Should this post be in the 'What do you Believe' thread above [and if so could it be moved there.

Moderator: Fist and Faith
Some things I have said of which I am not altogether confident. But that we shall be better and braver and less helpless if we think that we ought to enquire, than we should have been if we indulged in the idle fancy that there was no knowing and no use in seeking to know what we do not know;-that is a theme upon which I am ready to fight, in word and deed, to the utmost of my power.
Not bad, vraith, with the caveat that any relativism that is excessively absolute must also fail itself.Vraith wrote:I think we all have ideology-like systems. No one can be completely free of them [and it probably wouldn't be a good thing to be totally free of them].
And [probably] everyone is at least partially blind to some of their own underpinnings...and this is probably unavoidable. It's why "know thyself" is such good advice, a constant high-stakes struggle if you are doing it right, and has no end.
And yes, I think we all have more than one.
I think this is necessary, too.
Because I think every ideology...in fact, every POSSIBLE ideology...will be incomplete and inconsistent in itself.
Will be "not applicable" to some encounters with existence.
Most [perhaps all], if purely held and strictly followed will have at
least some monstrous outcomes, untenable contradictions.
Multiple systems are necessary because there are no such things as "self-regulating systems." [except perhaps dying...that process never, ever fails]
Don't disagree with that.Mongnihilo wrote:
Not bad, vraith, with the caveat that any relativism that is excessively absolute must also fail itself.
Ah, but there is a label for that. Doesn't Robert Anton Wilson call it "model agnosticism?" Fallibilism may also fit.Cagliostro wrote:Not so much a label, but more sort of a creed:
Question everything, especially those things that you believe are truths.
Yes. It requires a lot of sacrifice, and you will be far behind (i.e. instead of being a 30 year old Buddhist, you'd be a 15 year old Buddhist) but it is very much possible.peter wrote:This is [in the main] relating to the stuff that we are aware of, have controll of, and can [perhaps only with effort - but never the less] change if we choose to. Does our ideology however, go deeper; does it delve it's roots into places that are beyond our capacity to reach, to re-wire. Is it fixed at it's most basic level while we are still in the cradle, hard wired with the very belief systems that our parents, our communities, our culture imbues into us. Can I, born a Christian [still - I don't know?] decide to become a Bhuddist and be the same as a Bhuddist cradle born?
That's because you have not done itpeter wrote:This is a thing I have always had a problem with. Having been born in to a monotheistic society my earliest [religious] memories will be of my parents talking to me about 'God' and making me 'say my prayers' before bed each night. The God I might therefore consider intellectually, will be this one and none other, and deeply imbued in my makeup will be a 'monotheistic' core that I might choose to deny at some later point - but it will always be this one that I deny. How could I hope to extricate this 'root and branch' and then replace it to that same deep level with a pantheistic world view? [This is less applicable to Bhuddism I know than say Hinduism.] I have a serious problem understanding how this could be done [not however with the idea that the 'teachings' in terms of life-practice may highly sucessfully be adopted at almost any stage of a persons life.]
Agreed!Orlion wrote:I feel that art has taught me more about human nature and human condition than all the religious, philosophical, political, and scientific learning that I have received.