TheFallen wrote:Just to try to make my own position clear here, there should be no relevance to the issue in the characteristics, psychology or personality of whoever the poster may be. It's a matter of the most obvious fact that nobody can tell me (or anybody else) why they believe what they believe - I suppose people could make guesses, based upon what little information they have either been told by the poster or have some intuition about, but those guesses de facto cannot have the accuracy that the poster him-/herself will naturally have about the foundations of their beliefs. (I'll leave aside counter-arguments about utter self-delusion on the part of posters, or we'll be here forever).
Rusmeister, I do see that you seem to invariably find yourself in a bear-pit being harangued from all sides. What I'd like to do for whatever it's worth is highlight that at least some of the "attacks" on you are in no way personal/ad hominem. I - and several others at least, including Avatar and Dukkha Waynhim - take no issue whatsoever with your personal beliefs in as much as they apply to you, your life and world view. We may not agree with them, sure, but I certainly do not doubt that your personal convictions are both rock-solid and experientially gained and justified by - to use your words - a mixture of faith and reason. So, in no way am I even calling into question the tenability of your beliefs - plus, I see no purpose in trying to psychoanalyse why you might hold these... how the Hell would I begin to know? You've gained them via your reasoning, your experiences and your faith.
However, the major issue that I have exactly revolves around tenability. Your belief set is - as I am sure you'd agree - absolutist... it's the one true view. As such, it allows precisely no tenability for any other world view that differs in any way from yours - from your standpoint, nobody else's belief set can hold the slightest possibility of any validity if it differs from yours, because yours is 100% cast-iron absolutely and objectively universally TRUE. (I've got that right so far, I think?).
This puts you in an invidious position - you're effectively forced by your belief sets to be intolerant. You are literally forced to tell others with differing beliefs that they're wrong, and as such they must be less experienced, less intellectual, less rational. If you try to take a step back from yourself for a second, can you not at least admit the potential for that level of forced close-mindedness to be seen at least as intolerance, maybe arrogance, possibly zealotry and maybe belief fascism?
What you're doing - or forced to do, if you'd rather - is to insist that your views (and therefore by necessity yourself, as spokesperson for those views) are superior to everyone else's - everyone else is "benighted" or ignorant in the strictest sense of that word. I'm sure you'd argue back that you only do that because they actually are - and you'd tell us not to shoot the messenger... I'm sure you'd say it's not your personal doing that you have had the only objectively true view revealed to you.
However it's this (if you like necessitous) intolerance, absolutism, superiority or whatever that gets everybody else's backs up. That is what I for one react so antipathetically to.
I'm not accepting your example of Galileo as relevant - that's a (sly?) piece of sophistry. Galileo had empirical scientific and therefore objective evidence that the earth revolved around the sun - it just took a while for others to repeat his experiments and scientific measurements and thus agree with him. Similarly, I note in another thread, you used Maximus of Nicosia (or someone like that) as another exemplar... I'm not accepting that as relevant either, for what seemed to happen there was not a matter of empiricism or science. Maximus - or whatever his name was - held a view on the duality of Christ's human and divine nature that was considered anathema at the time. After his death, the Church changed its opinion to mirror his - and note the word "opinion", because the subject matter could not be exposed to any empirical or scientific test... it was just a change of mind.
My world view as I said allows for the co-existence of differing and indeed opposing beliefs as being equally valid - because for me, it's all about the personal and the subjective. I don't dismiss there possibly being one objective truth, but I'm not sure that - if there is - mere fallible humanity, with its perception of the external coming through five meagre senses and limited consciousness, can ever comprehend such. Let's face it, there have been countless examples of prophets claiming to exclusively know the One True Way.
Is this solipsist of me? Possibly, but given my previously posted respect for "cogito, ergo sum", how could it be otherwise? Whether solipsist or not, it's very definitely a "live and let live" standpoint, unlike yours. It also doesn't smack of any self-assigned superiority, unfortunately unlike yours - I'm finding it hard to equate your view and the necessity of its assertion of its own superiority with a teacher who revered the meek - aren't they the ones who will inherit the earth?
I simply do not understand why you refute any possibility of subjectivism in your own belief sets. You yourself have said that you came come to these by a mixture of reason, experience and faith... surely the latter two of those are by their very nature subjective and personal? Surely that makes the whole cornerstone of your belief set subjective and personal, at least in part?
And - this is a point I'd love a reply to - my view allows for my human fallibility. I could be utterly wrong and someone with an opposing view could be utterly right. I don't see any acknowledgement in any possibility of fallibility from you in your world view. Even if for the sake of argument, you have heard the one objective truth, how so you know that your fallible human ears have heard it correctly? Or fallible human brain interpreted it correctly?
