classical_hero
In whom I trust
I just want to hear your comments on the "Ancient Examples of concept" part of the article.
http://www.lamblion.com/articles/articles_rapture6.php
http://www.lamblion.com/articles/articles_rapture6.php
Well, I'd regard that as a diversion from what I'm really interested in hearing what Plot has to say (that is parallels to my argument) and more about God's thought versus reality.That would seem to be more in the line of Aquinas' meaning. But I'm interested to hear Plotinus's thoughts on this.
Well, I'd regard that as a diversion from what I'm really interested in hearing what Plot has to say (that is parallels to my argument) and more about God's thought versus reality.
Anyways, it seems to me that conceptions of God that lack timelike character deny God's agency, so I tend to not take them too seriously.
Right, I'm specifically referring to God having timelike characteristics (i.e. there's a sort of ordering to God's actions even if outside our conception of time), that's not incompatible with our conception of time being irrelevant to God nor God being eternal.That's not really what time being irrelevant to God implies. It's basically one of the attributes of God: eternity.
But as said, that's not the same as God being 'outside time'.
Yes.Did it exist before you thought you needed one and took possession of it? ( )
You're arbitrarily defining 'the universe' as everything we know to exist. If God exists, then He has to be a part of the universe, by that definition.Hm. I wonder during what time God is watching the universe. The universe being everything we know to exist. Since time basically is another dimension of space, God exists outside time and space, i.e outside our universe.* But outside our universe there is nothing known to exist. If God exists outside of time and space we cannot know God to exist. I wonder if this can be reduced to a paradox or that it is simply a contradiction.
*The spacetime continuum doesn't have an outside Everything is inside. It's lke asking the question: What will I see when I arrive at the edge of the universe? Well, nothing. Firstly, because you can't go there (the universe doesn't have an 'edge'), secondly, because nothing is there. I'm ignoring the concept of a multiverse here, but that doesn't principally change anything.
What those two scenarios have in common is that in both cases you're saying that God doesn't exist in 'our' time.I should note I'm not, in particular, looking for conceptions of God that do not follow my line of argument. I'm not really interested in proving or disproving God but in the nature of causality, information, and personal identity. That's why I asked plot if he's seen that line of argument before, not if he thought it to be valid.
Anyways, as for the idea that God is outside of time I don't find it that compelling to my argument. It seems to me that if God does exist outside of time, there are two options:
1. God has his own sort of super-time that exists beyond ours (think of super-time versus regular time as analogous to the timeline of an author to the timeline inside his novel), to which my line of argument would seem to still apply.
2. God does not have any sort of timelike character. In that case it seems to me that we cannot describe Him as doing things (watching, creating, thinking, etc.) because those don't really make sense without causality.
Whose?I just want to hear your comments on
So may I characterize your view as follows?
The difference between me and God's concept of me is that I am physical whereas God's concept of me is not.
If not what do you think differentiates me from God's concept of me?
That would seem to be more in the line of Aquinas' meaning. But I'm interested to hear Plotinus's thoughts on this.
I have no clue what you are saying here.
At any rate, it seems fair to assume that what Aquinas meant was that time is irrelevant to God. Which doesn't quite amount to the same thing.
You're arbitrarily defining 'the universe' as everything we know to exist. If God exists, then He has to be a part of the universe, by that definition.
More particularly, it seems that nothing anyone can say of God is actually true.
"We do not know what God is. God Himself does not know what He is because He is not anything. Literally God is not, because He transcends being."
Sounds to me like it was thought up by a couple college students baked out of their minds.
The position rests on the concept that humanity is already condemned at a logical stage prior to salvation.
A thought experiment that might help: assume everybody owes income tax (for simplicity, a flat tax). The government then decides to grant a 100% deduction to a certain group (single mothers, whether rich or poor). At the latter stage, does the decision to favour single mothers necessarily imply condemnation of everyone else?
A real-life (and therefore messy) parallel: in the UK, universities are entitled to charge tuition fees. In Scotland, the Scottish government pays the fees for Scottish students, whether or not their results suggest they deserve it. Is that an act of condemnation of Welsh students? Obviously this example muddies categories, but hopefully you can see what I'm getting at.
Anyway: I did have a question. I have heard numerous different interpretations of Romans 13:1-7, but few if any of them really deal with the fact that the passage was written when Nero was emperor. I have seen people mention that fact to prove that Christians are called to obey even monstrously evil governments, but such people completely ignore Romans 13:3-4 more often than not.
