Fist and Faith wrote:
rusmeister wrote:I'm not going to tell you that you can't know what you know or feel what you feel, even if I say that such knowledge or feelings are wrong.
You do
not say my thoughts and feelings are wrong, you say I can't think and feel them. You say it's impossible for a person whose mental processes are working correctly to think and feel them. They do not agree with your beliefs, so it cannot be. Therefore, the truth of the matter is that I haven't thought about them sufficiently.
You keep saying that I say this and I keep denying that I say this. What I think is that you have taken some statements of mine where I have said that your thinking is wrong and taken it to mean that you can't possibly think that. Of course you can think things. Everybody does - and therefore, I do NOT say that people can't think (or feel) things. If you've read that into something I've said, then you misinterpreted. Maybe I worded it badly at some point.
Now, as soon as you say "correctly", though, we have a different bone of contention. Who IS correct? If I am right, then logically, your conclusions CANNOT be correct and your thinking therefore goes wrong at some point in the process - and you can equally point out the reverse. And yes, I do think you miss things - as you think I do. What's the use of belaboring that, though, if the other consistently denies it?
Fist and Faith wrote:And it all comes down to this: "If universally meaningless, then no reason to do." You do not feel there is any reason to do anything if there is no eternal meaning to anything. And you base your pronouncements about my thoughts and feelings on it.
Well, yes. So what? That's what we do on these forums. We discuss these ideas. You base your pronouncements about my thoughts on your conclusions. This is only to say that we react to each other's ideas.
Fist and Faith wrote:The problem is, "If universally meaningless, then no reason to do" is not an objectively logical thought. It's your judgement. Our disagreement on this topic is certainly a more complex disagreement than "I prefer chocolate." "I prefer vanilla." But it's much closer to that than to an idea like "Survival is a universal goal." Meaning is different for different people. Different people don't even agree on which types of meaning are important. And I'm not talking about "exceptions." There are many individuals in both our societies that feel as I do. There's even the entire Zen tradition.
You say, "objectively logical". That can be debatable, although I no longer care to. What I could try to communicate is that I can see my own body rotting and crawling with worms (or like Scrooge, simply staring down at his own grave) and then contemplating what it all meant, and to whom. If I can only use the past tense, if I can ONLY say it meant something at one time to all of these people in the graveyard, then it no longer - in the present tense - means anything.* And I am standing there in the graveyard looking at meaninglessness. What is the good, what is the meaning of that?
*the same fate befalls meaning deferred to one's family or children - the 'they will go on' idea. But they won't go on. They, too, will all return to the earth. It is merely an attempt to postpone the inevitable conclusion.
But I don't think I can even communicate that. As long as death remains a theory, something far off, something that can be set aside and ignored, and a pretence that there is only life, that we can 'eat, drink and be merry', though tomorrow we die, then the illusion of temporal meaning can convince us that it is enough. And my words about it will themselves seem meaningless.
Fist and Faith wrote:And you try to place a similar universality onto the legal world. My goal is to let each person live their private lives however they want; yours is to require all people to live their lives according to your beliefs. It's not possible for everyone to agree on everything. Not even every Orthodox will agree on everything. Better to let everyone act on their own beliefs, provided those actions do not make it impossible for individuals to survive, or for people to live among each other. Those two things are what laws are supposed to be for.
This seems like a fine libertarian position. If I hadn't taught in public school, I might have bought it. Having seen a definite worldview imposed on children - one which pretends to accommodate all but in fact does so by treating them as irrelevant - has made me see that you cannot have such a world where people merely 'live private lives'. In public life, one ideology or another will dominate. If your school is teaching my kids to "tolerate" "alternate" sexual morality, for example, then we are already at war. You are making war on my kids, even if you don't realize it. I do.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton