I don't think anyone thinks that all humans are descendant from 1 pair of ancestor homo sapiens. Well, except maybe for some creationists.
This is curious coming from you ElMach, IIRC you're not religious. What are our moral "duties"? If you're just talking about basic human decency ("be excellent to each other") I don't think it's much of a duty & certainly doesn't make me feel enslaved.I think we're all slaves. We're born into a world where you are given moral obligations, you have a moral duty to perform these actions. You can choose to forgo them, but then you're not a good person. Additionally, due to the nature of reality, there is no amount of work that you can do that will release you from your obligations; the best you can do is to be dissonant regarding your obligations and ignore them.
So, to be a complex and sentient creature, you gotta be clothed and miserable?
How exactly did you come to the conclusion that Adam ruled over God, and that God does not exist after reading the definition of a slave and God's welcoming speech. This is a real mystery.Roller123, are you claiming that God does not exist within Judaism?
Exactly how does Adam rule God?
How was his screwup not half emancipation from fully being God's property?
How exactly did you come to the conclusion that Adam ruled over God, and that God does not exist after reading the definition of a slave and God's welcoming speech. This is a real mystery.
The idea that Adam is a slave to God is quite pathetic tbh. First of all, God doesnt need slaves as he is already omnipotent. Secondly the theory about God "forcing" Adam to do his will ( ie to eat and procreate) shatters to pieces when you consider that after a little incident God didnt force Adam back to his oh so enduring "work". He instead let him go.
Adam and God have a what appears to be a strictly work-related relation. Should i quote the definition of what an employee is? How difficult is it to follow the rule "dont eat the freaking apple". And much like anyone who doesn't do his job properly, he got fired, and put into job market, "free" of oppression of the employer. Mystery solved.
Well okay, what are the signs of slavery and abuse we can see while he was in Eden. Im baffled.Another person conflates Genesis, the modern American interpretation of the Christian God, and the free market.
Another person conflates Genesis, the modern American interpretation of the Christian God, and the free market.
This is curious coming from you ElMach, IIRC you're not religious. What are our moral "duties"? If you're just talking about basic human decency ("be excellent to each other") I don't think it's much of a duty & certainly doesn't make me feel enslaved.
Well okay, what are the signs of slavery and abuse we can see while he was in Eden. Im baffled.
But hang on - that would mean that "human beings" (however defined) arose in more than one place and on more than one occasion, doesn't it?
Is that a reasonable hypothesis?
It seems like people are saying that simply working is slavery. So are we meant to doing nothing all day? I can tell you from personal experience due to health issues that for the most part I do nothing all day and yet I am constantly tired. I can tell you I would be rather working since it gives you a sense of accomplishment and rather than worthlessness that doing nothing constructive all day does, but as of right now I don't have the energy to work and it is really frustrating when you know that once you get better you will be able to work.
We use our leisure for the betterment of ourselves, our society, and humanity. Unfortunately there's not much leisure in being sick :/
I enjoy leisure. I gravitate towards leisure. I self-select leisure as an option almost always when given the chance. I can, however, definitively point to the times in my life when I have been happiest - and while those times do not contain an absence of leisure, they are generally a time when I was working hard, not leisurely. I think there is often more meaning in labor than this particular society rates. Which, I think, is symptomatic of feeling like you are "working for somebody else." When you feel like you are working for you, your friends, your family, and your God/divine/spirituality/place in the world, it's very much a different equation.
The idea that Adam is a slave to God is quite pathetic tbh. First of all, God doesnt need slaves as he is already omnipotent.
Secondly the theory about God "forcing" Adam to do his will ( ie to eat and procreate) shatters to pieces when you consider that after a little incident God didnt force Adam back to his oh so enduring "work". He instead let him go.
Adam and God have a what appears to be a strictly work-related relation. Should i quote the definition of what an employee is? How difficult is it to follow the rule "dont eat the freaking apple". And much like anyone who doesn't do his job properly, he got fired, and put into job market, "free" of oppression of the employer. Mystery solved.