What exactly do you think Paul meant when he wrote this passage? And, (from a Christian standpoint) could his intended meaning be different than the correct meaning?
Is there any works that you could point to that would highlight this?
Consider the following argument
Given...God knows how my life will unfold
Q. How does God know how my life will unfold?
A. He had thought of it before.
Q. How did he think it before?
A. He had a concept of me that behaves the same way as me, that he imagined in a world just like ours.
Q. Did he know how my life would unfold then?
A. No, he is thinking this so he can know how my life, if I were to exist, would unfold.
Q. How can I be sure I'm the actual person not merely the figment of God's imagination?
A. You can't?
Well if that's the case I can't really say whether or not God knows how my life will unfold.
Have you ever heard anything like that?
If you reject a physicalist theory of identity (which pretty much everyone does), this becomes very plausible.
I can't remember who it was, but someone (a Church Father, I'm almost sure) said that God existed otuside of time, watching our universe from the outside. Plot'll probably know better.
That was Aquinas.
I think that the oldest source I've read that argues for God being outside of time was the 6th century De Consolatione Philosophiæ by Boethius...
I read much of De Consolatione Philosophiæ in the original Latin back during college, but don't recall anything about God being outside of time from then. That part I remember only from listening to a Librivox recording of an English translation a few months ago. It is harder to find the exact passage in an audio book, or check to see how biased the translators might have been.
I do remember thinking that the argument did not seem all that strong, and that he was using terms in ways very different from the ordinary meanings of the Greek terms that either our English or his Latin vocabulary had been used to translate. Boethius could speak Greek, yet relied heavily on the authority of Augustine who could not.
Plutarch said:But the God IS, we are bound to assert, he is, with reference to no time but to that age wherein is no movement, or time, or duration; to which nothing is prior or subsequent; no future, no past, no elder, no younger, which by one long now has made the always perfect. Only with reference to this that really is, is; it has not come into being, it is not yet to be, it did not begin, it will not cease. Thus then we ought to hail him in worship, and thus to address him as Thou Art, aye, or in the very words of some of the old people, Ei Hen, Thou art one thing.
Philo of Alexandria said:In truth, he is the father, and creator, and governor of all things in heaven and in the whole world. And indeed, future events are overshadowed by the distance of future time, which is sometimes a short way off and sometimes a long way off but God is also the creator of time, for he is the father of its father, and the father of time is the world So there is nothing future to God, who has the very boundaries of time subject to him and in eternity nothing is past and nothing is future, but everything is present only.
I believe that Thomas Aquinas based his ideas on the timelessness fo God on the work of Boethius. When it comes to authorities that Aquinas liked to quote to support his position, Boethius is a close second behind Augustine. (Pseudo-)Dionysus is a distant third, followed by Justin Martyr. Of course, my knowledge of Aquinas is mostly limited to an English translation of Part 1 of the Summa Theologiae, which was all that was on Librivox back in the spring.
Hm. I wonder during what time God is watching the universe. The universe being everything we know to exist. Since time basically is another dimension of space, God exists outside time and space, i.e outside our universe.* But outside our universe there is nothing known to exist. If God exists outside of time and space we cannot know God to exist. I wonder if this can be reduced to a paradox or that it is simply a contradiction.
Anyways, as for the idea that God is outside of time I don't find it that compelling to my argument. It seems to me that if God does exist outside of time, there are two options:
1. God has his own sort of super-time that exists beyond ours (think of super-time versus regular time as analogous to the timeline of an author to the timeline inside his novel), to which my line of argument would seem to still apply.
2. God does not have any sort of timelike character. In that case it seems to me that we cannot describe Him as doing things (watching, creating, thinking, etc.) because those don't really make sense without causality.
What is the contemporary opinion on whether a timeless God can perform actions within the universe?
I just want to hear your comments on the "Ancient Examples of concept" part of the article.
http://www.lamblion.com/articles/articles_rapture6.php
Is this a common way of thinking about religion? What sorts of flaws or strengths do you see to this approach? What exactly is the role theory of religious experience, and what other theories are there?My research wanders around in the overlap of theatre and religion. Broadly, I think theatre and religion operate similarly and accomplish similar aims. While doing other things, as well, both develop the conditions out of which emerges heightened experience, or what psychologist Abraham Maslow called “peak experience”. A shared device by which both phenomena make heightened experiences available is role-play. Theatre and religion offer adjunct identities, through the playing of which people bring ideal realities into existence. By playing the “Hamlet” role, or by playing the devotee role, a person may come to experience Hamlet’s world, or the world imagined by Christianity or Hinduism or What-have-you-ism.
