Author Topic: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)  (Read 44362 times)

ippy

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #25 on: March 01, 2016, 05:58:34 PM »
Dear Hope,

Well done, you attracted a new member to our small forum, keep up the good work.

Dear Stephen,

Welcome, I am the forums psychic, the spirits are telling me you have atheistic leanings.

Gonnagle.

If your psychic powers were any good Gonners, you'd already know if he was an atheistic or not.

I can remember seeing somewhere that there is a newspaper titled "The Psychic News", I can remember thinking, why do they need a newspaper?

ippy 

Gordon

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #26 on: March 01, 2016, 06:04:08 PM »
One doesn't have to down a bottle of whisky to do something 'wrong'.  One doesn't need to have had one's attitudes and behaviours modified in this way to be able to do wrong.  As for your comment that "Behaviours, attitudes and reasoning clearly have there origins in biology ..." perhaps you can provide us with evidential material to show why the law against killing someone - which exists in practically every 'corner' of the globe - is in any way related to biology.

Easy-peasy anything and everything that people think is due to human biology: there is no alternative to thinking using your brain. Try thinking using either your big toe or the nearest kettle if you don't believe me.

Quote
Good to see you making the same mistake that others here have - taking an argument 'for' the role of science in such a process and trying to point out an error.
As far as I'm aware, no-one uses the term spontaneous healing to refer to everyday healings - such as of colds or illness caused by viruses - it is generally accepted that this is one example of how the body is designed/able to combat infection/virus attack/etc.

How convenient that you exclude all the stuff that is routine and understood, due of course to scientific research such as the development of vaccines,

Quote
It tends to be used for more unexpected healing - when doctors have said that there is nothing more that they can do for a patient - such as in some cases of cancer or severe burning.  The claim that the body 'just repairs' itself after months, sometimes years of not being able to seems a bit far-fetched and unscientific.

Utter nonsense, and I expect I have rather more direct experience of this than you since I used to do it for a living, and Mrs G still does.

Quote
I've given this example before - emotions.  All others have managed to do is refer to the symptoms of whatever emotion they might be talking about, not the underlying processes

More nonsense: your emotions are biological processes occurring in your brain, where these are subject to both biological processes within your body (some of which are autonomic) and are also subject to external events, stimuli and other inputs, such as drugs, alcohol and let us not forget allergens.

You really do need to educate yourself out of the simplistic understanding of biology that you seem to have: and you won't find the answers in theology and its associated fallacies.
« Last Edit: March 01, 2016, 06:51:58 PM by Gordon »

Étienne d'Angleterre

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #27 on: March 01, 2016, 06:20:08 PM »


Dear Stephen,

Welcome, I am the forums psychic, the spirits are telling me you have atheistic leanings.

Gonnagle.
[/quote]

Hi, thank you for the welcome.

Your spirits are 4/7th correct.  :)

I don't have a belief in the traditional Deities but I do have a strong sense of the spiritual and numinous. I'm sure most people theist or atheist might feel the same.

I was having a cup of tea next to my camellia that is just coming into bud earlier. The birds were singing I thought this is heaven on Earth. Then I noticed that the birds were eating the insects on the plant - maybe not Heaven after all :-\

The reason I ask Hope is that wouldn't it be interesting if he was correct about these non material/ naturalistic things.

So far though I have seen nothing to convince me, but I remain open to persuasion.

Hopefully, the first of many conversations.

Stephen


Étienne d'Angleterre

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #28 on: March 01, 2016, 06:23:34 PM »
Absolutely. I wish I'd asked Stephen how he found us.

Hi,

Actually I did post briefly on the old BBC forum. After it closed I didn't bother but a few years later a bit of googling this place showed up.

I didn't post before because I'm no in a position to do so on a regular basis and I think it rude to ask a question if you haven't got time to respond.


Bubbles

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #29 on: March 01, 2016, 06:25:49 PM »

Dear Stephen,

Welcome, I am the forums psychic, the spirits are telling me you have atheistic leanings.

Gonnagle.


Hi, thank you for the welcome.

Your spirits are 4/7th correct.  :)

I don't have a belief in the traditional Deities but I do have a strong sense of the spiritual and numinous. I'm sure most people theist or atheist might feel the same.

I was having a cup of tea next to my camellia that is just coming into bud earlier. The birds were singing I thought this is heaven on Earth. Then I noticed that the birds were eating the insects on the plant - maybe not Heaven after all :-\

The reason I ask Hope is that wouldn't it be interesting if he was correct about these non material/ naturalistic things.

So far though I have seen nothing to convince me, but I remain open to persuasion.

