Search results

  1. Penelope

    Defining Divinity

    Rationality, Intellect, Emotion, Intimacy ... are the key mechanisms thru which you grow as a person (and by which, profitably for others, you change the world). & & & Lest I give either of us too big of headache, I will only address INTELLECT at this time. The SUBCONSCIOUS is an arena of...
  2. Penelope

    Defining Divinity

    Hi Thomas. Thanks for responding. Attempting to approach existence (and the meaning behind existence) in a manner that is systematic (that is rigorous without being rigid) is difficult for me. A big living puzzle with many interacting pieces. Not ... this is "always true" and that is "always...
  3. Penelope

    There is no such thing as 'Free Will'

    Friend of mine made this movie: Girl and guy on their second date. Dance recital, theater on Floor 2 in a college hall. The exit door to the hall is on the landing, at the turn of the stairs between Floor 2 and Floor 1. After the recital, the pair walk down the stairs. The guy pretends to...
  4. Penelope

    There is no such thing as 'Free Will'

    What you want most. Choices, yes, but meaningless ones. & & & In Developmental Psychology, a person grows from child to adult not just biophysically, but neurophysiologically as well. The two principle pathways of this process are COGNITIVE and AFFECTIVE development. (i.e. The evolution of...
  5. Penelope

    There is no such thing as 'Free Will'

    Hi Rodg Unlike some of your detractors, I recognize that your ideas (or, really, your ONE idea) is well grounded. Take a look at Game Theory. It is based upon your argument. (Except in Game Theory, the person who "only chooses what they want most" will always LOSE the game to a sophisticated...
  6. Penelope

    Defining Divinity

    {Defining Divinity (William James)} 6a. Old aphorism: There is nothing sure in life. Except death and taxes. 6b. Painful as it is, humans have to pay for their existence. We each owe a debt. We have to pay nature for our individual life ... with our personal extinction. But we also, while...
  7. Penelope

    Defining Divinity

    {Defining Divinity (Sigmund Freud)} 3a. The birth-trauma (in humans) awakens cognitive consciousness and affective awareness. We are conscious and aware from Day-1. ( ... Even though infantile sights and sounds are fuzzy and largely meaningless, at first. ... Even though the point of social...
  8. Penelope

    ticking biological clock (the Dna argument for Deism)

    The simple version of Deism goes like this: God sets His creation in motion, then backs off and watches it, not interfering. Lets "human morality and reason" take over. God sets the rules, starts the game, then sits back and indifferently watches the game play out. Lets affective and cognitive...
  9. Penelope

    Defining Divinity

    Defining Divinity 1a. Looked at scientifically, belief (in anything) is a hypothesis. (God is a theory.) 1b. But belief (in anything) never exists in a vacuum. Belief is always socially organized. (Even within an individual. Belief has to come from somewhere. Family, friends, community...
  10. Penelope

    Rebecca -> Tamar -> Ruth -> David = the genetic-engineering of a King

    Rereading the The Book of J and comparing it to Genesis, Exodus, and Numbers (with their later additions by other authors of the Scriptures) ... something struck me as interesting: Yahweh "shows favor" on this individual or "gives his blessing" to that individual. Yahweh is "pleased" ... But...
  11. Penelope

    History of Christianity

    Taijasi It may be arcane of me, in our "postmodern" world, to enunciated a belief in human progress. But I do. And if there is a clear 'cause' for that progress, I put some value upon - and (conditional) faith in - that cause. It has the ring of Truth to me. & & & Newborns of Homo...
  12. Penelope

    History of Christianity

    Nativeastral: l was just looking at it from a wider dimension; as to why Jesus became so popular there... Thomas: Maybe because the doctrine was so much more appealing? The success of Christianity might be a lot simpler than either 'linked mythology' or 'unique doctrine.' The astrological...
  13. Penelope

    Purity ... (core of religious piety? or mark of sectarian intolerance?)

    Is purity merely a refinement process? Sitting under a tree or in a cave or on a high butte, for hours on end ... till this person (via sensory-deprivation) begins to auto-hallucinate ... And some Great Truth comes knocking on Brain's door? Does exercising one's muscles - getting up, going...
  14. Penelope

    History of Christianity

    Amergin: I think the main conclusion is that Christianity is a Pagan Religion with some Jewish names, 1700 years ago. Naturally details can be lost and records fudged to protect the guilty. The structure of Christianity is fundamentally Indo-European with only a trace of Semitic religion...
  15. Penelope

    Purity ... (core of religious piety? or mark of sectarian intolerance?)

    Penelope: Sectarian distinctions of class, race, gender ... Innate hierarchy based upon dogmatic discrimination of perceived purity and impurity. Mark (Eudaimonist): Examples? & & & In most cultures of the past, and some still in the current world, a woman is seen as "impure" when she is...
  16. Penelope

    Purity ... (core of religious piety? or mark of sectarian intolerance?)

    Most if not all religions exhibit - as one of their devotional rites - the idea of purity. This good or bad? & & & Cleanliness. Asceticism. Discipline. Correct mind. Correct body ... Spiritual purity. Sectarian distinctions of class, race, gender ... Innate hierarchy based upon dogmatic...
  17. Penelope

    Meister Eckhart

    Towards a Poor Theatre (1968) by Jerzy Grotowski is one of the 20th century's key writings on Experimental Theater. Like Antonin Artaud, Peter Brook, Richard Schechner, Tadashi Suzuki, and others ... Grotowski sought to give modern theater both sound philosophical underpinnings but also give the...
  18. Penelope

    Living bravely.

    I like to think of this William James 'coyote' anecdote as a 'parable' (like we find in the Bible or in the writings of Kafka). A parable not about our animal-instincts (hardwired behavior) nor about 'extreme sports' (pushing the limit). But a parable about our 'social conduct' in the world...
  19. Penelope

    Did godlike qualities guide evolution?

    All mammals are social creatures. Mammals of the same species interact with each other. Herd together. Aid in the raising of each others' young, to some minor degree. But when hominids began to experiment with walking upright, 4 to 7 million years ago, something new (in terms of evolution)...
  20. Penelope

    Living bravely.

    William James: I saw a moving sight the other morning before breakfast in a little hotel where I slept in the dusty fields. The young man of the house shot a little wolf called coyote in the early morning. The little heroic animal lay on the ground, with his big furry ears, and his clean white...
Back
Top