juantoo3
....whys guy.... ʎʇıɹoɥʇnɐ uoıʇsǝnb
Kindest Regards, Paladin!
Ah, the philosopher at work!
Ah, the philosopher at work!
I like this.I would hazard a guess, that when it is all said and done it really depends on what part of the elephant you have a grasp of.
Indeed.As Jaiket has opened the possibilty of agnosticism over atheism ( a position I find more readily defendable in a logical sense) we have at least the lofty position of the beginners mind working for us.
I am not familiar with this by Suzuki, yet I have pondered the same and have come to call what is "the IS." Which, by my understanding, is the objective reality behind all subjective observations and philosophical musings of reality.Even if all the orthodox ideas of God, the Universe and Everything are eschewed are we not still left with, as Suzuki always said "Things as it is?"
I agree. I think it was Thomas who recently pointed out how an argument can be logical, and still not be true because it is based on a faulty premise.My point is that we can resolve all the gaps in our diverse philosophies and patch things together enough to be believable and still not have it all together.
Ah, Jung so soon? Would we include achetypal symbolism too? Yet, the "in-built" morals and archetypal symbols, with their shared meanings, had to come from somewhere. Perhaps it is beyond our ability to establish "where" exactly, but they did have a beginning.For example, if an atheist holds to a model of human beings being connected in a neural network or collective unconscious then ethics would come naturally because we wouldn't want to do harm to the species in any way. This wouldn't equate the necessity for a God at all,even seen from the perspective of the scientific or mechanistic view of Man-as-Machine.
This would explain Cai's view of the "in-built" morals.
I find it amazing how close you and I are in this. I sense "G-d" in a Christian sense, because that is the sense I am familiar with. Had I been born Buddhist, would I sense "G-d" in some other manner, or not sense "G-d" at all?Ultimately we are probably made of the same substance that the rest of the universe is made of, and therefore share in the same qualities as it is, it is these qualities that are the area of contention for many of us.
Call it God, or merely Suchness and we can disagree, but does our contention negate what merely "is" ?