Hopefully, the first of many conversations.

Stephen

You might be interested in the Panthiest thread on the Pagan topic then  :)

It was started by Shaker. 🌹
« Last Edit: March 01, 2016, 06:28:31 PM by Rose »

Étienne d'Angleterre

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #30 on: March 01, 2016, 06:36:50 PM »
One doesn't have to down a bottle of whisky to do something 'wrong'.  One doesn't need to have had one's attitudes and behaviours modified in this way to be able to do wrong.  As for your comment that "Behaviours, attitudes and reasoning clearly have there origins in biology ..." perhaps you can provide us with evidential material to show why the law against killing someone - which exists in practically every 'corner' of the globe - is in any way related to biology.
Good to see you making the same mistake that others here have - taking an argument 'for' the role of science in such a process and trying to point out an error.
As far as I'm aware, no-one uses the term spontaneous healing to refer to everyday healings - such as of colds or illness caused by viruses - it is generally accepted that this is one example of how the body is designed/able to combat infection/virus attack/etc.

It tends to be used for more unexpected healing - when doctors have said that there is nothing more that they can do for a patient - such as in some cases of cancer or severe burning.  The claim that the body 'just repairs' itself after months, sometimes years of not being able to seems a bit far-fetched and unscientific.
I've given this example before - emotions.  All others have managed to do is refer to the symptoms of whatever emotion they might be talking about, not the underlying processes
Its good to debate with you, Stephen.  Don't worry about not being able to post regularly.

Well I would like to cut out most of the post which spectacularly fails to get the point I was making.

You have picked (an correct me if I a wrong) emotions as something non naturalistic and not within the remit of science.

WHAT!!!!!

This I clearly complete rubbish.

Suffer serious brain damage and it is likely that you will suffer changed attitudes and emotions.

Take alcohol and / or drugs and it is likely that you will suffer changed attitudes and emotions.

Witness as traumatic event and it is likely that you will suffer changes attitudes and emotions.

People who are dead show no changes in attitudes and emotions regardless of how much Whisky or cocaine you give them or prop them up in front of Bambi in the tragic scene we are all well familiar with.

Add to this the FACT that medical science can produce drugs which effect hormones I think it more likely that emotions are naturalistic, have origins in Biology  and can be understood and manipulated (to a degree) by the application of science than emotions are supernatural.

What say you?




Étienne d'Angleterre

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #31 on: March 01, 2016, 06:51:15 PM »
Thank you,

I will investigate further.

Rhiannon

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #32 on: March 01, 2016, 07:16:42 PM »


I don't have a belief in the traditional Deities but I do have a strong sense of the spiritual and numinous. I'm sure most people theist or atheist might feel the same.

I was having a cup of tea next to my camellia that is just coming into bud earlier. The birds were singing I thought this is heaven on Earth. Then I noticed that the birds were eating the insects on the plant - maybe not Heaven after all :-\

The reason I ask Hope is that wouldn't it be interesting if he was correct about these non material/ naturalistic things.

So far though I have seen nothing to convince me, but I remain open to persuasion.

Hopefully, the first of many conversations.

Stephen

Hi, Stephen,

I'm a pantheistic pagan; to me spirituality is very much as you describe, feeding and nurturing the needs we have that go beyond the physical. And I think it is in the (supposedly) small things we find meaning - the sun on your face, the scent of the earth.

I fully understand where you are coming from on the apparent 'fallen-ness' (to borrow a phrase from Christianity) of the cycle of life where things consume other things in order to survive and heaven on earth suddenly slips away - btw I'm sure you know that tea is a form of camellia. But if you look on the whole without judgement, but consider how interconnected everything is, and how vast, there is perspective and balance to be had. It's only us humans that come along and spoil the party, at least as far as we know.

Enki

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #33 on: March 01, 2016, 07:58:10 PM »

Thank you for getting back to me, and I hope the cold is better soon.

I'm afraid I couldn't find anything non naturalistic in your post.

Right and wrong appear to me to be value judgements about behaviours. Behaviours, attitudes and reasoning clearly have there origins in biology and this can be clearly demonstrated by downing a bottle of Whisky. Do you agree that your attitudes and behaviours would be different subsequent to this? Biology is also clearly ripe for scientific investigation.

Likewise speed limits are a compromise between getting around as quickly as possible whilst also trying to minimise accidents. I don't see anything non naturalistic about this.

Not sure I understand  your point about spontaneous healing. You have a cold at the moment. I bet you won't a year from now (well not the same one anyway). What is non naturalistic about that. If you lost a leg in an accident and it suddenly grew back you might have something  worth talking about.

