• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Philosophy

Who really knows? Who will here proclaim it? Whence was it produced? Whence is this creation? The gods came afterwards, with the creation of the universe. Who then knows whence it has arisen? Whence this creation has arisen - perhaps it formed itself, or perhaps it did not - the one who looks down on it, in the highest heaven, only he knows - or perhaps he does not know? Rig-Veda 10:129.6-7(c.1000 B.C)

Is ignorance the apex of philosophy concerning the nature of 'God'?
 

Runt

Well-Known Member
LOL... with my newly developing understanding of Taoism I think I can answer this question... if gods really are archetypal and representative of Reality (or the Source, or the Tao), then these gods "came afterwards, with the creation of the universe". Reality/Source/Tao was already in place... once we were created we in turn created the "gods" to better understand Reality/Source/Tao.

Ignorance is the apex of philosophy concerning MY beliefs in the nature of "God"... however, I think ARCHETYPAL gods hold truth and have value (even if they are not God/Reality/Source/Tao...I'll choose one term later, I promise) because they represent the world as we understand it and thus are useful.
 
In greek myth, it can be said that the Titans came into existence simultaneously with the universe as we know it. beforehand they existed as a single entity within Gaia. Just thought i'd mention that.
 
Paradoxically in Greek Orphic myth (related somehow to Kapila's Sankya Philosophy. India) the Titans are destroyed at the moment of creation.
 

Runt

Well-Known Member
Isn't one of the Titans supposed to be responsible for giving fire (a "gift of the gods") to mankind?
 
Yeah. that'll be Prometheus (means 'forethought'). Hesiod mentions him. He doesn't feature in either of the myths mentioned above. He was the brother of Epimetheus ('Afterthought').
 

Master Vigil

Well-Known Member
Look at it but you cannot see it! Its name is Formless.
Listen to it but you cannot hear it! Its name is Soundless.
Grasp it but you cannot get it! Its name is Incorporeal.
These three attributes are unfathomable; therefore they fuse into one.
Its upper side is not bright, its under side is not dim.
Continually the unnameable moves on, Until it returns beyond the realm of things.
We call it the formless Form, the imageless Image.
We call it the indefinable and unimaginable.
Confront it and you do not see its face!
Follow it and you do not see its back!
Yet, equipped with this timeless Tao, you can harness present realities.
To know the origins is initiation into the Tao.

Chapter 14 from the Tao Te Ching.
 
Kronos is the villan in the first myth i mentioned. He and his mother Gaia conspired against Ouranos (heaven) and castrated him, thus setting free the titans from within Gaia. Kronos then became king of the universe. it was fortold that he would be dethroned by one of his own children and so he ate them (compare Abraham/Nimrod; Krishna/King Kamsa; Herod/Jesus etc). he was tricked into swallowing a stone instead of Zeus (the last born). Zeus finally defeated him and Kronos puked first the stone (Zeus the first reborn?) and then the rest of his brothers and sisters. The firstborn/lastborn reversal motif can be found throughout the Bible. Oh yeah, Kronos was also a titan.
 

Master Vigil

Well-Known Member
When you understand the Tao, and sense the Eternal Tao through chi, you can understand the world by understanding yourself. Even though you cannot understand the Eternal Tao completely, you can understand present realities by understanding the Tao's influence on the world. When equipped with the timeless Tao (understanding yourself and the nature of the Tao, and chi) you can harness present realities (you understand the nature of the universe)

To first understand the Tao, you must understand without words. For the Tao is beyond words. And once you understand the world without words, your perception no longer is limited by them.
 
only a fool is ignorant and were all fools because our knowledge is not infinite like our Creator. if u want to know God, he knew u before u were created. he created time and their r only instants in heaven . the first person God thought of was his mother. he loves her more than any other human. we are human and most everyone loves their mother more than anyone else. as he implied on the cross, his mother is our mother. we r all united in heaven and his mother is the Queen. the eyes are the window to ure soul and all u want to do is stare at God in heaven, kind of like high on marijauna but more intense, much more. i was an occaisional smoker but quit when i was taught it immoral as it is a self seeking selfish drug that destroys reality and makes real life boring until one is capable of facing reality again. like arsenic poisons the body, drugs poison the mind.
 
Notice how Rig Vada wrote of the highest and the one who knows. Even then they believed or at least suspected that there was a Creator and He knows.
 
dudley thoth said:
Who really knows? Who will here proclaim it? Whence was it produced? Whence is this creation? The gods came afterwards, with the creation of the universe. Who then knows whence it has arisen? Whence this creation has arisen - perhaps it formed itself, or perhaps it did not - the one who looks down on it, in the highest heaven, only he knows - or perhaps he does not know?
That's why science is so valuable....we may or may not be able to figure out the truth 100% accurately, but we can come close, if we look at the evidence and keep our wits about us. Go science! :goodjob:
 

Maxist

Active Member
Phillosophy has been around since the first of man. Well, I have to admit, since day one we were doing mathematics, and before that philosophy.
 

