I wrote this some months ago, and figured we could get a good debate out of it.
http://www.avantlabs.com/magmain.php?issueID=14&pageID=148
So, tear into me.
http://www.avantlabs.com/magmain.php?issueID=14&pageID=148
So, tear into me.
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Originally posted by ponyboy
Since you wanted a debate...good article, even though you misspelled altar in the Blind Eyed Insurgency paragraph.![]()
Are you a lawyer as well? You use a lot of words that most people wouldn't understand unless they had a dictionary handy.
So where does this soul come from? As you state in the article, we are what we create ourselves to be. Do you not believe that our choices are influenced by our external environment as well and that accounts for development of many character traits? Or are you trying to make the point that we all SHOULD BE what we create ourselves to be and ignore outside influence towards our development. I for one believe that this is almost impossible, especially in adolescence.
Originally posted by Eggs
Enjoyable piece Dante. The English perhaps unnecessarily high-browed, but despite that stimulating. If a work is good then it should be made accesible to the masses so that it has a chance to affect them equally. If not then the the power remains in the hands of certain individuals able to grasp the meaning of your work.
There is a God, or we are a product of chance. I dont really feel like turning this into a religious argument though. From a secular standpoint however, who we are is a compilation of our genes and our experiences. And perhaps a bit of randomness that is inherent in all human beings. I completely agree that who we are is who we make ourselves. There are no doubt limitations inherent to everything we do, but usually these limitations are self induced rather than being genetic. That said then, our interaction with life is very indicative of "who I am." Its not a quality that I have to look for to others but one I can see in my day to day life.
Oh, and by the way... if we damn the sophists to hell then we're going to have to do away with most everybody. Starting with Politicians
Ponyboy - I dont believe that our Soul has any responsibility in the development of our personality. As I said earlier, I do believe that our personalities come from genetics, interaction, and the randomness that is inherent in humans. At least that is my opinion as I grow older and see the similarities between my parents and I, and can trace occurences throughout my life that have shaped me.
Also, I think Dante was saying more that we shouldnt allow others to make us, not that we shouldnt be influenced by that around us. That is after all how we learn... through that interaction. So its seems his statement was more of a "How do you handle this interaction (whether divorce, or a pay raise, or whatever) with life" rather than that you should simply be an island unto yourself. The value that one gains from his article is that you can look at and respond to something however they wish. You can let something defeat you, or you can learn and grow from the experience and come back stronger/better equipped.
Originally posted by Dante B.
I don't write with the intent of speaking to the masses. I think with images and emotions, and those cognitive crumbs drop into the cracks of my work.
I aim to please---myself. And if I did give a thought beyond myself, it would be to those "certain individuals." Some will see the emotions born from the images, being able to relate.
Yes, disregarding the origin of man, the fact remains:
We are here, and we have control over our existence. I am, by the way, an Atheist.
I'd be the next to go.
Even with this supposed randomness, one can bring order to chaos. Two people may read the same book, yet they each walk away with a different view.
And so it is the same with life: It is the person that defines the impact and the relevance of an experience, not the experience that defines the person.
I gathered that. Probably also an Egoist in worldview? I thought that you were a nihilst at first. Of course you can be a reformed nihilist and perhaps rationally reason that one cannot be a true nihilist and still be alive without intellectually accepting the hypocrasy that there is no meaning to life but you still have a desire to go on... and in doing so you must create value out of which there inherently is none.
Either way, athiest or theist, one must have faith in their beliefs as there is no specific proof that absolutely supports either.
I'm not sure if that supports bringing order to chaos or of chaos itself. If there is only one book and one author who wrote the book with one meaning in mind, and two different meanings come out of it... then we are exemplifying chaos and not order. Or atleast to my mind it is so. However, if you have a different opinion of it then I would like to hear it.
One experience leads to a random impact in two people, yet these two people can make order of this randomness on a personal level.
Hence (as you stated in your argument) how from a battle lost one may conclude in defeat, or one may conclude in a lesson learned and gain value of it.
Life is what we make of it.
Originally posted by Dante B.
I am a Danteist.
I still have yet to understand what hell it means.
Are all beliefs equal?
No, I am speaking on the count of how each individual lets an experience impact them, for better or worse. The "experience," alone, doesn't shape them, for if it did they would both walk away with the same conclusion.
Almost.
Explain:
How is it a random impact.
Too bad it doesn't offer a money-back guarantee.
Loaded question? In the arena of proof I'd have to say yes. Without ample proof for any one belief the rest are still plausible. As far as beliefs go though, I try to narrow mine down through what I can physically interact with and that which I can produce a logical argument to support. Not necessarily a deductive argument, but at least inductive.
Its not truly random. However, I view it as random that an author can write a book with a certain meaning to it, and that meaning is not necessarily what will be the meaning that its readers derive from it. A million people can read a book and all get something slightly different from it.
Those that create themselves never need worry about that money-back guarantee
Originally posted by Dante B.
What is ample proof.
Is ample proof possible. To what extent can one dismiss another belief.
Tesosterone is a steroid.
Creatine is not.
If someone said, "Creatine is a steroid," is that merely a belief.
Definitely. However, I don't view "random" to be an appropriate word in this situation.
Indeed. But it never hurts to ask.
Joking.
Originally posted by Eggs
In Danteology at least!
Originally posted by Eggs
No, its not merely a belief. However, our religious affiliations are. Unless you can prove to me as conclusively that there is no God as you can that Creatine is not a steroid.
We can argue this on another thread, if you wish (won't be consistent with my responses, but I'll get around to them).
A Christian God? Whose God. It is up to the person making the claims to show evidence.
In my eyes, even if *a* being we can call God existed, it wouldn't be of any particular importance to me. Even without the supposed existence of a God, one can make sense of the world around them, knowing what is, and is not moral and proper (can debate this one here, if you wish).
Thus, aside from my argument (why God doesn't exist, which I can get into), I don't have any practical reason to believe in a god.
If I were to believe in a god, it wouldn't be in the Christian sense, or any religious sense of belief.
You mean because he isnt the hand that feeds us? Perhaps, perhaps not. But we are impractical creatures if anything Dante, are we not. We have fancies that wish to know how we came to be, how the Universe was created and so forth. Which is hard on me, because I've only ever seen life come from life, and I have never seen an object appear out of thin air. So evololving from nothing and the universe appearing like a twinky in front of a fat man, to me takes as much faith if not more so than believing in a God.
Wouldnt the acknowledgement of a God be a religious sense any way you look at it? You need not perform a certain religious activity to understand that there is a God. That only takes accepting that there is one. Or in your case not accepting that there is one, which is a religious belief in either case.
Originally posted by Dante B.
There is cause and effect.