I suppose a good way to proceed would be for you to give us an example of "the parts of our lives that go beyond the natural"

TTFN

Stephen

PS Thanks for the welcome messages.  I don't know how often I will be able to post but hope to give it a good shot.

Hi Stephen,

Welcome to this forum. I hope you enjoy it. You seem to have started well, with some very pointed questions.

And just so you know that there are plenty of people here with a variety of views and arguments, may I point you to a previous thread which discussed ideas of morality in some detail.

http://www.religionethics.co.uk/index.php?topic=10374.0


If you delve into this thread, you will probably get some inkling of the different ideas and arguments that people on here have produced on this subject.

Cheers.  :)
Sometimes I wish my first word was 'quote,' so that on my death bed, my last words could be 'end quote.'
Steven Wright

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #34 on: March 01, 2016, 08:00:57 PM »
The universe does not care if you lie, or kill, or steal.

Human groups do.

The 'rules' come from  groups trying to establish a way of living together that benefits all.
We are stronger as a group than individuals, and we need rules to live in large groups.

That's all there is to it.
But hang on because humans are part of the universe.......so the part of the universe that can care does.

torridon

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #35 on: March 01, 2016, 08:42:48 PM »
Hi Stephen, as I've pointed out before - several times - the issue is that as far as certain people are concerned the only valid evidence is that which is moderated by the scientific method.  As you will appreciate, since this method relies solely on the naturalistic, any non-naturalistic evidence is necessarily disallowed by such people.  Therefore experience is irrelevant - even though experience is quite an important factor in getting jobs, bringing children up safely, ... 

This shows a basic misunderstanding of the terms naturalistic, and evidence.  There is no such thing, and there never can be any such thing, as non-naturalistic evidence.  Evidence is a naturalistic concept.  The rest of your post is pursuant to this elementary faux-pas and thus is not worth reading.

Alan Burns

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #36 on: March 01, 2016, 09:09:46 PM »
Hello Stephen,

Welcome to the Forum.
I am one of the ever decreasing number of Christian posters on this forum.  As you may have gathered from other threads, I have spent a lot of time and effort trying to convince some of the non believers that we all have a spiritual soul which facilitates our conscious awareness and free will.  From your posts it would seem that you will present me with another challenge!
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

floo

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #37 on: March 02, 2016, 11:19:10 AM »
Stephen, why have you singled out Hope for your attention? Other posters, like Alan Burns make daft assertions without supporting evidence too!

Bubbles

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #38 on: March 02, 2016, 11:50:05 AM »
Stephen, why have you singled out Hope for your attention? Other posters, like Alan Burns make daft assertions without supporting evidence too!

True, perhaps he can take you on too, when you have one of your assertive ( black and white ) moments.

 ;)


Khatru

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #39 on: March 02, 2016, 12:16:51 PM »
Some people just can't accept that we live in a natural universe.

Why shouldn't everything have a naturalistic explanation? We can see the way that science has been ousting supernatural ideas for centuries - it certainly won't be stopping now.

In any event, there is no evidence of anything supernatural in our universe so the natural explanation is far more likely in any observation of phenomena we make.

Science provides the single explanation.  Believers are told to make two assumptions: One, that something is supernatural and two, that it just so happens to be the god(s) they have chosen to worship and not Brahm,a Shiva, Odin, Allah, Zoroaster, etc.
"I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy"

Dorothy Parker

floo

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #40 on: March 02, 2016, 12:30:57 PM »
True, perhaps he can take you on too, when you have one of your assertive ( black and white ) moments.

 ;)

Like what?

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #41 on: March 02, 2016, 12:36:09 PM »
Hope,

Quote
Hi Stephen, as I've pointed out before - several times - the issue is that as far as certain people are concerned the only valid evidence is that which is moderated by the scientific method.  As you will appreciate, since this method relies solely on the naturalistic, any non-naturalistic evidence is necessarily disallowed by such people.  Therefore experience is irrelevant - even though experience is quite an important factor in getting jobs, bringing children up safely, ...

Oh dear. This is just a re-statement of Vlad's "methodological materialism" mistake. "Evidence" is itself a naturalistic concept - it relies on data, testing, falsifiability etc. If you want to call something evidence then you have to play by these rules. If you want to call something else evidence though, then as ever you have all your work ahead of you to propose a method of any kind to distinguish this supposed evidence from mistake, misattribution, just guessing, the effects of a bump on the head etc.   

Quote
However

I have been trying to decide how best to introduce the following for a few days (when I haven't been coughing my guts up and suffering from nasal drip syndrome).

