Messy
Senior Member
Go to the ant...
consider its ways and be wise!
7 It has no commander,
no overseer or ruler,
8 yet it stores its provisions in summer
and gathers its food at harvest.
I think many of the earliest "learned men" were scribes. They were smart enough to read and write, and that put them at the top shelf of "learned." The way I understand it is that their goal was to make written records of oral traditions, or to make copies of other written records. They were not expected to be keen observers or investigators, although some of them probably were, but that was not their job. Fiction or not fiction was not their job to differentiate.
I watched a fun episode on the Discovery Channel or something like it years ago that did a two hour piece on the 100 most influential persons in the last one thousand years. I waited almost breathlessly to see who they would finally name "most influential" at the end of the program. It surprised me because I never gave the guy one bit of thought over the previous two hours. It was Johannes Gutenberg. And when I thought about it, I was in full agreement. He made a way to dispense information to learned men all over the globe, not just some scribe in the next cell over. And collectively minds could come together to compare notes, debate, and try to make sense out of it all.
@gruntlabor, I'm no scholar when it comes to these things, but personal experience would suggest that St Bonaventura's list is very close to the mark. He might have added the modern phrase "rinse and repeat" because renewal is needed for those of us who have a tendency to relapse. Sometimes it seems like two steps forward, one step back.Saint Bonaventura's (1221-1274) seven stages of ascent into God are
1. consideration of the wonders of the physical world
2. meditation on the physical sensations
3. contemplation of all these things
4. restoration of our goodness through Christ
5. transcendence into holy things
6. beholding these things, and we are bathed in light
7. the experience of ecstasy in stillness as we rest as one with God
I hope I am correct, Warrigal.
Interesting quotation. Many world leaders have had the delusion that they are in power by the Divine Right of Kingship."My feeling as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter... who, God's truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter".
"I believe today that I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator."
~ Adolf Hitler
He said that? In the concentration camps the Bible was forbidden. They smuggled a tiny one in. The Nazi's called it das Lügenbuch, the book of lies."My feeling as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter... who, God's truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter".
"I believe today that I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator."
~ Adolf Hitler
And maybe they want us to be happy and love each other. On the surface this sounds ridiculous, but it's every bit as likely or unlikely as the Bible God.what if we were created by some higher being aliens, they could be our god.
In defense of those words one could say:"My feeling as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter... who, God's truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter".
"I believe today that I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator."
~ Adolf Hitler
I asked Gemini:He said that? In the concentration camps the Bible was forbidden. They smuggled a tiny one in. The Nazi's called it das Lügenbuch, the book of lies.
He used Luther's writings.
Who have I heard that from (paraphrasing of course) lately?I asked Gemini:
Did Adolf Hitler say the following? "My feeling as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter... who, God's truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter". "I believe today that I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator.".
Gemini said;
Yes, Adolf Hitler made this statement during a speech in Munich on April 12, 1922. It is an accurate reflection of the "Positive Christianity" rhetoric he used early in his career to garner support from Christians by framing Jesus as a fighter against Jews. --Gemini
Whenever two or more atheists are gathered together, they come:Ah the irony of a thread from an atheist has become a great theist thread and it's 3/4 of the way to 1,000 posts...
Wow.I asked Gemini:
Did Adolf Hitler say the following? "My feeling as a Christian points me to my Lord and Savior as a fighter... who, God's truth! was greatest not as a sufferer but as a fighter". "I believe today that I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator.".
Gemini said;
Yes, Adolf Hitler made this statement during a speech in Munich on April 12, 1922. It is an accurate reflection of the "Positive Christianity" rhetoric he used early in his career to garner support from Christians by framing Jesus as a fighter against Jews. --Gemini
Apologies JustDave and Rakaia to you both and Bretrick for wandering off this interesting topic. Unfortunately, I'm sure to forget again so I'll get lost.Whenever two or more atheists are gathered together, they come:
Onward Christian soldiers,
Fighting as to War,
With Cross of Jesus,
Going on before.
But we always welcome the refresher courses, just in case we forgot something.
Topics wander in forum threads. Interesting topics wander more. I think it's an Internet rule. And what would atheists do without a constant reminder that we are all doomed. What would we have to talk about?Apologies JustDave and Rakaia to you both and Bretrick for wandering off this interesting topic. Unfortunately, I'm sure to forget again so I'll get lost.
I think I love you, or at least I love that you have questions and wonder. I too puzzle over how anyone came up with the notion of a god in the first place. It makes sense to believe in a "creator" who is very much like a human and that is a logical connection to a "destroyer". But I think to be aware of this consciousness we must do our best to let go of all our modern notions, and focus on humans being equal to trees and other animals. A time when trees and rivers had spirits, to understand the evolution of our separation from nature, and creation of gods and then the separation from God and need to be saved.
I suppose having one god for everything would eliminate some of the "My god is better than your god" squabbles between religious factions. Or may it's all the pharaoh could keep track of. Oh wait the Pharaoh was a god. Hmmm, does this tell us something about what gods strive for?
