|
|
Spiritual AtheismJulian said Dec 31, 2006, 11:24 PM: |
||
|
I want to start of here with a wonderful discussion between Richard Dawkins and a very bright theologian believer with an actively involved studio audience on a Bristish TV talk show. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismNicole said Jan 1, 2007, 2:37 AM: |
||
|
Dear Julian I can sympathise with how you see it, and yet life without myth and mystery has never personally attracted me. I think any framework of reality and spirituality that excludes religious sensibility is too limited to be universal. As I get older I become more and more aware of how deeply personal our views of reality are, how important it is for each one to find a coherent way of understanding life for that person at that time. If you’re right and spiral dynamics cannot be inclusive of this kind of religious approach, then it’s just another form of exclusivism, like fundamentalism (as an extreme I hasten to add). Love Nicole |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 1, 2007, 10:56 AM: |
||
|
hey nicole, yes i hear that fear. my point above, however, is that surrendering the literal interpretation of myth (ie religion) actually deepens, expands, enrichens and exponentialy multiplies the mystery! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 1, 2007, 12:51 PM: |
||
|
Hi, Julian, |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 1, 2007, 2:22 PM: |
||
|
awesome question. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmaryw said Jan 1, 2007, 1:13 PM: |
||
|
Hi you guys, and happy new year! Re: the question of faith – People define this word in different ways. Probably the most common definition is as you have described it, Julian: belief without evidence. But I have come across post-mythic religious practitioners who see faith as something entirely other than belief or certitude. It is more akin to a trust in the unfolding of the Kosmos … a recognition that the universe is conspiring on its own behalf, through us, with us, and in us. This unfolding can certainly include doubt, questioning, and the seeking of evidence. As such, what you seem to be expressing here could be defined as a kind of faith: a deep trust that “surrendering the literal interpretation of myth” actually “deepens, expands, enrichens, and exponentially multiplies the mystery.” |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmaryw said Jan 1, 2007, 1:44 PM: |
||
|
Okay, back again – I wanted to include this passage of Donald Richo's (an ex-priest who is now Buddhist) on the complexity of faith, which he sees as evolving through stages (similar to Fowler's “stages of faith”) – |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 1, 2007, 2:15 PM: |
||
|
Hi, Mary, I appreciate what you've written here. I've been thinking about writing about different levels or stages of faith, not all of which are predicated on “belief in an unproven (unprovable) claim or doctrine,” so I'm glad you brought these things to the table. If you define faith narrowly, as I believe the “new atheists” like Dawkins and Harris are doing, then yes, it makes sense to argue that development requires us, at some point, to leave faith behind. But a number of theological traditions have a deeper understanding of faith than the literalist/fundamentalist variety, and in the contexts of these traditions, it makes more sense to speak of a continuum of faith, with “evidenceless belief in mythical propositions” only one phase in an overall current of relationship with Being. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 1, 2007, 2:15 PM: |
||
|
beautiful beautiful stuff mary. lovely nuanced trans rational and rich sources you are drawing from. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismNicole said Jan 2, 2007, 5:19 PM: |
||
|
Hi Julian Darn this not having adequate access to internet! There is all kinds of other stuff I want to read but it takes so long with the Blackberry… I’ve been talking to a couple of friends in the meantime about what was troubling me when I first responded to your posts and they both were quite helpful in unpacking some more background on integral theory for me. You see this is all still very new to me and I get quickly lost in quadrants zones and first to third person language… I hear what you’re saying and am glad that your approach opens up into greater mystery for you. I think a thread on mystery and myth might be a fun rabbit hole, when I have time and net access, because there are many approaches to both and working through some of them may be of help… Happy new year to you too! Love Nicole |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 1, 2007, 2:35 PM: |
||
|
Cool, Julian, thanks. I am about to head out to Berkeley with my family, so I'm just dashing off this post, but I'll return to write more later. I wanted to ask to more quick (orienting) questions, if you don't mind: |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 1, 2007, 4:43 PM: |
||
|
nice questions - let me get back to you on that when i have a moment - and have done some research into question 2! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 1, 2007, 5:21 PM: |
||
|
well off the top of my head i think i prefer atheism for some reasons, agnostic for others. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 1, 2007, 8:47 PM: |
||
|
Mary I appreciate your thoughts about faith too….. and agree with them. I remember reading once “a paranoid is a person who believes the universe is conspiring against them, while a mystic is a person who knows the world is conspiring on his behalf.” |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 1, 2007, 11:34 PM: |
||
|
beautifully stated as always jane. thanks. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheism_ [no longer around] said Jan 2, 2007, 3:04 AM: |
||
|
