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Previous comments... You are currently on page 8.
I had a recent interchange with LS who stopped interacting when the questions got to a point where she couldn't respond (my conjecture). So, I'll posit the same to you. Are love or freedom real and rational?
What is your problem with Judaism? How about Hinduism, or Buddhism?
Neither your ideas being the same nor different than hers says anything about thinking for yourself versus blindly accepting what you read from her or anywhere else. It depends on whether or not you are in fact understanding and thinking. Disagreeing could just as well mean that one blindly accepts or has been manipulated by what someone _else_ said.
"Disagreeing" with someone is not a sign of independence. Believing you have to disagree in order to be independent is just as dependent on what someone else says as believing you have to agree.
"A is A" seems to be some kind of dogmatic slogan for him, open to sanctioning any arbitrary assertion he wants. His bizarre statement, "You cannot state that one form of moral beliefs is one thing and another is something else, as some are very fond of stating: A=A", is false. "A is A" does not mean that "one thing" and "another" must be the same whenever he wants them to be.
thank you for your response. Robbie is just argumentative for the sake of being argumentative. He will not go away regardless of how often you present reality to him. he has yet to understand that A is A.
That being said, one of my strongest complaints against Objectivists and Randists is that they begin to treat philosophy as religion. I have even been told that I cannot 'pick and choose' amongst what Rand said with respect to what I want to represent as my philosophy.
Jan
Again, I think, there is a confusion here because of imprecise terminology being used.
Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Judaism etc. are religions, not philosophies and not ethics theories. There are philosophical aspects and ethics issues in them. But, without a doubt, their bases are faith. Faith is by definition not a rational proposition.
As I pointed here recently in a different context, I have a moral code, not based on a specific philosophy or on a specific religion. It is: nobody has the right to DECIDE what is good for me AND I AM responsible for ALL my actions. You can advise me, but I am the final authority.
I vigorously disagree that none of the religions or of the philosophies is better or worse, just different. In my opinion, there are huge differences in goodness or badness among both religions and philosophies. The beauty of this life is that I am entitled to that judgment. I learned long time ago that is nearly impossible to reason about religion with religious people. Here, among us Objectivist (which you said you are not), we can analyze and analyze forever the details of goodness or badness of religions and philosophies and "measure" them on some kind of "scale". Still, we would in the end part, each with our own opinions, perhaps somewhat improved, but friends as before.
Do you see the differences I am trying so quickly to describe?
By the way, this whole subject is the reason why I recently posted the little piece about the quote from Augustine of Hippo. I am surprised how little rational reaction I provoked. You only pointed out that clean of heart does not mean free of sin. That is only a tiny side issue.
Friends as before (I hope)!
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