I'm not familiar with that theory. I'll think about it. I was going to say that in modern times having only one god for our advancement in true knowledge, doesn't seem to need extra gods. But then there's India, a strong contender for national power, which suggests one god or many may not be a modern day factor, but I'm not very knowledgeable about India. Do they discover or copy? I don't know.
It doesn't seem to create a feeling of safety at all. I don't know if things would be different without gods. Man controls politics and strives for power over others, and we wouldn't think about gods if man hadn't come up with the concept of them to begin with. And as I've said before, a world without a god, or one that works independently of a god, suspiciously seems to resemble a world with a god that people claim is what we have right now.
Thank you for that information and explanation. I feel like a child with a new toy/thought to play with.No, how trees and mushrooms communicate doesn't change how I define "consciousness." Plants can communicate through chemical means, although they don't think about what they are doing. In that way, they are like humans who react chemically through hormones, without understanding why they do it. But I certainly don't see the chemical processes in plants as magical, nor am I impressed by it. It's just what they have evolved to do.
My BIL sent me a book on this exact topic about trees and mushrooms, but the book tried too hard to emphasize that it was in someway a secret intelligence, and even presented in such a way that it might invite a spiritual viewpoint. It's biochemistry, which I hate to call "simple" biochemistry. It's complicated enough so that some people see it as magical. It's not. It's just complicated, and something we don't even know about when it's happening.
How does a mindless human cell in the mitochondria know that another cell in a remote part of the body is needing help to make a vital repair? Our cells communicate this through chemicals carried about in blood cells. When the DNA of a hospital cell is notified it quickly fashions a strand of RNA and sends it into the blood stream where the affected cell finds it and fashions a repair part of DNA to save itself. It all happens very fast, with us humans not giving it a single thought, or an awareness of this happening, and it's going on all day long all over our body. It's biochemistry.
As for my definition of consciousness, it's a part of the brain of higher animals. Dogs have it, and we can recognize it in them, but it has evolved in humans into something that we consider "higher intelligence," and can use it to rationally (or alternatively, irrationally) respond. We can use it to solve, understand, create mysteries, and imagine. It's not perfect, we can't even trust our memories of past experience that well. It can even cause trouble for ourselves. Don't get me wrong, as flawed as it can be, it can be a very powerful asset that the so called lower life forms don't have access to.
I look forward to your answer. I have no idea why a flat plain is not meaningful space.
It is easy to buy the book "The Hiding Place". Is that the book with the dissertation?Wow.
Corrie ten Boom's brother went to Germany in the 1920s.
From Google AI (you can find anything now, I once read this in a book):
Willem ten Boom (1886-1946), the brother of Corrie ten Boom, warned early on about the evil taking root in Germany, specifically from the academic world.
The Dissertation (1927): Willem ten Boom, who studied theology and obtained a doctorate in Leipzig, wrote as early as 1927 that a terrible evil was taking root in Germany.
Warning against Universities: In his writing, he stated that it was precisely at the universities that the seeds were being planted of a contempt for human life such as the world had never seen.
Recognizing Nazism: Willem, who was also a pastor and missionary to the Jews, saw the antisemitic and Nazi ideology emerging early on in the 1920s through his contacts in Germany, long before Hitler came to power.
Reaction: According to family stories, his warnings were laughed off at the time by the few who read his dissertation. Willem was an outspoken opponent of the rising Nazism and, during the war, worked actively in the Dutch resistance together with his son Kik to help Jews.
I think many of the earliest "learned men" were scribes. They were smart enough to read and write, and that put them at the top shelf of "learned." The way I understand it is that their goal was to make written records of oral traditions, or to make copies of other written records. They were not expected to be keen observers or investigators, although some of them probably were, but that was not their job. Fiction or not fiction was not their job to differentiate.
Sorry, I was replying to your comment: "Without the trinity how could there be any meaningful space?"
I can't answer that for you, and perhaps I completely misunderstood your original comment. It happens!
When scientists and cosmologists state that the universe is "flat," they are not describing a 2D sheet of paper, but rather using a technical term from differential geometry to describe the curvature of space. It means that the universe follows Euclidean geometry, where parallel lines stay parallel forever and triangles sum to 180 degrees, even on a cosmic scale. [1, 2]
Okay I googled for an explanation and AI says.
Uh, yeah,
we discuss this stuff every night at my dinner table.
Actually, this is really over my head, but maybe someday I will understand it.
That is genius, bringing up Helen Keller. That triggers me to think about when I was preverbal.I wonder if what Helen Keller experienced gives us a clue to what consciousness is and how it arises. She describes her world before her awakening as "nothingness". She had no awareness of anything, just like a worm.Then at the water pump she connected the water she was experiencing with the label w-a-t-e-r. When we developed language, that is when consciousness starts.
Being conscious doesn't include awareness or understanding. We don't know how the brain/mind makes consciousness/understanding. This is where we begin to mythify it's nature.
The latest explanation of how trees and mushrooms communicate may change your mind about consciousness. To assume communication is not possible without human language could be an error.