IMSassafras said:
Pilgram,
It has been a while since I have conversed with you on your search. Reading your posts has been interesting, and I have at least one question that I would like to ask you.
You have posted many times that you would like to take "agreed on dogma" and incorporate it into your new religion. I am not sure how any "dogma" can be agreed on in all of "the world's 'great' religions". The "dogma" that I feel you are refering to is not always agreed on within one relgion let alone a multitude of religions. If you gave me some examples, it would be greatly appreciated.
I went ahead and looked up the word "dogma" at Dictionary.com for a better understanding of the word. Here in a copied version:
There were 4 entries.
#1
1. A doctrine or a corpus of doctrines relating to matters such as morality and faith, set forth in an authoritative manner by a church.
2. An authoritative principle, belief, or statement of ideas or opinion, especially one considered to be absolutely true. See Synonyms at doctrine.
3. A principle or belief or a group of them: “The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present” (Abraham Lincoln).
#2
1. That which is held as an opinion; a tenet; a doctrine.
The obscure and loose dogmas of early antiquity. -- Whewell.
2. A formally stated and authoritatively settled doctrine; a definite, established, and authoritative tenet.
3. A doctrinal notion asserted without regard to evidence or truth; an arbitrary dictum.
#3
1: a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof [syn: belief, tenet]
2: a doctrine or code of beliefs accepted as authoritative; "he believed all the Marxist dogma"
#4
a medical reference
(I tried not to get too crazy with the defintion(s) of "dogma", so I simplified it. If anyone would like to read the actual definition(s), they may do so at Dictionary.com. And if anyone has a better source they would like to refer to, please do so.)
Within the defintions I provided, you will read "dogma" is defined very broadly. Anywhere from "An authoritative principle, belief, or statement of ideas or opinion, especially one considered to be absolutely true." to "a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof".
So what is "dogma"? Is it Truth? Is it unprovable Truth? Is it False? And how are all of the relgions going to agree on the defintion of "dogma" or the usage of the word to define "a new religion"?
Also, the source of the "dogma" is important. Did it come from God? A Prophet? A church? Did it come from a infallible source or a fallible one? Does it matter? Personally, I would believe a infallible source over a fallible source any day.
Pilgram, I hope I am not being too bold in my request for a better understanding of your word "dogma".
I would like to ask you one more question... What are the religions you consider to be "the world's 'great' religions"?
Unity in Diversity
Sassafras
Greetings Sassafras,
I do not find you too bold but I fear your request will go unanswered. If with all the definitions of "dogma" you cite, you are still unclear as to its meaning, I do not believe I can help in your understanding.
But to move for a moment to a peripheral issue may be of assistance. I do not think it very important to use the exact same words in coming to an understanding of a term. I like examples much more than definitions. I guess this makes me less of an acedemic. So be it.
In philosophy we find the skeptics who claim to believe or know nothing. Okay. But they manage to eat, drink, sleep, work, breed, etc. It is less important what they say they believe or know and more important what they do.
We can dance around words forever. I find it boring after a short time.
A dogma, as I use the word, is simply any belief, any opinion. Period. Whether or not it is written down on golden paper and framed with rubies and pearls, it is still just an opinion when you come down to it. Okay.
Whether the pope or the doper who lives in the alley expresses it, it is still just an opinion. It is dogma.
All dogma is not created equal. Some work and some don't. The key is in defining one's goal. I see love as a dogma that works and hatred as one that fails. However, I am very aware that many people disagree with me. They love to hate and hate to love. So the goal is what counts.
If a person (or nation) seeks superiority,he (it) will do well to follow a course of hatred, suspicion, mistrust, enslavement, segregation, class injustice, censorship, tyranny and much torture and killing.
However, if a person (or nation) seeks peace and equality, she (it) will follow a much harder course. That course is love.
But love is not weak and defenseless. That which is weak and defenseless is weakness and defenselessnes.
When I referred to the world's "great" religions, I am speaking for the theologians who use the term. I think none of them are even good let alone great. Great is simply a term of art among theologians. It means those with a great many followers. Numbers!
"Agreed upon dogma of all religions." This is an easy one really. It boils down to the Golden Rule no matter what you want to call it. Spike Lee's movie, Do the Right Thing, hit the nail squarely. You don't have to be told by the pope, the dalai lama, Jerry Falwell, rabbi, amam, witch doctor, shaman or the easter bunny what the right thing is. You really don't.
The problem is that many people want others to act toward them in a fashion different from how they act toward others. Bill wants a stranger to lend a hand when Bill needs a hand. But when Bill is asked by a stranger to lend the stanger a hand, Bill walks by pretending not to even notice the stranger's existence.
This doesn't work. I don't need a dogma to tell me that this doesn't work. To say it works for Bill is still mistake. It hurts Bill in a way he is as yet too ignorant to understand.
Dogma.
A black man on drugs who got his head beat in by LA police had enough sense to ask the billion dollar question. "Why can't we all just get along?"
Do the right thing. We all know what it is. When we pretend not to, when we hide behind "definitions," we don't stop knowing. The skeptic who claims not to know anything, knows enough to eat when hungry, sleep when tired and copulate when horney.
I want to write a new bible. It's easy work really. But it's only for adults. No stories about snakes that talk or angels who hand us golden plates with god's words. Just a few dogmas such as Do the Right Thing. Don't steal. Don't initiate violence. Don't lie. Don't cheat. Don't sell defective products. A few more perhaps, but not very many.
I won't write about God very much. I don't know the woman. I don't know what she thinks about abortion so I'll keep my mouth shut and let every woman decide the issue for herself.
I won't write about which foods are clean and which are unclean. I wash all food with water before I eat it. That's good enough for me.
I won't write about heaven or hell. I've never been to either.
I'll write about teaching children how to think rather than what to think.
I'll write about why people are ashamed of their nakedness and how this is a metaphor for their shame of existence.
Dogma. Easy stuff, really. You already know all you need to know. Do the Right Thing, Sas, Do the Right Thing.
Love and Peace,
Pilgram