In the past, we have been told here that sceince doesn't deal in right and wrong - yet that is a major part of human life.  There are, for instance, the societal rules and regulalations that exist in any society.  If sceince doesn't deal with right and wrong, where does the impetus for deciding what is right and what is wrong come from?  It clearly can't be a merely naturalistic source, otherwise science would always be able to give imput.  So, let's take a couple of examples.  Where, if at all, is the naturalistic reasoning behind the idea that one shouldn't lie? or kill (after all most of animal world kill to survive and we don't seem to regard this as unacceptable).  On the other end of the spectrum, there is the issue of speeding.  There was scientific evidence used to install the current 70mph limit here in the UK - though I'm told that modern research has largely refuted that evidence.

Seriously?

Seriously seriously?

First, "science" has a great deal to say about the biological basis of morality - try reading Bill Hamilton for starters for example. Briefly, codes of behaviour we call “moral” tend to favour the survivial of the genome and we can demonstrate this readily with careful observation of the species that practice it.

Second, even if science can't currently explain something that doesn't give you free reign to decide that the answer must therefore be non-naturalistic. This "reasoning" is essentially that used to explain that thunder and lightning was Thor chucking his hammer around.

Third, if you want to claim the supposed non-naturalistic as a fact then you also have all your work ahead of you first to define it, and second to demonstrate it.

Fourth, if you actually mean something like “science can’t tell us what’s right and what’s wrong” then the question itself is misguided because it assumes an empirical answer that’s “out there”, something for which there’s no evidence whatever. That said, if we’re to look anywhere for answers to these questions then as Sam Harris has argued using the tools of reason and logic seem more likely to give us more reliable answers than pointing to ancient texts and the personal “faith” of some people that those texts must be true.   

Quote
Obviously, it is very hard to provide a naturalistically valid methodology for parts of our lives that go beyond the natural…

That’s just incoherent. What on earth makes you think that  there are “parts of our lives that go beyond the natural”?

Quote
- but then of course even the die-hard scientific naturalists here turn to 'magic' when they invoke 'spontaneous healing' - something that doesn't fit in the
scientific lexicon at all.  They have no answer to the situation so make things up.

And that’s just stupid. “Spontaneous healing” refers to an unexpected recovery from illness for reasons that aren’t well understood. Maybe one day they will be understood, maybe we’ll never know but either way that says not one jot of an iota of a smidgin to the cause being “not natural”, and moreover no-one with a functioning brain thinks the cause to be “magic”.

Apart from that though…
« Last Edit: March 02, 2016, 12:49:03 PM by bluehillside »
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Leonard James

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #42 on: March 02, 2016, 12:46:32 PM »
Hope,

Oh dear. This is just a re-statement of Vlad's "methodological materialism" mistake. "Evidence" is itself a naturalistic concept - it relies on data, testing, falsifiability etc. If you want to call something evidence then you have to play by these rules. If you want to call something else evidence though, then as ever you have all your work ahead of you to propose a method of any kind to distinguish this supposed evidence from mistake, misattribution, just guessing, the effects of a bump on the head etc.   

Seriously?

Seriously seriously?

First, "science" has a great deal to say about the biological basis of morality - try reading Bill Hamilton for starters for example. Briefly, codes of behaviour we call “moral” tend to favour the survivial of the genome and we can demonstrate this readily with careful observation of the species that practice it.

Second, even if science can't currently explain something that doesn't give you free reign to decide that the answer must therefore be non-naturalistic. This "reasoning" is essentially that used to explain that thunder and lightning was Thor chucking his hammer around.

Third,  if you want to claim the supposed non-naturalistic as a fact then you also have all your work ahead of you first to define it, and second to demonstrate it.

Fourth, if you actually mean something like “science can’t tell us what’s right and what’s wrong” then the question itself is misguided because it assumes an empirical answer that’s “out there”, something for which there’s no evidence whatever. That said, if we’re to look anywhere for answers to these questions then as Sam Harris has argued using the tools of reason and logic seem more likely to give us more reliable answers than pointing to ancient texts and the personal “faith” of some people that those texts must be true.   

That’s just incoherent. What on earth makes you think that  there are “parts of our lives that go beyond the natural”?

And that’s just stupid. “Spontaneous healing” refers to an unexpected recovery from illness for reasons that aren’t well understood. Maybe one day they will be understood, maybe we’ll never know but either way that says not one jot of an iota of a smidgin to the cause being “not natural”, and moreover no-one with a functioning brain thinks the cause to be “magic”.

Apart from that though…

Makes me realise how much I've missed you, Blue!

