan’ race and think they should rule the world, to that; if you like whales and trees and want to save them, to that; if you like money and think you can make some by killing whales and trees, to that. Regardless of whether any of it lasts forever, any of it is just as valuable as any of the rest of it, as long as someone happens to value it, and there is no big picture. Isn’t that what you’re saying?
When my car is broken down to the point that it is beyond repair, yes, it is time to get a new one. Unless, of course, I have such a sentimental attachment to the car that I decide to keep it anyway and keep it running for as long as I can.What if your car is badly beaten, has a gas leak, is from the 1970’s, randomly catches fire, has an unreliable steering wheel, and a dysfunctional left blinker? Do you care about it then, or are you ready for a new one, knowing it has no objective, spiritual purpose?
Just a note: there’s nothing about being “precious” that entails “being able to be remembered forever and ever.” My childhood experiences were precious, even though I’ve forgotten a lot of details.So, since this is our one life and we should enjoy it and make it precious (even though we will forget it all when we stop existing)
We have been through this before, but I’ll go through it again. I don’t think that there are any ultimate “shoulds” or “should nots,” so your question is nonsensical.why shouldn’t a pedophile capture, rape, torture, and kill little girls?
It seems you are saying that you essentially made up or borrowed your morality from sources that made sense to you. Is that right?Haha… To put it simply - certain things that were taught to me as black and white right and wrong did not logically make any sense. So in exploring those things … I let my life experience guide me in a logical fashion… this teaching defies logic - lets test - yea I don’t believe that — ect
Since you mention it, can ask the nature of the event, or at least how it shook your faith?I was raised Catholic - one event shook my faith which was very traumatic. But I took my time leaving the church…
That makes perfect sense. I did the same thing, I bounced all over the place. If I weren’t a Theist, I could get into philosophical Taoism. The whole wei wu wei thing is very much my bag baby! Though my voyage brought me home to Rome, I can understand the journey. It took me almost 20 years. Even worse, Christianity is really, really hard. Though its satisfying in a much more visceral way at 38, then it was at 14. I sleep good at night.I actually studied for over 2 years before deciding not that there was NO God - just that it’s not this God - if that makes sense.
Its been a slow practice -
I don’t know much about Buddhism, there is one here, Rossum.I tend to move away from mediation though - I do follow some of the teachings of nichiren Buddhism-
I do not chant though -
But this sect varies in the importance put on a person taking action - personal empowerment contributes to peace -
You can read about the 10 principals if you are so inclined or i can elaborate if you want
but as i said i don’t totally follow a single faith I believe greatly in karma -
I believe in right action as well -
(respect tolerance self control honesty compassion generosity)
The thing about the truth is that it is the truth for everyone, it always surprises me where one finds it.I also have taken some Hindu beliefs as well as Tibetan -
Have you ever been to a movie theater before to see a new film? Why did you go? In your eyes, that movie doesn’t mean anything in the full scheme of things. Perhaps you went because you realized that during those two hours of your life, you chose to devote it to something you personally would most likely enjoy and get pleasure out of. In the end it may not seem to matter, but what you did right then at that time, is choose to consciously (hope) to enjoy the movie. If the supposed new future contains time, why de-value the time you know that you have this instant?Without God, life would have no real purpose.
There’s really not too much more to say (it’s redundant) and Antitheist also answered these questions very well. If we go away when we die, it may not matter then to us then (hence we’re dead), but it did matter during the time we were here, and what we did may matter to the rest of civilization because we were not selfish, just as many before us were not selfish. Did some of the greatest contributors to society care that eventually their life would end? They greatly helped us with what we were able to do, just as what we do will hopefully help the future. It’s the circle of life, and I enjoy what I have which is my subjective view. If others don’t, I guess it’s there choice, and they reap their own benefits/consequences.We could “decide” a purpose, but that would have no effect on morality. We can’t decide what’s right or wrong. All we can decide is a personal preference. Life is such a preference; if we just go away when we die, then it doesn’t matter if we die in a hundred years or a million. We’ll all die eventually and we’re not coming back and we won’t be able to look back at all the happy memories. So what’s the point of living in the first place? There is none. Life is pointless without God.
You are assuming there is an infinite big scheme. I’m assuming mine is (hopefully) a full 90 years or so. I’ll take the days I have and contribute to happiness in order to receive the same, as others have contributed before and presently. If you have an infinite big scheme of days, why do you really care what you accomplish tomorrow, if you supposedly have an infinite time to eventually accomplish it anyway?In the big scheme of things, sugar is pointless, whether we like it or not. Similarly, if there is no afterlife, life is pointless whether we like it or not.
a good example of this from this forum is someone asking me about evil -Are you saying that Buddhists don’t have rules of right conduct?? What kind of Buddhism are you into? Mahayana? Therevada? Zen? Can you give some actual examples of what you draw from these various ‘theologies,’ what it means to say that you are “mostly eastern (very buddhist)” in your theology?
Just curious Catholichelp, have you read the works of Thomas Merton? Although his focus was on moral issues and social justice rather than concepts of God, you may like his ideas on the union of eastern religion and Roman Catholicism. Just a totally-off-topic recommendation.I don’t totally know if I believe in “god” at all. Some days I do more than others haha-
I have more proven to myself what I find incorrect and thus most of my beliefs are pulled from more than one theology- because I find some truth in a lot of theology - rather than total truth in one - Instead of black and white wrong and right ‘rules’ of conduct so to speak I life by principals of behavior … how to handle myself - rather than this is always right this is always wrong -
I guess I am mostly eastern (very buddhist) in my theology
It seems you are saying that you essentially made up or borrowed your morality from sources that made sense to you. Is that right?
not exactly.it would be more correct that I found it useless to accept what someone had given me as right or wrong and just run with it my whole life-
So I used different philosophies as a basis for how to behave - tolerance - patience - compassion - understanding -
but right and wrong on religious issues -
birth control
abortion
gay marriage
marriage in general
ect -
I allowed my own life experience to shape my views …
Since you mention it, can ask the nature of the event, or at least how it shook your faith?
this will take me longer to answer and I really need to think about what i am comfortable posting -
but i will come back to it after my kids are in bed![]()
I have not actually but I will look into on my kindle tonightJust curious Catholichelp, have you read the works of Thomas Merton? Although his focus was on moral issues and social justice rather than concepts of God, you may like his ideas on the union of eastern religion and Roman Catholicism. Just a totally-off-topic recommendation.![]()
Don’t worry about it. Sokay.… after my kids are in bed![]()
thanks I’d rather not deal with it on a public forum - I am more than willing to talk in PM if you are interested.Don’t worry about it. Sokay.![]()
That’s OK.I didn’t mean to pry into any personal stuff.thanks I’d rather not…