juantoo3
....whys guy.... ʎʇıɹoɥʇnɐ uoıʇsǝnb
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Thanks for the Francis Bacon. I agree that "as long as" people remain deliberately ignorant it is to their detriment. Ignorance itself though is no crime nor sin.
Not always ... when seeking becomes a virtue for its own sake, then most of its product is dross.And the "seeker's mind" is far more productive practically, spiritually, pragmatically and diplomatically.
That's part of the examination ...There are things worth knowing. There are things not worth expending effort towards.
Yes ... we call it common sense.Do I have a need for the knowledge to pilot a fighter plane ... That is practical wisdom in action.
And the "seeker's mind" is far more productive practically, spiritually, pragmatically and diplomatically.
True, but could it have been much worse?something without which civilisation would have been very, very different,
hurr...hurr
he says as he raises his glasses to his forhead and stomps his staff in agreement...
yes.
of course, you only have my word for it, but you must admit that it is patently impossible for you to substantiate your belief without actually producing a parallel version of human history. to quote gandalf, "even the very wise cannot see all ends".
perhaps you are right in one way, though, tao. if religious people had actually done what they were told to do, rather than ignoring large parts of it to do with peace, social justice and morality, the world might be a much nicer place. if all jews kept shabbat, for example, we would contribute a great deal to saving the environment by not driving our cars for 1/7th of the week. personally, my car use dropped 42% the minute i stopped driving on saturdays. similarly, if we all tried to "love your neighbour as yourself", i find it hard to believe the world would be a worse place.
i'm not saying "more religion" is the answer. i'm saying "more of the right sort of religious behaviours" is the answer.
b'shalom
bananabrain
I like this idea of an I Don't Know section!
Think of the rib not as just a splinter of bone but as the forces between men and women which attract us to each other yet which also repel us. The Heb. word that has been translated rib is usually rendered into English as side or chamber -- not rib. (Concord) I think it is not referring just to a rib but to the symmetry and asymmetry in our body organs. Altogether, several types of symmetry and asymmetry are represented between men and women. Our bodies appear symmetric externally, but there are internal organs like the heart, liver, and bowels that are not symmetric. These organs approach a kind of symmetry when there are two bodies together. There are even body parts that men & women can share, called 'Reproductive organs;' however we can only get so close together, have so much symmetry. I think its not that a rib had to be taken to make the woman, but that a special dynamic was created in humankind between the sexes. The story of Genesis may relate to us what this is for....
...but I don't know for sure what it is! Care to speculate?
Now please tell the Pope that faith does not finish the truth.I don't know.
Isn't "I don't know" an honest answer?
Point is religions do not share what is absolute in truth.Is it better to lie when one doesn't know the answer? Are these the kinds of answers you hoped or expected to see? Is there not a great presumption in the OP regarding the abilities and motivations of others?
What is the fallacy? You want your children to have the truth as well.Ah! I see yet another fallacy brewing...
Why is the sky blue? Why does thunder peal after the lightning strike? Perhaps you know, perhaps you don't. For centuries I would guess many thoughts were put forward to explain, but at most only one is factually true. Do we have that truthful answer today? I don't know. I don't know because tomorrow somebody may come along with a better explanation, and I want to be open to hear it. I want my children to be open to hear it too.
Between all measurement.What is the nature of time?
entangled energyWhat is gravity?
Mass is energy (light) affixed in time.What is the relationship of matter to energy?
Electric and magnetic field at perpendicular planes; see the cross!What is light made of?
Until now!Why do flags wave in the wind? All of these are simple physics questions...without answers.
See gravity but with a twist; mankind can predetermine or experience the affect before acting or imposition to existence.And then there are questions of the heart and of spirit; What is love?
So if your kid wanted to see what is is like to pee from the kitchen counter top simply for 'curiousity' would you educate 'why he shouldn't'?For a simple question with a simple answer I agree children should be taught. But to narrow a child's horizon to rote and ritual, by demanding a simple answer whether true or not to a complex question, is to sabotage a child's innate curiousity and wonder. It stifles their imagination.
so your point is not so clearI don't know.
People who do think they know everything, scare me.![]()
Do we not first have to learn to ask the correct question and then be willing and able to hear the answer when it comes?
The answer "I know" locks our minds away from possibilities.
or drunk, again!tao, have you been watching hharry potter, again??
And you can see it in our world? Can you give at least one clear example?
Know? Or hope and trust in faith? The two are not the same.
that would depend on if a person was after accurate knowledge ,or just knowledge based on mens thoughts
Sir Francis Bacon aka.. Shakespeare....Actually in the orthodox traditions, none.
Whether man accepts the answers, is a whole other question.
The prevalent philosophy of the West, shaped by the Enlightenment, was founded on an erroneous assumption — "the triumph of art over nature" (Novum Organum Francis Bacon) (that science could explain and tame all nature), and continues to run its course, in the pursuit of 'progress' and 'freedom', even though the growing weight of evidence suggests somewhere, someone went wrong.
"The entrance into the Kingdom of man, founded on the sciences, being not much other than the entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven, where into none may enter except as a little child." Novum Organum Francis Bacon.
Above is a typical formative psychology of the Enlightenment. Here we can see that science has replaced faith ... the belief that science will put man back in the Garden of Paradise, or rather, in the absence of Eden, science will create a new Paradise for man ... he no longer has any need of God.
Brilliant!As long as man exercises his option to say "I don't know" without obligation to find out, as long as he insists his own ignorance is more valid than truth, because it's the authentic expression of his autonomous freedom ... he betrays himself, and his seed ...
Thomas
Bacon's approach is well-characterized by two quotations from his works:If in other sciences we should arrive at certainty without doubt and truth without error, it behooves us to place the foundations of knowledge in mathematics."
— Opus Majus, bk. 1, ch. 4
Mathematics is the gate and key of the sciences. …Neglect of mathematics works injury to all knowledge, since he who is ignorant of it cannot know the other sciences or the things of this world."
— Opus Majus
Which perfects the reality that no faith has the answers complete.of course, you only have my word for it, but you must admit that it is patently impossible for you to substantiate your belief without actually producing a parallel version of human history. to quote gandalf, "even the very wise cannot see all ends".
Correct. As the first precept is integrity or honesty. And if integrity was kept in pursuing knowledge, that may even contradict the belief itself, this world could be a better place.perhaps you are right in one way, though, tao. if religious people had actually done what they were told to do, rather than ignoring large parts of it to do with peace, social justice and morality, the world might be a much nicer place.
Compassion?i'm not saying "more religion" is the answer. i'm saying "more of the right sort of religious behaviours" is the answer.