God is a Concept...
- Bill Wiltrack
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God is a Concept...
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Which is sooooo true.
I reflect upon individuals who are sent to prison who when upon reaching there are overwhelmed with a coming to god experience.
They find their faith or their faith is rejuvenated.
Often when we lose a loved one or someone close to us or when we experience a personal tragedy of another sort - we turn to god.
We immediately become faithful.
Then, on the other hand, when things are going well, or when things are exciting we generally lose our faith. When reflecting upon those time we may say we lost our way. - We gained a kingdom but lost our faith.
We turn to god to find mercy when life experience seems to become unbearable.
We turn away from god when we don't need him.
The wisdom of John Lennon...
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Which is sooooo true.
I reflect upon individuals who are sent to prison who when upon reaching there are overwhelmed with a coming to god experience.
They find their faith or their faith is rejuvenated.
Often when we lose a loved one or someone close to us or when we experience a personal tragedy of another sort - we turn to god.
We immediately become faithful.
Then, on the other hand, when things are going well, or when things are exciting we generally lose our faith. When reflecting upon those time we may say we lost our way. - We gained a kingdom but lost our faith.
We turn to god to find mercy when life experience seems to become unbearable.
We turn away from god when we don't need him.
The wisdom of John Lennon...
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Re: God is a Concept...
I like (liked, I guess is more appropriate) John Lennon. But his lyrics were popular for the very nature of obscurity that poets use. To this saying, I would restate it as follows: "Go(o)d is a concept by which we measure the Bad; Pleasure is a concept by which we measure Pain"
Duh. Literally it only means that to anything 'valued' by emotional standards requires the duality of extremes. You can't have any idea of what is "good" without contrasting it with "bad" nor "pleasure" without contrasting it with "pain".
However, the reverse may not be true. That is, to what may be initially absolutely "good", as some "God" suggests that if you judge its character by default as owning the source of all reality, it also OWNS the cause of all that is "bad"; But, if something originates, "bad", while not desirable by our personal preferences, such a state by itself may lack meaning but breaks no rule of consistency should what is "good" be derived from it because we interpret the trend from what is bad to good itself a justified improvement, .... a "good" thing.
This is how I derive an argument to why an "absolute nothing" as an origin is more rational in a similar way to assuming "absolute something" always existed. Logic by most assumes a default assumption of "consistency" through the "law of identity" that leads unfortunately to Godel's Incompleteness Theorem....that to any most detailed 'logic' (math is what he focused on), no system can be confidently able to cover, explain, or demonstrate ALL truths that exist consistently and thus, completely. If you begin with all consistency, nothing inconsistent to reality should exist which would be absurd.
Yet, reverse this. If you begin with absolute nothingness, in that it may seem "inconsistent" for us to feel is 'true', should it exist, it would also lack NO compulsion to even 'laws of consistency' that dictates it to require conforming since NO LAWS exist in absolute nothingness. However, should it just happen to evolve into containing a part of it as being "consistent", it doesn't exclude the "inconsistent" parts either, since that is by default perfectly inconsistent. So absolute nothingness is most rational as a complete and sound origin rather than absolute something.
I get your emotional vibe though. I still prefer lyricists to be most 'imperfect' being more obscure as they are because I can freely interpret what is lacking clarity to my own selfish interpretation.
Duh. Literally it only means that to anything 'valued' by emotional standards requires the duality of extremes. You can't have any idea of what is "good" without contrasting it with "bad" nor "pleasure" without contrasting it with "pain".
However, the reverse may not be true. That is, to what may be initially absolutely "good", as some "God" suggests that if you judge its character by default as owning the source of all reality, it also OWNS the cause of all that is "bad"; But, if something originates, "bad", while not desirable by our personal preferences, such a state by itself may lack meaning but breaks no rule of consistency should what is "good" be derived from it because we interpret the trend from what is bad to good itself a justified improvement, .... a "good" thing.
This is how I derive an argument to why an "absolute nothing" as an origin is more rational in a similar way to assuming "absolute something" always existed. Logic by most assumes a default assumption of "consistency" through the "law of identity" that leads unfortunately to Godel's Incompleteness Theorem....that to any most detailed 'logic' (math is what he focused on), no system can be confidently able to cover, explain, or demonstrate ALL truths that exist consistently and thus, completely. If you begin with all consistency, nothing inconsistent to reality should exist which would be absurd.
Yet, reverse this. If you begin with absolute nothingness, in that it may seem "inconsistent" for us to feel is 'true', should it exist, it would also lack NO compulsion to even 'laws of consistency' that dictates it to require conforming since NO LAWS exist in absolute nothingness. However, should it just happen to evolve into containing a part of it as being "consistent", it doesn't exclude the "inconsistent" parts either, since that is by default perfectly inconsistent. So absolute nothingness is most rational as a complete and sound origin rather than absolute something.
I get your emotional vibe though. I still prefer lyricists to be most 'imperfect' being more obscure as they are because I can freely interpret what is lacking clarity to my own selfish interpretation.
