Good stuff, T, good stuff.  I wanted to use the word "love," but I was
afraid I'd come off as even more new age, but yeah, I've posted here
that true love is consciousness, and thank you for helping me come
back to that.  More later, no time to reply-enjoy your words right now.

Edg

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, t3rinity <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Duveyoung <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > Curtis, et al,
> > 
> > To me, this "refining an atheistic stance" is merely a waste of time
> > like having a discussion about where's the best place to stand in a
> > cesspool.  "Oh, stand over here, cuz the puke stench is easier to bear
> > than than the doo-doo stink over there." 
> 
> Well I don't know about the way you put it Edg, but basically,
> principally I agree with you. Out of reasons I have already tried to
> point out, and that particularely directed at a 'Rationalist Atheist'.
> The moment you deny an ultimate ground / being / mystery at the basis
> of creation which cannot be rationally contained (for a rationalist
> its only a matter of time till science will understand it all), you
> have no way of attaining anything, or evolving towards a 'higher
> goal', like the mystic would do. All the fine-edging on yur
> intellecual POV will be mute, as it is clear what becomes of you in
> the end: A dissipation into the inconsciousness.
> 
> I am not sure though, if Curtis is really in this category. It seems
> he is still on his quest.
> 
> <snip>
> 
> > Major AWE can only come from seeing Pure Being's manifested diversity
> > as ALIVE, not MERELY an almost infinite, glorious, incredible
> > clockworks a'tickin'.  It's all the difference between looking at the
> > Mona Lisa, and looking at the Mona Lisa and understanding that she's
> > actually there looking back at you -- and her smile now blazes at
one.  
> > 
> > That's the difference between an atheist's awe and enlightenment's
awe.
> 
> I think thats the bottom line for me: Religion /spirituality is all
> about living it and practising. An atheist may be in awe, but
> basically (Unless he is a Buddhist or Taoist)he is just exploring a
> kind of a metaphysical study. So he may be in awe, yes. But he cannot
> LOVE reality as such, and he cannot develop a passion about it. (maybe
> some out there regard or sense this passion as something dangerous)
> There is no one there to love, except of course his spouse, his
> children etc. He can love everything in the objective world, but of
> course he cannot love the WHOLE  Essence in a personified way.
> Similarely, a Buddhist, being an atheist (soft one)can have all the
> detachment in the world, but whatever awe Curtis or barry may have, it
> cannot translate into love - not at least in a unfified way towards
> the essence of everything. A believer to the contrary is more
> interested in loving God than proving him/her.
> 
> An atheist is under the dictate of th mind - he can gauge what the
> mind can know and what the mind cannot know. A believer does not trust
> the rationale, he trusts his heart only. He is not interested in the
> truth of his mind, if he/she is practising, he will trust the truth of
> his heart/soul. This is completely internal and has no relationship to
> external reality. I am very much a fan of Kierkegaard when it comes to
> his views on subjectivity and choice:
> 
> "We cannot think our choices in life, we must live them; and even
> those choices that we often think about become different once life
> itself enters into the picture. For Kierkegaard, the type of
> objectivity that a scientist or historian might use misses the
> point—humans are not motivated and do not find meaning in life through
> pure objectivity. Instead, they find it through passion, desire, and
> moral and religious commitment. These phenomena are not objectively
> provable—nor do they come about through any form of analysis of the
> external world; they come about through inward reflection, a way of
> looking at one's life that evades objective scrutiny. Instead, true
> self-worth originates in a relation to something that transcends human
> powers, something that provides a meaning because it inspires awe and
> wonder and demands total and absolute commitment in achieving it."
> 
> "Johannes Climacus, in Concluding Unscientific Postscript to
> Philosophical Fragments, writes the following cryptic line:
> "Subjectivity is Truth". To understand Climacus's concept of the
> individual, it is important to look at what he says regarding
> subjectivity. What is subjectivity? In very rough terms, subjectivity
> refers to what is personal to the individual—what makes the individual
> who he is in distinction from others. It is what is inside—what the
> individual can see, feel, think, imagine, dream, etc. It is often
> opposed to objectivity—that which is outside the individual, which the
> individual and others around can feel, see, measure, and think about.
> Another way to interpret subjectivity is the unique relationship
> between the subject and object."
> 
> "Scientists and historians, for example, study the objective world,
> hoping to elicit the truth of nature—or perhaps the truth of history.
> In this way, they hope to predict how the future will unfold in
> accordance with these laws. In terms of history, by studying the past,
> the individual can perhaps elicit the laws that determine how events
> will unfold—in this way the individual can predict the future with
> more exactness and perhaps take control of events that in the past
> appeared to fall outside the control of humans."
> 
> "Subjectivity comes with consciousness of myself as a self. It
> encompasses the emotional and intellectual resources that the
> individual is born with. Subjectivity is what the individual is as a
> human being. Now the problem of subjectivity is to decide how to
> choose—what rules or models is the individual going to use to make the
> right choices? What are the right choices? Who defines right? To be
> truly an individual, to be true to himself, his actions should in some
> way be expressed so that they describe who and what he is to himself
> and to others. The problem, according to Kierkegaard, is that we must
> choose who and what we will be based on subjective interests—the
> individual must make choices that will mean something to him as a
> reasoning, feeling being."
> 
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_S%C3%B8ren_Kierkegaard
> 
> Here a short side note for anyone who has a problem with me using the
> word choice: In your language its you (the individuals) choice, in my
> language its Gods choice. Any problem?
>


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