So forgive me, but when someone points one out and shouts "gotcha!" it appears to me a lot like pointing at one gnat in a whole cloud of gnats and shouting; "a gnat, oh my God, kill it before it eats us all!" *haha*
I cant really change your interpretation if this is how you view my approach. It really is a case of that I think the theology you are presenting is horribly flawed and inconsistent, and I am pointing such out. Call it cheapshottery if you want. I dont really care so longs as those inconsistencies and flaws exist.
I enjoy logic and I can see it's a valuable intellectual tool, but it's a far, FAR cry from the 'totem of all truth' some people around here think it is. Same goes for the scientific process.
And yet again you attack these without really proving a reason for why they are wrong, why they shouldnt apply, why your alternative is better or why such attacks even help substantiate the theology you have been trying to present. Its vacuous rhetoric PureX, and I suspect it was said more for your own benefit than for mine.
They were using tools like intuition, empathy, fantasy, brutal self-honesty, intellectual/emotional/spiritual deconstruction, chance, rigid conformity, and a lot of others I can't think of at the moment.
Relevancy? Im assuming since you think logic and such is flawed, and have presented these you must think these are useful so care to you know actually explain how these apply to this topic? I also resent the implication here that others in this thread lack intuition, empathy, brutal self-honesty or intellectual/emotional/spiritual deconstruction. But you do seem to have demonstrated rigid conformity to your idea so I concede that one. But I have to reiterate, what does this have to do with your theology?
And they weren't just talking about these tools, they USED them. They APPLIED them to their lives and to physical world around them to see what the results would be. These are people of real insight and courage, living the ideas that we just talk about. They have beaten back their egos and are able to adopt all sorts of new ideas and let go of all their old ones, just for the joy of exploring new ways of seeing the world around them. They really do this!
To reiterate the key point which the above ignores what does this have to do with whether those ideas are true or not? I know folks who sound like the above after getting high, but I somehow suspect this isnt something many would recommend.
Probably a cheap blow (I admit when I do low blows you know), but consider the above while reading this quote from the Scientology website:
If you could discover the truth about life and the mind you would not only understand your true spiritual nature, you could also help your friends, associates, family and community. Scientology has practical tools you can use right away to improve life.
Simple tools one can use immediately to help such things as improving relationships, getting your career on track, working out and accomplishing goals, helping family and children, handling drug dependency, and gaining greater self-esteem. These and other vital Know-How are covered in the Scientology Handbook.
I'm just throwing this out there so you'll maybe understand why those old and tired nineteenth century philosophy class rules don't mean all that much to me. I agree with you about how intellectual dishonesty is unhealthy and annoying, and all.
Your first sentence is contradicted by the second. Labelling an idea as old when you seem unable, or unwilling, to explain its irrelevancy doesnt sit well with me. You cant claim to be intellectually honest when you do this. But, and this is what puzzles me, rather than actually addressing this you try to explain it away by burying it under prose like the above and the below.
But with we humans, rigorous honesty is something that comes only with a lot of practice, and we never really get it down fully. So along with the honesty, we need a lot of patience and forgiveness, too. But most of all we need open ears, eyes, hearts, and minds. As an artist I can honesty tell you that breaking the rules teaches us as much as following them ever will.
Lovely. But since my sole concern here is intellectual honesty youll understand why I ask how this has anything to do with whether the idea is true or not.
The problem with you 'argumentum ad populum' objection is that it comes from an old philosophical format that was designed to get at a static, objective idea of truth. In the several hundred intervening years since these philosophical rules were invented, our collective concept of truth has changed considerably, to the point where many of these old rules just don't apply, anymore.
This is still a fallacy today. Most people in the world dont think a being called PureX posts on this forum does that mean you dont or does that mean that the proposition I have presented is flawed? Appealing to numbers has no bearing on the truth value of the proposition being presented it was a fallacy in the 19th century that is still as much a fallacy today. When you take on arguments against logic like this you really arent helping yourself. In fact I think the above is one of the most foolish quotes Ive ever seen on this forum. You may take insult at that, but the comment above mandates this description of it.
In the case of our discussion, we are not pursuing an objective truth, like those philosophers of days of old. We are pursuing a concept of truth, now, that does in fact live in the minds of humans, only.
We call such concepts imaginary. No doubt youll take objection to this, but read your own words here.
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This whole real to me business reminds me of the following which is used to see Sceintology:
3. Salvage: Definition of salvage: "to save from ruin." Before you can save someone from ruin, you must find out what their own personal ruin is. This is basically-What is ruining them? What is messing them up? It must be a condition that is real to the individual as an unwanted condition, or one that can be made real to him.
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