- Terrapin Station
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- Bill Wiltrack
- Posts: 5468
- Joined: Sat Nov 03, 2007 1:52 pm
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Re: God is a Concept...
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Scott, I get your emotional vibe though. I too still prefer lyricists to be most 'imperfect' being more obscure as they are because I can freely interpret what is lacking clarity to my own selfish interpretation.
Scott, I looked for you on Facebook & LinkedIn. Don't think I saw your profile. Is there another social media site that you are on?
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Scott, I get your emotional vibe though. I too still prefer lyricists to be most 'imperfect' being more obscure as they are because I can freely interpret what is lacking clarity to my own selfish interpretation.
Scott, I looked for you on Facebook & LinkedIn. Don't think I saw your profile. Is there another social media site that you are on?
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- Arising_uk
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Re: God is a Concept...
Where do you get this stuff from?Bill Wiltrack wrote:I reflect upon individuals who are sent to prison who when upon reaching there are overwhelmed with a coming to god experience. ...
What appears to happen is that they are there for some while before they meet someone who rejuvenates their faith or inculcates it.
Really? Well I'll have to take the word of a godbotherer about this as it appears to me that what actually happens is that those who have no faith in the first place just muddle along and those who have faith may lose it whereas those who had it sometimes regain it.Often when we lose a loved one or someone close to us or when we experience a personal tragedy of another sort - we turn to god.
We immediately become faithful.
That right, well I'll take your godbothering word for it but my partner bothers 'God' but only when things are going well.Then, on the other hand, when things are going well, or when things are exciting we generally lose our faith. When reflecting upon those time we may say we lost our way. - We gained a kingdom but lost our faith.
Many seem to turn away at that point? My partner never does this with her 'God'.We turn to god to find mercy when life experience seems to become unbearable.
She must be an extra special godbotherer as she only turns to her 'God' to thank 'him' fpr what she's got.We turn away from god when we don't need him.
Really! Pop-stars for wisdom?The wisdom of John Lennon.
- Bill Wiltrack
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Re: God is a Concept...
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Yeah,....got to tell ya...your scare quotes really aren't working anymore...AT ALL.
Never were too effective for you...
They just got dull - even duller than before.
Oh well,...If you care to take the time to make the effort I know it will pay off for you.
Superficial & dull...
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Yeah,....got to tell ya...your scare quotes really aren't working anymore...AT ALL.
Never were too effective for you...
They just got dull - even duller than before.
Oh well,...If you care to take the time to make the effort I know it will pay off for you.
Superficial & dull...
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- Arising_uk
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Re: God is a Concept...
Try writing a paragraph then.
Still, with a seven second attention span I can understand your problem.
Still, with a seven second attention span I can understand your problem.
- Bill Wiltrack
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Re: God is a Concept...
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...um, this ACTUALLY WAS a deep philosophical topic at one time...may I officially invite YOU personally to actually add PHILOSOPHICAL CONTENT to the actual subject at hand! - as opposed to continually attacking the original poster directly.
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...um, this ACTUALLY WAS a deep philosophical topic at one time...may I officially invite YOU personally to actually add PHILOSOPHICAL CONTENT to the actual subject at hand! - as opposed to continually attacking the original poster directly.
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- Arising_uk
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Re: God is a Concept...
Take a look, I did.
You as usual ignored what was said.
You as usual ignored what was said.
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Re: God is a Concept...
I don't use either.Bill Wiltrack wrote:.
Scott, I looked for you on Facebook & LinkedIn. Don't think I saw your profile. Is there another social media site that you are on? [/size]
It is already 'bad' for the Americans. But the privacy policies are even MORE horrendous for those of us outside of the U.S. as the 'agreements' basically completely disable any right of privacy to their company, third-parties, and the U.S. government among others who they allow to have access. I don't recommend ANYONE to use many of those services these days. Even forums and search engines are bad and we don't have the same freedoms that people presume we have these days.
- Bill Wiltrack
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Re: God is a Concept...
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Oh, Okay...I'll start getting the word out to the 1.2 BILLION people on FACEBOOK right now and the 250 MILLION members on LinkedIn.
{sarcasm off}
If you want to be a philosopher, a true philosopher, to ANY degree, the number one emotion that you must overcome is fear.
*Good luck in your quest...
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Oh, Okay...I'll start getting the word out to the 1.2 BILLION people on FACEBOOK right now and the 250 MILLION members on LinkedIn.
{sarcasm off}
If you want to be a philosopher, a true philosopher, to ANY degree, the number one emotion that you must overcome is fear.
*Good luck in your quest...
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Re: God is a Concept...
And to what do think might be the most popular selling book of all time? (Hint: It relates to the title of this thread)
I don't pander to the crowd, thank you.
I don't pander to the crowd, thank you.
- Bill Wiltrack
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Re: God is a Concept...
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You're either not making sense right now or you have accidentally posted to this thread when you meant your last post to appear upon another thread.
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You're either not making sense right now or you have accidentally posted to this thread when you meant your last post to appear upon another thread.
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- vegetariantaxidermy
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