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Originally posted by sweetnpetite
Yes, thank you cant. I was going to point out basicly the same thing.
Even in the dictionary there are 3 seperate definitions of truth including these two:a transcendent fundamental or spiritual reality b : a judgment, proposition, or idea that is true or accepted as true which go along w/ the idea of spirtual truths as apposed to facts.
For instance, one can find truth in a work of fiction, although the story itself may contain no facts and may not be in any way shape or form factually true. I would think that this sort of thing would be fairly obvious to anyone hanging out in an authors forum.![]()
Thank fuck!Joe Wordsworth said:I think people can find meaning in fiction.
amicus said:
If you are saying that 'thought' cannot be verified or shown to correspond to any measurable thing...."
The perhaps a recent Discovery Health Channel program where in specified electrical current in the brain was observed to peak when a 'new' idea was introduced in the mind, might interest you.
Secondly, although one cannot take a thought and fondle it, thus measure it in the real world....one must acknowledge that the mind works in the same manner for each human being.(normative), not autistic or otherwise impaired)
Since human perceptions all come about the same way, through near identical sensory input, the the correlation of the content of the mind, i.e. thoughts and ideas, Do have a direct connection to reality, thus can be equated to being real.
amicus...
Joe Wordsworth said:
Essentially (the mixing of metaphors here is a bit rough), you're saying that they are Absolute in that they both exist and don't contradict each other.
Joe Wordsworth said:
"I believe the earth is composed of multipe gods and goddesses" is a statement defining what reality has--take then, into consideration "I believe that Christians are right, too, in that there's one God only". One cannot truly have both beliefs, as it represents an impossibility. One can assert them, utter them, talk about them... but, essentially, belief is the acceptance of something as true--and when you accept a truth (even if its not correspondant), you exlude that assertions contraries.
Joe Wordsworth said:I believe in God, but I've never said "God exists"--as that would be asserting a truth that I can't assert reasonably.
There's a sensation called deja vu, where what just happened is perceived to have been already known to have happened.On our perceptions, in the early or mid nineties, even the Wall Street Journal ran a three day column on page one about how we're perceived to be able to perceive. In sum, we can't, at least not directly.
Yes, even touch and taste is not direct. What it is is a set of impulses so fast that we think it's really real time, but it is something that is almost instantaneously fed to portions of the mind which interpret it all, and make judgements. That's also true of seeing. We, the outer body, if I can use that loosely, must wait to know what it is we saw, or thought we saw, until whatever it is that we are tells us what it thinks we saw. (Mercy, did I say all that mumbo-jumbo?)
gauchecritic said:Unfortunately I have been swayed, majestically, by Star Wars (but forget the minihedrons or whatever they are)
I really believe that there is a 'force' which emanates from all living things, that surrounds us and penetrates us. And is a part of being 'alive'.
(I'm pretty sure he must have stolen the idea from a 'proper' faith)
When it comes to logic and truth I tend to believe that it is all wordplay. Which isn't to say that religion is any different.
In this case I subscribe to Pratchett. Anything you can think of or believe is 'true'. (For any given value of 'truth'.)
The site that I frequent, when researching answers to logic (apart from Monty Python) is The Atheism Web.
It seems to me that, were it not for religion, then there would be no logic.
Gauche

Originally posted by sweetnpetite
No, I'm saying that I believe that religions are systems, and that different systems work for for different people. In otherwords, just because I believe that Christianity has some things right, doesn't mean that I literally believe that every word of it is literally true.
Oh can't you? Surely you've heard of a little thing called Trinity, which defies all logic in aserting that god is three but at the same time god is one.
Many pagans likewise believe that the many goddess and gods are different facets of one god (or in some cases 2)
One CAN truly have both beliefs, weather it represents an imposibility or not. Just as one can believe that a bush can be on fire but not burn up, or that one can believe that the red sea parted to let the isrealites through, or that a virgin could give birth without the help of any human sperm, or that a man could walk on water or that the dead can come back to life.
All of those things represent impossility. And all these things are believed by millions of people who also believe in the properties of fire, gravity, birth and death as explained by scientific fact.
That is the most illogical thing I've ever read!
How can you believe in God, if you don't believe that it is true? If you won't or can't say that God exists then you don't believe it. Believing means *believing* and if you think something is unreasonable or that it might not be true, you don't believe, you just 'think maybe.'
And since we are quoting from the dictionary, please logic your way out of this:
be·lieve: To accept as true or real.
sweetsubsarahh said:Dicks are not logical.
They may have a mind of their OWN, but they are certainly not logical.
But if we are going to mention dicks on a religious thread, I should blushingly add that one of the few ways to get an "Oh God!" outta me happens when my husband uses his.
Ahem.

Joe Wordsworth said:My comment was in response to your IBM and MAC analogy. Because those systems aren't contradictory (you talked about using one or the other), of course one can use them without problem. They are both "Absolute", in that they don't represent a contradiction.
amicus said:hello mismused....
Not sure your question can be answered even by someone familiar with how the mechanical functions of the brain actually work.
It is, however, miniscule amounts of electrical energy traveling along certain paths in certain areas of the brain that have been observed using scientific method.
It is not that I believe in or have faith in that science, but that the lay expressions are such that I can follow and 'logically' accept the information as valid and without contradiction.
Now, going back to your post about whether a 'word' could be detected or just 'brain activity'...I think was your question.
Well..both I suspect. The 'new idea' was presented to the subject through both words and sight and sound, as I recall. A variety of different stimuli were presented drawing a normative response from the brain. When the 'new idea' was comprehended, the brain had a mini orgasm in a particular area and the electricity measured peaked.
So while that is not the identification of a word, as you asked, but rather, I think, the identification of a 'concept' or an abstraction within the mind.
Words only describe existents and the wider range of thought, words are not the actual thing...thus the mind deals in the abstract, through the senses and the means by which memory and comparison works in a normal mind.
At least, that is how I understand the process....
amicus...