Julian, just a simple question. Is it fair to say you don't adhere to the notion of non-dual awareness? |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 2, 2007, 5:16 AM: |
||
|
Julian, I have written on other forums (I am sure sounding somewhat of a nutbar) about this riddle that has always(as long as i can remember as a little child) been caught in my head….. No surprise, the riddle is: “How did I(we) get here, I mean really?! ” |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 2, 2007, 8:41 AM: |
||
|
After writing this morning, I was thinking of T.S. Eliot. I have not read him thoroughly, and yet, how he is my true brother! 'the fire and the rose' T.S. Eliot–I googled–and came upon this writing of his: [edit] The Cocktail Party (1950)
|
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 2, 2007, 12:04 PM: |
||
|
thanks jane! your uncensored soulful streams of consciousness are quite beautiful. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 2, 2007, 2:36 PM: |
||
|
I am back at work for the night, and the 'category errors' are blocked by the work WeB Police…so alas, I shall have to wait until tomorrow to see what you are referring to….I am sorry if I am not able to be more clear….I keep experimenting with what works…. and it may be that I am jumping higglety pigglety from quadrant to quadrant….or maybe that is the nature of what I am trying to describe. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 2, 2007, 3:31 PM: |
||
|
you always make me smile jane - this time i am laughing out loud. :O) |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmarigpa said Jan 2, 2007, 12:02 PM: |
||
|
I'm loving this thread, finding the discussion at times inspirational, revelatory, compelling, thought-provoking, satisfying ….. also fun! Ditto, if noot more so, for the 'The Myth of the Given' thread. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 2, 2007, 3:35 PM: |
||
|
beautifully put ma rig pa. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmarigpa said Jan 2, 2007, 4:28 PM: |
||
|
Hey, Julian |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 2, 2007, 7:39 PM: |
||
|
now you're showing your cards dude :O) |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 2, 2007, 8:58 PM: |
||
|
Wilber discusses atheism and agnosticism briefly (perhaps too briefly) in Integral Spirituality. I think some of the things he says are relevant to our recent discussion, so I'll summarize them here.
Where I see it having difficulties, so far, is in the perpetuation of forms of the LLF. For instance, confusing “faith” as a whole with its particular Blue manifestation. This sets up a counter-productive antagonism, in my view, and overlooks or fails to recognize deeper forms of faith that are operative within the “new atheist” or “deep agnostic” movement.
|
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 2, 2007, 11:38 PM: |
||
|
yes i love that part of IS. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 3, 2007, 1:02 AM: |
||
|
in our wandering but interwoven three threads here on enlightenment, the myth of the given and spiritual atheism i thought to direct y'all - any who are interested that is - in the direction of a blog post of mine called The Spiritual Psyche's Shadow: Guru's, Cults and Aliens. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 3, 2007, 6:44 AM: |
||
|
Hi, Julian,
|
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismNicole said Jan 3, 2007, 8:48 AM: |
||
|
Thanks Balder. You have eloquently put into words much of my discomfort. I think we can readily recognise the the reflexive atheism of a child or teenager who has just rebelled against his parent's religion isn't at the same level of a Hawkins, for instance. So to think of all religion as being on the same level regardless is extremely simplistic… I don't know enough about integral theory but i think there must be ways of being religious at all the levels, right, that don't necessarily limit one? |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 3, 2007, 10:17 AM: |
||
|
i hear you guys. i respect the pluralistic desire to be open to otther cultures. i respect the humble intention to not put down any culture from a western rationalist bias. most of all i respect the longing we all have for novelty, magic and mystery. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 3, 2007, 11:42 AM: |
||
|
Julian, |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 4, 2007, 1:04 PM: |
||
|
again jane this is quite beautiful. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 3, 2007, 12:15 PM: |
||
|
Hi, Julian,
|
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 3, 2007, 2:51 PM: |
||
|
glad you are finding common ground seth! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmaryw said Jan 3, 2007, 3:44 PM: |
||
|
Nicole wrote: “I don't know enough about integral theory but i think there must be ways of being religious at all the levels, right, that don't necessarily limit one?” |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmaryw said Jan 3, 2007, 3:46 PM: |
||
|
Dangit, I meant my previous post to reply to Nicole's post further above, but somehow it posted here. Oh, well … |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismLauren said Jan 3, 2007, 4:23 PM: |
||
|
I bow in gratitude to all of you, most especially Jane, Balder, Julian, and Mary. This is a brilliant discussion; I find it challenging and tremendously moving. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmarigpa said Jan 3, 2007, 4:51 PM: |
||
|
Wonderful, Lauren, beautiful beautiful beautiful. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmaryw said Jan 3, 2007, 5:42 PM: |
||
|
Lauren – ditto to what Ma Rig Pa said. I'm delighting in your eloquence! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 6, 2007, 9:50 PM: |
||
|
hey lauren - you posted this right after i got a lot more busy and so i hadnt responded. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 3, 2007, 6:04 PM: |
||
|
Coolness – great stuff, y'all.
