N
Neoplatonist
Guest
Interesting. Yes, I’m familiar with the arguments of the medievals, and actually presented at a conference on Aquinas’ argument in De Ente et Essentia regarding necessary and contingent being. That line of thinking opens up a whole strange other thread, for how are we to interpret all the events of the Bible and the metaphors Christ and the apostles present us with if we try to imagine God as being itself, rather than a being.
No voice from the sky at Jesus’ baptism. No will. No hearing or answering prayers. No ‘our Father.’ No appeal from Jesus at Gethsemane or the cross. I mean, seriously, what does it mean to ‘talk to being itself’? We can say some things, we can make sentences about it, but I don’t think we can grasp how to reconcile the idea with the teachings.
In particular, what would it mean to frame ‘being itself’ as giving or with-holding gifts? Water doesn’t ‘give or withhold gifts’ - if we do the right actions, it behaves in certain ways. Electricity. Light. Honestly, we will be hard-pressed, if we remove the idea of ‘person’ to maintain any but a thin pretense of distinction between Western and Eastern religions.
Back to the issue at hand, though, if we fail to align ourselves with Being, why would we continue to exist? There’s a whole new kind of paradox there if we try to imagine our soul continuing on for eternity after it had turned away from being. Have you considered that?
No voice from the sky at Jesus’ baptism. No will. No hearing or answering prayers. No ‘our Father.’ No appeal from Jesus at Gethsemane or the cross. I mean, seriously, what does it mean to ‘talk to being itself’? We can say some things, we can make sentences about it, but I don’t think we can grasp how to reconcile the idea with the teachings.
In particular, what would it mean to frame ‘being itself’ as giving or with-holding gifts? Water doesn’t ‘give or withhold gifts’ - if we do the right actions, it behaves in certain ways. Electricity. Light. Honestly, we will be hard-pressed, if we remove the idea of ‘person’ to maintain any but a thin pretense of distinction between Western and Eastern religions.
Back to the issue at hand, though, if we fail to align ourselves with Being, why would we continue to exist? There’s a whole new kind of paradox there if we try to imagine our soul continuing on for eternity after it had turned away from being. Have you considered that?