Originally posted by sweetnpetite
Haven't read your whole post, but I wanted to say this. They are controdictory in such a way that programs written for one will not work for the other. (unless they are specially formatted, ie translated)
Or to put it another way, you can't play a BETA tape in a VHS or vise virsa.
they are *systems* for watching the movie. you can watch the same movie on either system, but as far as compatibility goes they are not.
Religion to me is a system, not a truth. Therefore, all systems that play the movie (ie, "work") are equally valid, even if they contradict each other.
So while you are saying A says B so if C is the opposite of B, either A and B or C are false, I am saying that A is true (works) in this system while B is true in that system.
It is true, for instance that strawberries are a healthy food, they are good for you. But in the body of someone who is alergic, they are not healthy, they are harmful. So while it is still true that strawberries are healthy, it is also true that they are unhealthy. Eating strawberies works for me, but it may not work for you.
Relilgions can say that things are true, and they may be. But they stop short of the whole truth which may be that A=B except when it doesn't. They drop the part that says 'exept when it doesn't' giving a partial truth and making it seem that anything that doesn't is not false, when it may very well be.
In otherwords, it may seem that two beliefs (or facts or truths) are opposite, but that is only because we have a partial understanding of them AND WE EXCEPT OUR PARTIAL UNDERSTANDING AS COMPLETE.
Does this make sense yet?
Originally posted by cantdog
I know the fuck it ain't in my head. But I don't get to say it's subjective, either. He doesn't like inner, he doesn't go for internal, that fellow hates that I call it in the head, the other says I can't use the word subjective without being dangerous. Fuck then.
What do you like? The stuff I learn easiest in dialogue: can I call it dialogical? I hate that, it sounds Hegelian. But I find the alternative terms cut out from under me. I want to say I'm checking out the personal and the interpersonal, the self and the cultural, the "I" and the "we", art and culture. All that stuff, to me, is subjective, but fuck that. Gimme a fuckin word for it so I can talk, here.
sweetnpetite said:Haven't read your whole post, but I wanted to say this. They are controdictory in such a way that programs written for one will not work for the other. (unless they are specially formatted, ie translated)
Or to put it another way, you can't play a BETA tape in a VHS or vise virsa.
they are *systems* for watching the movie. you can watch the same movie on either system, but as far as compatibility goes they are not.
Religion to me is a system, not a truth. Therefore, all systems that play the movie (ie, "work") are equally valid, even if they contradict each other.
So while you are saying A says B so if C is the opposite of B, either A and B or C are false, I am saying that A is true (works) in this system while B is true in that system.
It is true, for instance that strawberries are a healthy food, they are good for you. But in the body of someone who is alergic, they are not healthy, they are harmful. So while it is still true that strawberries are healthy, it is also true that they are unhealthy. Eating strawberies works for me, but it may not work for you.
Relilgions can say that things are true, and they may be. But they stop short of the whole truth which may be that A=B except when it doesn't. They drop the part that says 'exept when it doesn't' giving a partial truth and making it seem that anything that doesn't is not false, when it may very well be.
In otherwords, it may seem that two beliefs (or facts or truths) are opposite, but that is only because we have a partial understanding of them AND WE EXCEPT OUR PARTIAL UNDERSTANDING AS COMPLETE.
Does this make sense yet?
Originally posted by Pure
My diagnosis. You want a world of private, unchallengeable 'religious talk.' So you can say "I believe it is true God exists." But you want it to be unchallenged and unchallengeable. If some one says "God does not exist" you want the option of replying "I never asserted [or argued] he did."
What you do is disconnect God and belief in 'him' from all activities of living. Your statement of belief is like you're saying, "I believe I had a dream last night." And no one can or will argue with it.
More pointedly, since you do not assert "God exists" nor "God does not exist"-- you take a 'pass' on both. You are--rather than 'privately religious' (the first label I considered)-- essentially agnostic (leaving aside your idiosyncratic use of terms).
----
A larger quote, but not full posting from Joe;
I believe in God. I believe it is true that God exists. But I will never assert (say, point out, extend forward as the premise to an argument) that "God exists". I accept is true and real, but that I cannot prove it means that I don't use it as the premise to any argument. That'd be irresponsibly intellectualism and poor philosophy.
Originally posted by sweetnpetite
Edited to add: the original point was that religons are systems (like a VCR is a system) that can help us to see truth (like the images on your screen) except that they are more complicated than a VCR-- you have to understand them to some degree in order to use them and the better you understand them, the better you can use them. (hmm, maybe I should have said religion is a system, like the system one has for cooking). If they get you the desired results they work, or are true.
there is more than one recipe for making a chocolate cake or a loaf of bread. the fact that one recepe works does not mean that another is a false recepe. (if A is true, then not A is not true, as you say.) So it is NOT true that if my recepe makes plain chocolate cake, and your recepe is different from mine (not mine) that it will not make chocolate cake, or that it is a false recepe.
Originally posted by Pure
Had he been unwilling to assert anything in the religious domain--a la Joe W-- there would be nothing to discuss, and disagreement or agreement would be idle.