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#1
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Perspective 1
Question: Why is it important to you that others associate their inner experience with “God”? There's real life without “God” for many. Answer: It’s all about relationship. Looking outward, we see and experience only the reflection of our soul, our inner life. Why settle for crumbs? Jesus said he came so that we may have life and have it more abundantly. He taught that the greatest thing we can ever learn is to love and how it is to be loved in return. The contemplation of nature and the inner life without a personal God can instill wonder, even peace, but only a person can love. And how much greater is the love of the Divine than the love of man? Question: Do you not appreciate that not everyone feels a “being” “loving” them and that this does not mean they lack an “inner life” or a genuine spirituality? Answer: No. (I can already hear accusations of arrogance and intolerance from the politically correct.) First of all, the question flows from lowbrow theology, the assumption that God is something “out there,” something apart from us and experienced as though he were a foreigner. Second, if I am a person, can the Ultimate Source be less? "Human personality is the time-space image-shadow cast by the divine Creator personality. And no actuality can ever be adequately comprehended by an examination of its shadow. Shadows should be interpreted in terms of the true substance." (UB, P.29) Or, as mystics have said for thousands of years, “As above, so below; as below, so above.” Third, I affirmed in the above answer that the contemplation of nature and the inner life without a personal God can instill wonder and even peace. That’s fine, but intellectual assent to sentiment is not spirituality. It is nothing more than a capricious acceptance and appreciation of physical law. How, then, can I appreciate it? I love my children unconditionally, but does that mean I should support them in everything they think, say and do? Quote:
Let’s suppose for a moment that immediate experiences, however various and disparate they be, are logically incapable of contradicting each other. Can you draw a non-contradictory conclusion from the following two premises?
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“If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things through the narrow chinks of his cavern.” WILLIAM BLAKE |
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#2
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It does not surprise me Schodinger answered as such, but to take 1 and 2 as facts is a false premise. As for your first half.... the question was posed "do you NOT" and you answered NO, that is to say you agree, correct?
As for the thing you quoted: Quote:
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I'm not sure I understand what you are looking for here. I am not debating, but asking what it is you seek. This is a discussion, and I do not agree by my "religion/philosophy". Please clarify the conversation..... Thanks
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The Merrill StEubing sets sail and salutes you! |
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#3
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Very much the straw man, Rolling Stone. As you know from the context these are borrowed from, associating "God" experiences with an "out there" God is assumed in my comments about "God." Since you don't want to consider other's perspectives, you aren't aware of how similar we view this subject but rather are fixated on the idea that everyone must talk about things the way you do.
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RETIRED.
Peace. |
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#4
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Calling my perspective "arrogant" may be correct, but calling it "intolerant" is nonsense considering (like I said in another thread) my wife is Catholic, one sone a Baptist, the oter an atheist and my sister makes most other Mormons I know look like "Jack Mormons." If I really was the way you say I am, we wouldn't get along as we do. Quote:
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“If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things through the narrow chinks of his cavern.” WILLIAM BLAKE |
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#5
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Oh. . . I don't know . . . perhaps the fact that you're quoting me in the OP?
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RETIRED.
Peace. |
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