Food for thought?
Thanks, TF,
I consider that a much better thought-out post than most. It does try to take one of the bulls by its real horns.
I agree on the bear-pit, and also that not EVERYBODY does ad hominem. My objections are to some particular posters that do; that respond to that when there is nothing else to say.
One thing that I get from some of you, is that you see only absolutes in everything I believe - as if there were only "good guys and bad guys", black and white. The fact that I DO see absolutes does not mean that I think in those black-and-white terms; as Solzhenitsyn said, I think the line between good and evil runs through every human heart. Since everyone has free will, and in general, personal responsibility for action, we could all choose to be better than what we are.
I see nothing illogical or untenable in believing that there really IS a definite answer to these questions - it is self-evident , for example, that this universe came about in one definite way, and not many different ways, each according to his beliefs. Therefore it is eminently logical that there is either a creator or there isn't - but there is not BOTH a Creator and NOT a Creator. That is absolutism - and it is the rational stand, and the other, that says that both/all are true or that it doesn't matter at all that is irrational nonsense. So I certainly respect the atheist who says there is no Creator. Huxley was far more rational than many thinkers today in that sense.
I think that when you say things like "less experienced", etc - you take my words some place that I do not. Being right does not mean being more experienced. A little dumb dog might be the one to rip open the curtain where the Wizard of Oz is hiding. Doesn't make him more experienced - but it DOES mean he managed to see through something that the others didn't. So coming from that angle, there's no fascism, etc involved. It can be blind luck (except that I don't believe in luck - which is an atheist concept - I believe in Divine Providence). I'm not better than any one else, and I don't secretly think that I am just because I've learned something that many of you don't know. It was how my life worked out. There are many things where you could say similar things about what you have learned - and I would respect that on a great many of those things.
I recognize that this is unpopular. Christianity is an unpopular faith. If really engaged, it means renouncing a great many things that many embrace in this world. It is a fighting religion in a sense - it is a great many things, and I only bring a couple of its many facets here - the ones I can do well. As Zahir may deliver God's love far better than I, I think I deliver its uncompromising character - for that is what it is. Christianity (above all orthodoxy) is the opposite of compromise - although God accepts us all where we are, but is satisfied with nothing less in the end than our totality.
That you do not accept things that are not empirical evidence reveals that you hold the fundamental dogma of materialism. OK. I believe that there are aspects of truth that are NOT amenable to the physical sciences, and so consider that to be a short-sighted dogma. But all that says that you hold different dogmas than I do. I don't know how well-thought out those dogmas are, but I know that simply claiming the materialist (what Lewis called "naturalist") view does not by any invocation of empirical science make the person one whit more rational than the super-naturalist.
It's interesting that you seem to know that the Church "just changed its mind" after the death of Maximus. I wonder in what detail you know that story, and from what sources that causes all these people to "just" change their minds? That sounds extraordinarily far from what true human behavior and ego are.
Now meekness is fine - in people who have the truth. But Jesus was not meek and mild with everyone. He called the Pharisees 'a nest of vipers' and other epithets that I don't even take on myself. Meek does not mean "let everyone do and say what they want at all times". It DOES mean to recognize one's place, and that it is usually a good deal lower than we'd like to think.
Some aspects of my faith ARE subjective and subjectively arrived at. It is precisely the demand that something somewhere be subjective and personal - but in the right place - one's discovery of THE Truth - rather than in the wrong place - a belief in one's complete inability to do so.
I can be wrong on many things. I admit a great deal of fallibility. But I insist that there are SOME things that I can be certain of, and am quite sure that I am not wrong on. I am quite sure that you are not a figment of my imagination. You could be a sock puppet of Fist, for all I know, but I am certain that I am not dreaming you. If I may be granted that, I may be granted other things that I may be certain about. I also hold that the natural sciences are incapable of determining supernatural truth, and are useless in an appeal to determine it. I am quite certain of this, and cannot be mistaken. As to my faith, it is called a faith. I CHOOSE the certainty, just as you have the right to a faith - even a blind faith - in a different certainty. If I have a brother or friend that constantly borrows money and fails to pay it back, I will be prone to not trust him - but I can always choose to trust him again, whether it be through love or foolishness. Or the Indiana Jones example:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_-BOvWVycM
A leap of faith that is revealed to be rational in hindsight - but is not at all obvious when the leap is made. In hindsight it is all lit up, so to speak, and is obvious to me. It confirms my certainty.
Does that clear up a little bit of where I stand?
"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