Shaker

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #43 on: March 02, 2016, 12:53:00 PM »
Ditto!
Pain, or damage, don't end the world. Or despair, or fucking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man, and give some back. - Al Swearengen, Deadwood.

Andy

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #44 on: March 02, 2016, 02:13:20 PM »
Hope isn't going to provide a method for the non-natural because the concept has no explanatory power - it can only give an assertive "what" and not an explanatory "how". This is because invoking a concept that can do anything leaves us with no means of ever being able to establish when it does do something. Spontaneous healing? - oh that'll be the non-natural. The doctor cured you? - oh that'll be the non-natural working through the doctor.

You need to posit something this non-natural can't do, otherwise you can apply the concept as an "explanation" for anything, which is pissing in the wind as it cancels out the idea that it does explain. Contrast is needed, otherwise a non-natural explanation is left meaningless.

wigginhall

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #45 on: March 02, 2016, 02:48:49 PM »
Hope isn't going to provide a method for the non-natural because the concept has no explanatory power - it can only give an assertive "what" and not an explanatory "how". This is because invoking a concept that can do anything leaves us with no means of ever being able to establish when it does do something. Spontaneous healing? - oh that'll be the non-natural. The doctor cured you? - oh that'll be the non-natural working through the doctor.

You need to posit something this non-natural can't do, otherwise you can apply the concept as an "explanation" for anything, which is pissing in the wind as it cancels out the idea that it does explain. Contrast is needed, otherwise a non-natural explanation is left meaningless.

Very good, and nice to see you again.  I was taught in terms of constraints.   Any descriptive or explanatory scheme must have constraints, and usually quite narrow ones.   It would be difficult to do a Ph. D. in 'Stuff that I like', or 'Here are some ideas I've had recently'. 

The supernatural can do anything, in other words, there are no constraints.   As Andy said, what can't it do?  And,  the devil can make you think very clever ideas - so beware!  But how do I know when an idea is demonic? 
They were the footprints of a gigantic hound!

jjohnjil

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #46 on: March 02, 2016, 04:41:40 PM »
Hi Blue

"...  even if science can't currently explain something that doesn't give you free reign to decide that the answer must therefore be non-naturalistic. This "reasoning" is essentially that used to explain that thunder and lightning was Thor chucking his hammer around."


I can't agree with this because, as I see it, those ancients who thought thunder and lightening was Thor chucking his hammer around were the first scientists.

What do scientists do these days?  They look at unanswered questions, they use any knowledge already gained, and they come to some sort of hypothesis.  Surely that's all those guys were doing.

That they got it wrong isn't surprising, scientists are always bringing their ideas up to date.  It is the religious of today, who seem to think bringing their ideas up to date is a big no no!



Shaker

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #47 on: March 02, 2016, 04:43:50 PM »
I can't agree with this because, as I see it, those ancients who thought thunder and lightening was Thor chucking his hammer around were the first scientists.
That's all very well as a hypothesis, but is it testable? And was it actually tested?
Pain, or damage, don't end the world. Or despair, or fucking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man, and give some back. - Al Swearengen, Deadwood.

Étienne d'Angleterre

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #48 on: March 02, 2016, 04:56:40 PM »
Stephen, why have you singled out Hope for your attention? Other posters, like Alan Burns make daft assertions without supporting evidence too!

Because he indicated that he had a methodology that was useful for the "non naturalistic" aspects of life, and I wanted him to enlighten me.

However, as he can't give an example of a "non naturalistic" aspect of life I don't think a methodology will be forthcoming.


Étienne d'Angleterre

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Re: Put me out of my misery (appeal to Hope)
« Reply #49 on: March 02, 2016, 05:01:59 PM »
Hi, Stephen,

I'm a pantheistic pagan; to me spirituality is very much as you describe, feeding and nurturing the needs we have that go beyond the physical. And I think it is in the (supposedly) small things we find meaning - the sun on your face, the scent of the earth.

I fully understand where you are coming from on the apparent 'fallen-ness' (to borrow a phrase from Christianity) of the cycle of life where things consume other things in order to survive and heaven on earth suddenly slips away - btw I'm sure you know that tea is a form of camellia. But if you look on the whole without judgement, but consider how interconnected everything is, and how vast, there is perspective and balance to be had. It's only us humans that come along and spoil the party, at least as far as we know.

Thank you for that. I am not going to be bothering with this thread much more as it is clear that no answer will be forthcoming, and actually I don't want to spend my limited available time in pointless discussions. I must admit to not knowing as much as I probably should about pantheistic paganism, is there some reading you could point me to in order that I may get up to speed?

Best regards,

Stephen