| |||||||||||
| |||||||
| Important Notice |
| Philosophy of Religion The philosophical study of religious beliefs, doctrines, and history. Focused more on the whole and not any certain Religion.. What is God? Theology - study of nature of God and religious truth. Theology uses documents, philosophy uses reason. |
![]() |
| | | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| ||||
| A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God
I have not been a part of this forum for very long, but I find it alarming how often terms like "infinity", "eternal", "loop", etc. are thrown around. Moreover, I find it equally alarming how frequently the existence or nonexistence of God comes up. And both of these things usually coincide together. First of all, I think it's a fairly well established fact that God's existence can neither be proven nor disproven. The horse is dead people; we killed it centuries ago. I certainly hope any sain person would agree to this. Philosophy of religion encompasses much more than simply this issue, and I for one am done discussing these so called "proofs". Can I get a second on that? We can and should however discuss the values of believe or disbelief for the individual, and the philosophical consequences of various religious doctrines and belief in general. All of which would make for much more interesting and beneficial discussions. Also, for some reason lately it has become commonplace to assume that "eternality" or "infinity" is something that exists seperate from and external to time, that it is an entity in and of itself. I tend to disagree and would like your comments on this. I agree with Unamuno in that contrary to what is popular today, eternity is not the state in which time no longer exists, but rather it is the state in which time never ends. As far as I know, historically the idea of infinity or eternity makes no claims to an infinite past of any sort, but only to an infinite future. But I reject the idea that these concepts are altogether unintellegible, and can therefore be used to elicit a God which is unintelligible; that is, a God which is unarguable. What are your thoughts on this? In addition, can I get anyone to second a proposal to add Existentialism as a branch of philosophy open for discussion in this forum? |
| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Master Pangloss For This Useful Post: | ||
| |||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God It's much easier to kick a dead horse than one that is alive. Quote:
And alas, I fall into the same camp. Any discussion that I would begin to have on eternity would ultimately fall back to the Christian idea of God. Quote:
Quote:
__________________ de omnibus dubitandum est |
| |||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God Quote:
Quote:
|
| ||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God
de Silentio - It is certainly true that in the Christian tradition they refer to their God as having an infinite past. I actually affirmed this in the last bit of my original post. But I don't think Plato ever claims that for "souls." Regardless, I was not referring to a God or souls. I was referring to the historical concept of "eternity" or "infinity" itself. You know what...this thread is going nowhere at light speed. Just think about it. Aedes - I wouldn't say that theology and philosophy are entirely separate. If anything, I would say that theology is the slave or the prisoner of philosophy. Although, unfortunately it is very often a bothersome and taxing prisoner, but a prisoner nonetheless. But theology is subject to philosophy and must answer to it. Actually existentialism encompesses virtually every branch of philosophy, but in fairness, it is highly unique. So, I can settle for something a bit broader. Think of it and I will be happy to get the conversation started. |
| |||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God Quote:
|
| |||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God
There are uses of 'infinity', 'loop', ect, both proper and improper in their context. To be dismissive of the concept is not helpfull, rather we should discuss what eternality and infinity are! Eternal is an inductive conclusion drawn from observation and the concept of time. We can envision an object movign at a slow pace relative to another 'forever', but in doing so, we only outline its rules of movement. When an object moves forever, we can equally well say it will not stop in relation to another object. Consider this:Stillness is an illusion, you and I have never seen a perfectly still object. It would have a temperature of absolute zero so that microscopic movement would not be there, and simultainiously it must be stationary relative to every other object in the physical universe, which is impossible, you could simply say that the object is moving around the other objects no matter its orientation! Nonmovement is not real, only movement in different degrees relative your frame of reference! Nonmovement is a product of inductive reasoning and perceptual limitation! It seems that such inductive conclusions are more akin to a syntax or rule set than any physical actuality. It may denote a physical actuality or create a mental approximation of one, but it is devorced from the thing which it denotes in an essential way: it is a rule set, not an object. Considering infinity as a rule set, we can envision a physical object by a trick of perception which is infinite in size and density, even though such an object can never exist. In absolute terms such as those of infinity, nonmovement, nonexistence, we create rule sets by which meaning is approximated and a point is derived. Depending on the context of use, such terms are necessary and to the point or nonsensical. There is no such physical object as a mathematically dense platonic solid, that is a perfectly smooth solid with no internal space between subatomic particles with everysingle particle totally solid and singular in every property, but we can write rules by which such things can be physically approximated! No wheels are perfectly round, but the concept of roundness gives us a pointer by which we can see the way to improving our existing technology! By considering certain words to be definite/verifiable, and some to be syntactic/rule-sets, you avoid the problem of nonexistent absolutes. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Zetetic11235 for the above post! | ||
| ||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God
[quote=Zetetic11235;20018]There are uses of 'infinity', 'loop', ect, both proper and improper in their context. To be dismissive of the concept is not helpfull, rather we should discuss what eternality and infinity are!quote] Zetetic - You present me with two options, both of which are very troubling. Either, I have not made myself clear or you have not understood me. I'm not sure which is worse. You have merely restated what I have already said. I never so much as implied the dismissal of the concept of infinity. I was strictly speaking about the concepts themselves, which again, you affirm we should be doing anyway. So I think we are in complete agreement on this. |
| |||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God Quote:
Regarding Plato, his 'World of Ideas' contains things that are in a constant state of being, never changing. I always presumed that Plato implied no beginning with his World of Ideas. However, I have found conflicting evidence online, both in support of and against my presumption. If Plato doesn't talk of eternity having no beginning, Aristotle apparently does, and he no doubt played an influencial role in the history of the concept of eternity. I do not know his works directly, but I read numerous times that he claimed that his Unmoved Mover has no beginning or end. (however, I could be wrong, it was very brief research) Quote:
Quote:
__________________ de omnibus dubitandum est |
| |||||
| Re: A critique of the misconceptions of eternality and God
Master pangloss, it was pretty late when I read your post and I glanced it over more or less. I think I must have missed missed the last few lines. I gave a possible framework by which the types of words you were speaking of in your first and last paragraph could be ordered and understood. We should continue this, developing a framework for the use of these words is quite important for understanding how to apply them and when it is appropriate to do so. You are quite right about the number of god proofs in this forum, but I don't see how this is a problem you should be concerned with. They choose to remain ignorant when so many threads and posts are availabe to them. Don't exacerbate the problem by posting in these threads if you don't find the discussion worthy. |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Engels' Critique of Formal Logic | Heimdal | Logic | 1 | 08-12-2008 02:12 AM |
| First edition of the Critique of Pure Reason (Kritik der reinen Vernunft) | b6zulu | Immanuel Kant | 3 | 12-31-2007 01:23 AM |