Which is not to say that my work argues that religion is fake. My correlation of theatre and religion does not accept that theatre is fake. Aristotle felt that he had to reduce theatre to mimesis in order to rescue the art from Plato, who thought we’d be better off without theatre. But Aristotle was wrong. Playing roles does transform people, and theatre does throw the world into confusion. Plato, in fact, was right, and we should be afraid of theatre. Very afraid.
Currently my work is concerned with theatre audiences and with private devotion. I would argue that theatre audiences that do have some kind of heightened experience—and if you cried at the end of Old Yeller, you know what I mean—approach that experience by taking on and playing a role that anticipates the materialization of that experience. To some extent, I am following Hjalmar Sundén’s “role theory of religious experience”, here. But I would add that elements of cognitive theory, narrative theories of personal identity, and existentialism contribute significantly to understanding how we experience reality as something other (or more) than what reality should be.
You can see Boethius' argument here. However, Boethius certainly did not invent the idea that God is timeless. As you can see in that passage, he states that everyone believes this doctrine, and he is merely articulating what it means. His definition is that God's timelessness is "the complete possession of an endless life enjoyed as one simultaneous whole". The key idea here is simultaneity, so in God there is no progression from past to future.
However, the idea of divine timelessness was far older than Boethius.
[edited because quotes do not show in quote]
It's a contradiction, but only because you've defined it that way. If you define the universe as "everything that exists" then God will be part of the universe, but you lose the ability to assert that everything in the universe is spatial and temporal, because God isn't (or at least might not be). But your original definition seems off, because people can talk meaningfully of the possibility of multiple universes, as you rightly point out - but it does make a big difference to your argument. "Universe" on this view might mean something like everything that forms a spatial and temporal continuum with each other. There could be more than one such continuum, having no spatial or temporal relations to each other. Even if there's only one in fact, there would still be the conceptual possibility of something existing outside it. And there would be no particular reason to assume that that thing had to be temporal or spatial, unless one had reason to think that, necessarily, anything that exists must be temporal or spatial.
(2) is the traditional view. However, in rejecting it here, you're assuming that causality is necessarily temporal. I don't see any reason to think that. To say that X is the cause of Y is, perhaps, to say that X is the explanation for why there is Y. I don't see a good reason to think that that requires X to be temporal.
There was a time when people thought that the notion of causation necessarily implied spatial contiguity, such that action at a distance was a conceptual impossibility. This was one reason why there was opposition to Newton's view of gravity, which operates at a distance. We now know that this notion of causation was faulty and that Newton was correct - action at a distance is possible. People still retain the idea that causation requires temporal contiguity, but I see no reason to think this. We don't even know what causation really is in the first place, as Hume showed, so how can we claim to know under what circumstances it can happen?
A lot of people seem to think that he couldn't, because an atemporal being couldn't relate to temporal beings in the requisite way. I think that this is a major motivation behind the view of many theologians today that God is not timeless at all but exists within time, everlastingly. (There are other motivations for this view too.) I'm of the opinion that this view makes little sense and is unnecessary. I don't have any problem at all with the idea that God is timeless and that his unlimited power allows him to be the cause both of the temporal universe and of particular events within that universe. I really don't see why he shouldn't be.
A famous defence of divine timelessness is Stump, Eleonore and Kretzmann, Norman, (1981) "Eternity", Journal of Philosophy 78(8): 429–458. Stump and Kretzmann argue that a timeless God could have a sort of pseudo-simultaneity with events within time, allowing him to cause them or interact with them in other ways. Even this seems to me over-kill as I don't see why he'd need to be simultaneous with them in any sense.
1. I got a lot of heat in my "gay-friendly churches" thread from Evangelicals here when I mentioned my church allows gay members, saying any church that doesn't recognize homosexuality as a sin is 'not real Christians. Would you consider my church, the Disciples of Christ to be 'real' Christians (you won't offend me if you say no). Either way, what would you say is the official cutoff point for someone to be a 'real' christian, or not?