Golyadkin

Member
dudley thoth said:
Who really knows? Who will here proclaim it? Whence was it produced? Whence is this creation? The gods came afterwards, with the creation of the universe. Who then knows whence it has arisen? Whence this creation has arisen - perhaps it formed itself, or perhaps it did not - the one who looks down on it, in the highest heaven, only he knows - or perhaps he does not know? Rig-Veda 10:129.6-7(c.1000 B.C)

Is ignorance the apex of philosophy concerning the nature of 'God'?
Obviously no offence intended by this, but when your looking at ancient foriegn civilisations religions or philosophies you have to becareful not to translate it into your own crudities. I dont think that statement implies that it would be 'arrogant' for us to assume to understand, but rather its saying that theres no ultimate answer or Catagorical Imperative to existance, or for that matter its not even a question, and is a mistake for us to think it is.

And with that it mind as regards Taoism, although i agree with what you guys said for the most part, properly speaking, the visible world or existance is more real than the Tao, the nothingness out of which all things emerge. To quote the Tao Te Ching
"The name that can be named is not the constant name. . .
It was from the Nameless that sprang Heaven and Earth"

A.C Graham says something about this, this is also a bit long but is interesting, "This conception of mystical contemplation as a withdrawral into the ground underlaying the multiple and changing world is ofcourse common to many mystical schools Western and Eastern. But Taoists think of this experience in terms perculiar to China. A Westerner tends to fit the mysticism of other civilisations into a Neo-Platonist frame, thinking of a primarily congnitive experience in which the seer rends of the veil of illusion and discovers his oness with the underlaying Absolute, Reality, Being.

For Chinese thinkers however the basic questoin is not 'What is the truth' but 'Where is the Way?' They concieve the ground to which they return in meditation, not as ultimate Reality, but as the Way for which they are searching. this expains an apparent contradiction in the concept of the Tao. As long as they are concerned with action, Taoists, like Confucians, concieve it as a metaphorical path to be followed. But when they eulogise the Tao revealed in contemplation, they use such metaphors as 'root', 'ancestor', 'mother', the 'Unborn' from which all things are born. They present it as the source from which the myraid things emerge and even contradict the metaphor of a highway by calling it the 'gate' from which the highway starts.

It is therefore a mistake for the Western reader to connect the Way with his own concepts of Being and Reality. Indeed, in terms of the Chinese words (yu/wu, shih/hsu) which are closest to these words in funtion, it is material things which exist and are solid (real), the Tao which is Nothing and tenuous or viod (unreal). 'Nothing' is concieved (as Hegal and other Westerners have concieved it) as a positive complement of Something, not its mere absence. The Tao is like the hole in the wheel which takes the axle, the inside of the vessel, the doorsand windows of a house; they are Nothing, but we draw advantage from the wheel, vessel or house only by using its empty spaces.

One concequence of this difference of view point is that for Taoists the absolute stilling of the mind in contemplation is only a means for discovering the Way to live; it connot be (as it may be for those who concieve it as a revelation of absolute Truth, in comparison with which all normal experience seems trivial) a state supremely valuable in itself. Just as Nothing has no significance except as the complement of Something, so the withdrawral into Nothing has no significance except in relation to the ordinary life to which the mystic returns. Pure trances states in fact have a very modest place in the liehttzu(philosophical taoism) We read of a certain Nun-kuo-tzu who sat like a clay image:
"Nunkuotzu's face is full but his mind viod; his ears hear nothing, his eyes see nothing, his mouth says nothing, his mind knows nothing, his body never alters."
But theidea in the Lieh-tzu is a state, not of withdrawal, but of hightened perceptiveness and responsiveness in an undifferentiated world. . ."

And heres a quote from the book of Lieh tzu to excenuate this

"Only then, when i had come to the end of everything inside and outside me, my eyes became like my ears, my ears like my nose, my nose like my mouth; everything was the same. My mind concentrated and my body relaxed, bones and flesh fused completly, I did not notice what my body leaned against or my feet trod, I drifted with the wind East or West, like a leaf from a tree or a dry husk, and never knew wether it was the wind that rode me or I that rode the wind."

If nothing within you stays ridiged,
outward things will disclose themselves.
Moving, be like water.
Still, be like a mirror.
Respond like an echo."
 
Top