What Is Easter?
There's a lot I don't get about religion. However, one thing that I don't get the most is the popular manifestation of Easter. Supposedly, It commemorates when God in the form of a man was asphyxiated by being nailed to a cross and left to hang on the upright cross until death overcame him. A particularly hideous way to die. So in order to commemorate this grisly act, we are inundated with cute bunnies laying candy coated chocolate eggs and having our kids pictures taken at the malls with 6 foot tall rabbits who if they were real would scare the pants of kids more than the myriad of Santas during Christmas. Can anyone explain this phenomenon to me?
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If it doesn't fit, just make something up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFYAI...
You continue to think that you can 'shoehorn' religious mysticism into philosophy somehow. Won't fit.
Your assertions are based on ideas that ignore and contradict readily observable aspects of existence.
During the 20th century, dozens of things that were deemed impossible suddenly became possible. Who knows what tomorrow might bring. I think the quote goes, "I do several impossible things before breakfast" -- The Red Queen in Alice Through The Looking Glass.
I am not talking about existence nor debating it. I am not asserting that it is subjective in any way. I am not asserting that consciousness precedes existence. I assume existence (as an axiom), but I am also confining my study to that of conscious entities - not banana peels. I do not question the existence of a banana peel, but it is not relevant to this discussion because insofar as I can determine, it is not a conscious entity.
Rand asserted that the only way to examine the universe was by the perception of a consciousness which could identify it's boundaries, its distinctness from other objects AND had the capability to reason. Unless you disagree with that statement, we will proceed upon that basis. Before I worry about the after-death existence of a banana peel, however, I'm going to look at a more personally valuable and applicable question: whether or not my personal consciousness will still exist after death. Will my ability to perceive and reason continue after death? Because if not, existence won't matter one iota to me after that point. My first and foremost concern is myself. I have no question that the rest of the universe will go on one way or the other.
"Testing your ideas about death and consciousness should come with a medical disclaimer."
Only if one lacks the imagination to come up with a test that does not involve self-destruction or bodily injury.
http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/pri...
Testing your ideas about death and consciousness should come with a medical disclaimer.
Do you propose another method of obtaining the necessary information? I'm open to suggestions. The problem is that what we might call an observation of death is merely an observation of the cessation of biological functions. There is no correlating test for the presence/absence of consciousness I am aware of. Example: one in a comatose state. Such an one exhibits limited biological function, but no self-will (aspect of consciousness) ascertainable by scientific discovery. Is such a one alive or dead? Might there remain a nascent/inactive consciousness or even an active one which has somehow lost its ability to control its vessel?
"Existence is; and, regardless of whether you "think", you are. The banana peel and you both exist whether you are conscious, or not. You and the banana peel are existents observable by others. Your death ends all the biological functions that your human consciousness depends on."
Thanks for the clarification. That makes more sense.
I agree that things exist. The question, however, is whether the consciousness continues to exist despite the termination of those biological functions. (Which brings up the interesting concept of what would cause a consciousness to temporarily inhabit a physical form in the first place...) I think you are assuming biological and conscious function are one and the same. I question the assumption and contemplate the possibility of independence.
"There are rational explanations for unusual, individual, mental experiences. Those experiences are not a valid basis to construct ideas fundamentally in contradiction to what is."
I never asserted otherwise. However, I also categorically reject the collective insanity case implied here - that somehow each and every assertion of "miraculous" circumstances can be attributed to some mental defect or hallucination. That is the refuge of unjustified speculation fueled by confirmation bias. Many in such cases have been examined by medical staff and declared completely competent. In cases of healings, many have taken place in the very presence of astonished medical staff.
Must all such instances have to be taken at face value? No, and I do not suggest any such thing. An impartial judge, however, does not issue a peremptory verdict without first weighing the arguments.
Rather than looking at individual claims and putting the proverbial cart before the horse, however, I think it prudent instead to establish the feasibility of the original question first and foremost. If the hypothesis may be reasonably asserted that consciousness and biological function are not one and the same, then these incidents (asserted by some to be miracles) may be examined individually as potential evidence in corroboration of the assertion.
If knowledge can only be confirmed first hand then most of science is bunk. I'm sure B realizes that a truth can be confirmed without personally experiencing it.
He inferred that each person was their own religion and eschewed the building of edifices and rituals.
Please keep in mind that I do not wish to come across as correcting, as much as wish give information.
Mainly, Easter is not about Jesus's time on the cross, it is about his resurrection from the grave. Two different matters all together.
On another note, it is not about religion. Christianity is not a religion. Christ was very anti- religion.
Existence is; and, regardless of whether you "think", you are. The banana peel and you both exist whether you are conscious, or not. You and the banana peel are existents observable by others. Your death ends all the biological functions that your human consciousness depends on.
There are rational explanations for unusual, individual, mental experiences. Those experiences are not a valid basis to construct ideas fundamentally in contradiction to what is.
I also strongly caution against any assertion that no evidence of consciousness after death could exist when one has already admitted that he has declared the search for such a waste of time and/or effort. A pronouncement of that type is open evidence of confirmation bias - not of one searching for reality.
Adieu.
"The banana peel..."
I'm really struggling to understand where you are coming from and where you are headed. Perhaps you can restate the entirety of your comment and precede it with your assumptions. I am not intentionally being difficult, I am just struggling to find the set of logical tracks upon which your mental train of thought is proceeding.
The banana peel seen on your porch, by your neighbor, was still there regardless of whether you were playing a joke, knocked unconscious, or dead. Your condition can concretely be determined with a bucket of water or medical assessment.
Using your argument would eliminate the reality of any diminished mental condition—because we cannot be that person. Twisting logic like this cuts off 'blood flow' to one's capacity for reason.
The human mind has the ability to believe anything, and it underscores our necessity to reason. Having physical reactions within our bodies is not proof of a contradictory dimension; and dire, emotional stress is not a tool used in rational thought.
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