|
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismMascha said Jan 3, 2007, 9:54 PM: |
||
|
Hi excellent pod people, debunking? Great. Let’s go all the way. As others have pointed out, so far, even our most vociferous debunker has not been radical enough in his approach to the noble path of eliminating make-believe. Assertion: bottom line. no one has real magic powers. Question: How do you know that? Seriously. A: no one knows what happens after death. Q: How do you know that? Have you some magical insight into everyone who ever existed and ascertained what they know or don’t know? Which leads to another question: Who are you? A: no one has ever seen literal proof of any eastern or western mythic construct - they are symbolic and do not refer to literal reality. Q: Again, how do you know that - or anything else for that matter? Prophecy: Cocksure comes before a debunk. Possibly because it hits its head on a bunk bed, but experts aren’t certain yet. More later, maybe… Heee |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 4, 2007, 12:58 PM: |
||
|
yeah thats the spirit! :O) |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismMascha said Jan 5, 2007, 1:13 PM: |
||
|
Hello Julian, ah, you’re being a good sport :-D) First off, I’m replying here only to keep some continuity. It gets a bit confusing if we have to repeat points in another thread. You know, I didn’t even see your reply to my above post until the next day because this feature, where new replies show up in the middle of threads, is a novelty for me. Now I wonder - perhaps you did see my point after all? The following sentence may indicate an opening towards extending the inquiry far enough to also include the subject, thus questioning what, if anything, can be known as an objective reality separate from the perceiving subject. To illustrate, I’ve underlined the second half of a sentence where you have graciously modified your language so as to leave room for something you might acknowledge as scientifically valid: good ole Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle: “as such no-one knows what happens after death and it appears most likely that nothing at all happens based on the data.” My answer to your questions a) and b) is yes. Though I don’t keep much of what Wilber says in mind after I’ve read it, I’m so intrigued with my own authority, however faulty and bungling it may still be. Finally, what bothers me at times is what I view as the standard mix of “reddish-orange” dogmatism inherent in some of your repeated claims; the dismissive vengefulness and ridicule apparent in the tone; and the indiscriminate lumping together of pre- and trans-rational phenomena. This combination strikes me as posturing, assuming the position of an ‘ultimate authority’ in search of recruits, admirers, yea-sayers, followers in short - the exact same pitfall you’re railing against. Why this bothers me is very clear: I want to get past that kind of mental positioning in myself. I long for an authenticity that doesn’t need to fight & oppose. Yes, your honor, guilty as charged. Fact is, I only join conversations such as this anymore because Balder and Jane and - oh, you know who your are, I don’t have to list all your names - because there are people here who can debunk a debunker without much of a personal charge. Love to all always, M
|
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheismmarigpa said Jan 4, 2007, 3:07 AM: |
||
|
Hey ho, it’s hat eating time ….. I did think it would've been too good to be true ….. can't say I really expected Google to come up with an article starting along the lines of “Chinese government ministry scientists baffled as they witness the unexplainable …”, but as I'd never done a Google search on this topic before, it was incumbent on me to maintain an agnostic position with integrity and at least recognise that I didn't know whether I would or wouldn't find such an article. Ditto on whether the phenomenon alluded to actually can occur or ever has occurred … or not. On to the next bit of business. In your response re. meditators allegedly sitting upright in meditation after death, you said: I am wholly open to these possibilies ….. and ….. while I don’t expect any Tibetan lama / yogi will arrange to die in that room where the JREF Million Dollar Challenge takes place, I also don’t think that this or any other way of proving / verifying is a primary concern of the type of practitioner I’ve alluded to ….. I don’t require these kinds of things to be believed by anybody, myself included ….. and I remain open to the possibility that the type of content contained in “the testimonies of individuals I consider reliable”, as Balder put it, might just one day be accidentally or otherwise witnessed and verified in a way that is acceptable to the rational inquirer ….. if this hasn’t occurred already. I’d now like to give due praise and thanks to the contributors on this thread … and this isn’t confined solely to those mentioned. First to yourself, Julian … I don’t want this to come across as a back-handed compliment … I want to thank you for all the golden wheat you’ve provided us with. I’ve sung the praises of Jane, Mary, Lauren and Balder already (although I want to add steadfastness and magnaminity to the list of B.’s qualities I’m grateful for). Seth, I’ve appreciated your contribution …. there has been talk already about resurrecting an ‘Integral Astrology’ thread – do you want to kick one off? And last but not least, to Mascha for your use of the rapier while I was still staring impotently at the wooden sword in my hand. Best to all Lol |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismNicole said Jan 4, 2007, 4:34 AM: |
