dauer said:
I'm stating that I take for granted a lot of ideas, ideas that are externally verifiable. The evidence we have for G!d is the same as the evidence we have for schizophrenic delusions once we take into account cultural influences. We do not have external verifiability.
hmm. well, could you give me an example of an externally verifiable *idea*? that is, one which is an idea alone? as for this argument about evidence, you could say the same thing about real love, good music, or fine art and those exist all right even if nobody agrees about what they are and all we can verify externally is their tangible artifacts. nonetheless, as the discworld philosopher didactylos puts it, the turtle moves.
I don't make the assumption that Jewish ideas about G!d must be correct. There are belief systems that don't require G!d is indivisibly One and I'm not beginning with the premise that G!d is indivisibly One.
then what is it that makes you jewish other than the same sort of stuff that reconstructionists would agree with?
Further, if the psyches of different individuals are independent of one another and G!d only exists within the human psyche, then G!d is not indivisibly one.
i would certainly suspect/suggest that the psyche is not an independent entity.
If either I am my body or some of me is my body, and some of my body is fingers, then some of me is fingers.
yes, but all your fingers are part of one hand, therefore unified. is this down to semantics now or have we agreed, say that G!D Has many Faces, but they are not indications of separation within G!D?
I'm only stating that, if we accept the premises I've given, the conclusion follows.
i'm not sure there's anything inevitable about that, though.
You said 'like star trek' not believe it's our future. I like The Matrix. That doesn't mean I believe we have a future as batteries for machines to look forward to. I don't hold a belief in a utopian future for humanity.
well, you should. or what are we here for? surely you, like me, work for such a thing to come about? that is exactly what tiqqun 'olam is concerned with - so we end up having our wars on the holodeck rather than hiding in the earth's core from arnold schwarzenegger or flying mechanical squids.
rebzgabbai said:
think that perhaps Reb Zalman is saying that there was always experimentation and innovation but its just not something that has been publicized much because it didn’t serve objectives of those in power.
oh, smeg, not the "objectives of power" argument... look, if you're innovating you rarely publicise what you're doing until you're sure it will scale and not fall flat on its face at launch. reb zalman did not, i think, start with a grand PR announcement.
Reb Zalman has done a lot of work on helping us to define avodah zarah in a modern context.
now that i am particularly interested in. the categories of avodah zarah are very poorly understood in modern traditional communities. people are still being taught at mainstream yeshivot that christianity is AZ, that you can't go into a church, that the trinity is idolatrous and so on. there is fundamental ignorance not just about that, but also about hinduism, modern neo-pagans and so on. i'm not saying those categories are inoperative, but i am arguing for a far more minimalist and restricted position, the same as i am around kol ishah.
What is halachah without the theology to back it up? Isn’t it just then a legal system?
depends on whether you mean systematic theology or not - we did without one just fine until sa'adiah.
If a basis for kosher behavior is decoupled from God then it is decoupled from torah and then where are you.
reconstructionism! hehe. i don't think that necessarily demands very much in terms of theology, however.
Also, I am not his peer in any way shape or form because I have been working very hard to fill in insufficient training in yiddishkeit of which I have felt a need for most of my adult life. He, on the other hand, came from a chasidic family and was given the highest quality Jewish training in Vienna and beyond. Vienna seems to have been a special environment to have come from. I would imagine his IQ is super high as well.
but this is simply renewal version of the "din Torah" argument from authority. you don't have to be someone's peer to question or challenge. you're denying your own right to be convinced. what is the difference between your deferral to reb zalman's upbringing and the insistence from some of the kiruv-mongers of my acquaintance that if i went off and studied at yeshiva for 20 years, i'd definitely end up agreeing with them. as such an assertion cannot be evidenced accurately, i'd tend to discount it in no uncertain terms. it's not a substitute for argument from merit. i'm not, incidentally, down on reb zalman here, i think you're putting him on a pedestal.
Reb Zalman has a teaching called Deep Ecumenism. In it, he talks about how no religion can afford a triumphalist bent at this time because of our mother the planet which needs to be our collective focus.
but even if the planet was not in danger and we were a sustainable civilisation, i'd still have a problem with any triumphalist religion, because triumphalism necessarily implies a conversionist agenda and i don't subscribe to that: i'll leave off converting you for the moment because right now we need to save the planet. that for me is completely disingenuous.
He talks about the need, in certain cases, for Judaism to import files which have been lost to us Jews from other religions. We recognize they were lost and need to be regained.
now this i agree with, albeit i'm not sure i would see the difference here between reb zalman and, say, aryeh kaplan.
Why can't brothers and sisters just be loving?
because they're brothers and sisters! the middle east is nothing more than a giant case of "daddy, he's on my side of the seat!"
I don’t have specifics. Sometimes individuals find their souls longing for something they aren’t finding in their synagogue or church. Then they go to see Sylvia Boorstein, e.g., who teaches something of a mindfulness practice and they say, "That’s just what I needed. Why didn’t my minister or Rabbi give that to me? Is it a part of my religion?" In this case, it might just be a lost file that was once part of the religion.
now this i can certainly agree with, it was precisely what happened to me, i just had to find the part of RAM that was still being used for those subroutines, fortunately i didn't actually have to do much importing.
Meditation, chanting and dance, in the context of a Jewish service, help lower a sense of difficulty of reaching in God’s direction.
except in the UK. clearly you've never seen british jews trying to do this sort of thing, it's terribly embarrassing. we're going to need some other stuff than this. perhaps we should import the file for the japanese tea ceremony.
My own view is that it is the leading edge of Judaism and includes mysticism, eastern philosophy, chant, dance, meditation, interfaith activities and other progressive notions.
hmm. a big assumption there that all these things are necessarily "progressive".
dauer said:
theological attempts to justify changes in halachah, most specifically, paradigm shift.
right, but i don't think you're on a winner using theology for that, because all you're really going to be getting there is confirmation bias and post-hoc rationalisation. i think you're far better gathering support for an evidence-based position. for example, my point about valid eye-witness 'eidut that r. moshe feinstein drank non-halav-yisrael milk, that roshei bet din used to feel perfectly comfortable attending the royal opera house; i personally have witnessed a sephardi dayan (and indeed the whole bet din) at a performance with a lady singer. this is where documentary evidence can be of use; i don't see why takkanot ha-kahal cannot be of service here. there is, to give another example, the ruling that ladies' trousers are not "men's apparel", because the world doesn't see it that way. this principle could, with great care, be of far more use where we have gotten out of step with *contemporary* society in the name of the social norms not of *judaism*, but of C19th europe; to put it more succinctly, there is no possible reason for sephardim to be wearing black hats.
b'shalom
bananabrain