Kishkumen wrote: ↑Tue May 03, 2022 9:45 pm
In other words, being a materialist who might be open to the divine but is waiting for it to be demonstrated according to materialist methods and standards, you downgrade the importance of human imagination, hopes, and dreams.
I can't imagine how treating the imaginative hopes and dreams of humans as imaginative hopes and dreams of humans and not descriptions of reality is problematic. you say doing so downgrades the importance of the hopes and dreams...well, sure, if we wish to think our imaginative hopes and dreams become the basis of reality simply because we imaginatively hope and dream them. In my mind hopes and dreams should be downgraded to hopes and dreams rather than elevated to reality. It basically feels absurd to think we can call a spirit realm reality all because many people have been steeped to think there really must be a spirit realm--particularly when we have no rational basis to think there is a spirit realm. It is absolutely unreasonable to treat one's imagined desire for a spirit world as a good rational basis to think there is a spirit world. son of a bitch...did I just repeat myself again?
It is all just the flotsam and jetsam of the brain, so nothing to be overly concerned about, and certainly something dangerous to take seriously. So, I completely disagree with you, and I find your ideology to be anti-human. I don’t mean that as a knock on you, or anyone else who shares your opinion. I just find the total reliance on material tools and methods to be astoundingly narrow given the incredibly narrow lens these things provide to the totality of existence. If an ideology rejects much of what makes us human, then it is insufficient to account for our condition and guide us to a better place.
I get the difference. I hear it plenty from apologist types. As if treating humans as capable of being rational in their pursuits is a bad thing, as if if doing so somehow devalues human experience. I see it as completely the opposite. We don't just get to dream something and by virtue of one of us dreaming it that dream becomes real. Pretending like there's something to that because we really want to think there is an unfindable world that replaces or subverts our naturalist one seems to be a huge problem.
Moreover, it just seems odd to me to say that, given our human limitations, we should distrust much of what we experience in the world and narrow down our sense of reality to a razor-thin slice of phenomena.
Characterizing a naturalist perspective as a razor thin phenomena seems silly from the vantage point of a naturalist, admittedly. We should distrust human experience because our proclivity to pretend the unreal is real has proven to be problematic.
Again, we don’t have a materialist verification of the spiritual realm. My magnifying glass is doing a crap job of detecting radio waves too. What I think is going on here is that the totality of things is much more vast than we are capable of understanding with our finite minds and methods. We get little glimpses of something more, and people who look hard can get stronger intimations of other things going on, but, yes, I don’t know that we will harness spirituality as effectively as we can harness the energy of the atom, or what have you. That does not make it pointless, stupid, or bad either.
It simply makes it an untrustworthy source of describing reality. That is if we are intent on letting our imaginations go wild and in so doing imagining a reality that is not there, then we ought to accept that doing so is simply our imagination. And we should not ever be so arrogant as to think we can conjure up reality simply by dreaming something unreal. I don't see how talking ourselves off the cliff as our imaginations carry us around is a bad thing. We need to accept that our desire for more is simply a force of our ambition and is not itself a good reason to think our imagined ideas are more important than reality.
A spiritual mindset will eventually burn us? Our materialist mindset is in fact burning us right now. It is called global warning, and it is almost exclusively due to our lopsided materialist way of approaching the world. We demand more things, and we will ruin the planet to get them. That is not a gift of Christianity or Hinduism. It is a gift of capitalism and materialism.
Our only solution to global warming in any possible way will come from a naturalist perspective--the imagined supernatural isn't saving us. Yes, we can't escape that our ideologies often feel good only to demonstrate bad effects later on. Its reasonable to proceed cautiously in our ideologies, not uncap them and pretend the unreal is real.
You make that all sound so bad. Maybe it is just misdirected but not inherently bad.
Either way, it seems rather problematic to me. I can't see how it helps anyone to think any one's imagined hopes and dreams are real simply because the one hopes and dreams them.
I'm going to address a couple of larger points here. What you are saying is the type of thing I've heard from DCP and his followers over the years. And certainly, just because I've heard it from them doesn't make it bad. I just think it a bit backward to think that way. Of course it's possible that there is something beyond the natural. But to think because it's possible and so many of us really want to be adorned in the heavens one day, we can just start saying the possible is probable without sufficient reason to think so. And then if you don't accept that the possible is probable simply because you prefer attempting a rational life, then you aren't being imaginative enough...you are limiting humanity...or something. DCP often attacks materialism on such grounds. The odd thing is from his perspective (and I'm going full tu quoque now) Mormon theology is wholly material. Spirit, god, intelligence...its all just matter. But the type of matter it is, on momonism, is
undetectable matter. But we can be assured its there because that was imagined to be true a couple hundred years ago by someone. That's it. There's little difference between the claims of Mormonism and every other traditional spiritual view in a sense. It's just pretending there is something we can't detect and that something is a representation of reality. I can't imagine how us responding with, "eh...believe whatever you want" is at all helpful. No. Being rational, learning to be rational is far more important in my view. And doing so will require us drop the superstitions. We'll have to reason our way out of them. There I wrapped this back in to the topic of Mormonism for the sake of the board.
Also, I can't help that all we can find it the natural. You offer a concern that since we can't verify the supernatural we ought to accept that it's real because we don't have the tools to verify it. You see it's not reasonable to suggest since we can't detect radio waves with a magnifying glass that means we ought to accept unmeasured unfound imagined supernatural exists. Once we're able to detect the supernatural in some way, you can make that point. Until then you are just hoping there is a tool out there that finds the supernatural and hoping that tool finds the supernatural. But that hope doesn't give us any reason to think there is a whole world of supernatural ready to supplant our own.
I've enjoyed this little back and forth. It's funny we struck this up in the midst of a thread dedicated to complaining that Interpreter has attacked some of it's fellow religionists (although I guess Hauglid may be pretty much in limbo as per the religion these days). Screw staying on topic, eh? My fault. but I enjoyed it. And though it feels this has run it's course to some extent, I reserve the right to respond again...hah. Just wanted to express some appreciation for the discussion.
“Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.”
― Carl Sagan, Cosmos