||
|
wow i am awed by the beautiful people here contributing to this thread… if it helps, julian, i too cast my little belated vote not to have you fold up as i enjoy your contributions and your energy, and while we don't always agree, it's too much fun and there are too many more interesting aspects of this rabbit hole for that to be a reason to stop! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 4, 2007, 6:51 AM: |
||
|
here is an article from Resurgence Magazine: |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 4, 2007, 12:44 PM: |
||
|
jane: re the astrology article - pre rational. :O) |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJane said Jan 4, 2007, 1:01 PM: |
||
|
Pre rational! As quick as that!? |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 4, 2007, 12:46 PM: |
||
|
you're a good man ma rip pa. :O) like a little kethcup with your entheogenic hat? |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismBalder said Jan 4, 2007, 8:55 PM: |
||
|
Julian, I know you've had a number of posts addressed to you in the past couple days and there's only so much time in a day to keep up with them, but I hope you find time to respond either to Lauren's recent post or my last post to you here. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 5, 2007, 3:00 PM: |
||
|
well mascha, i hear your concern, but i don't agree. in fact i am trying to be as discriminating as possible and the whole thrust is an attempt to differentiate (specifically not lump together) pre from trans. though i am sure we might disagree as to what goes in those categories - hence the new thread - which is precisely about exploring and backing up and making sense of those differences in opinion. i look forward to your input., as it sounds like you have some strong opinions of your own - even if they are strong opinions about not having strong opinions! :O) |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 5, 2007, 3:12 PM: |
||
|
hey balder - i will not abandon this thread, but will come back when i have a chance to get into the responses you are pointing out….thanks for the reminder! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 5, 2007, 6:00 PM: |
||
|
hey balder and lauren in particular, and everyone else too! |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 6, 2007, 12:29 PM: |
||
|
well seth. i feel like i am little damned if i do and damned if i dont with you right now. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 6, 2007, 4:27 PM: |
||
|
seth, |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 6, 2007, 9:42 PM: |
||
|
seth i have barely any idea what you are talking about. i feel like we have hardly engaged. i am glad you feel like you are recieving gifts from the exchange though, such as it is. |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheism~C4Chaos said Jan 6, 2007, 9:21 PM: |
||
|
hey Julian, |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual AtheismJulian said Jan 6, 2007, 9:41 PM: |
||
|
c4 |
|||
|
|
Re: Spiritual Atheism~C4Chaos said Jan 6, 2007, 9:48 PM: |
||
|
Sam Harris also posted this article, 10 Myths and 10 Truths About Atheism, on RichardDawkins.Net. i posted a response on my blog. allow me to repost it here. 1) Atheists believe that life is meaningless. Yes, this is true. But since Sam Harris is generalizing here, I'll say, forget “beyond the grave”, most people find meaning and happiness with the promise of waking up tomorrow and being alive in the next few days, months, and years. And I would presume that that include Atheists as well. But www.com/psyrelig/happy.htm">according to some research, religious people are happier than non-religious people. Does that mean that religious people find more meaning in life than people who are non-religious? “Jews, Christians and Muslims claim that their scriptures are so prescient of humanity's needs that they could only have been written under the direction of an omniscient deity. An atheist is simply a person who has considered this claim, read the books and found the claim to be ridiculous.” Yes. It's true. It's not fair to blame those crimes on Atheism. But what Sam Harris didn't mention was that Atheism also has qualities of fundamentalism. Why? Because just like religion, Atheism has levels of development. There are pre-conventional atheists, there are conventional atheists, and there are post-conventional atheists (Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins are post-conventional). Dogmatism (which is a quality of pre-conventional to conventional level) on any religion or idea or philosophy results from the levels of development of the individuals and society. In short, you can be highly religious and non-dogmatic at the same time, and you can be a highly reasonable Atheist but still dogmatic. 4) Atheists think everything in the universe arose by chance. | |||

Help

