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 Topic: Re-introduction

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  • Re-introduction
     Reply #30 - June 23, 2014, 06:16 AM

    Great Smiley

    Unfortunately I live in England & I have no immediate plans to travel to Canada. However, as you correctly pointed out, this forum can also accommodate a debate format. I will be sure to let you know when I am free Smiley
    (I'll also suggest a structure for the debate in order to avoid it dragging on and on)


    Sure thing, when you have a structure in mind just PM me or something and we can set it out =).

    Not as simple as that, al-Ghazali proposed the criterion of "judging".

    It essentially boils down to two categories: Jahil-e-Muqassir (culpable ignorance) and Jahil-e-qasir (inculpable ignorance).
    On top of this, he stated that those who receive the message of Islam but in such a distorted way that they cannot believe it are worse off than those who never received the message at all.
    Therefore, those who fit into this band & the entire band of inculpable ignorance shall not be "judged".

    Anyways, according to Mr.Ghazali I should have already reserved my place in hell & been killed for my apostasy Smiley


    Would you mind getting the page numbers so I can look this up in Arabic from Ghazali?

    Of course there has been a great deal of conversation on the topic.

    But just so its clear from my comprehension, man is judged on the actions he/she carries out based upon the comprehension they have or seek. This even applies to apostasy, and as there is no mechanism to correctly educate rules cannot be properly implemented at all in any form =/.

    Kaffara = to hide/cover the truth, which is always the ongoing issue. If you really think about it, no one will ever know what is going on inside your head.

    If someone who is unaware or unconvinced of the truth of islam won't go to hell, then why tell people about the religion? If they do believe and can't handle all the rules isn't it a possibility they'll end up in hell, whereas if they had remained ignorant they'd have gone to heaven?


    Because truth is still truth. The responsibility is not removed from the neck of the truth-bearer, rather the truth-bearer must speak what is true about reality for the sake of mankind. To let people bask in the ignorance of what is false is not only a lack of compassion, but also a lack of accountability and responsibility. This goes for anything that's true, whether the reality of fire burning, or the eventuality of death, or other truths.

    In fact, the comprehension is that this is guidance from the Creator of the universe. Naturally if the universe has a Creator, one would want to follow the direction of the Creator instead of based on the knowledge of one's own self or the knowledge of mankind.

    Both reasons are compelling in the absolute sense to continue to speak.

    This will go in the direction of epistemology though, so maybe a new thread in the philosophy section =).

    Thanks for trying to explain it to me, truthseeker. I guess we'll have to agree to disagree...I really do not believe that there is such a person who definitely "knows" that he's going to Hell but he won't even try to avoid it because he wants what he acknowledges is a temporary and minor pleasure more than he wants to not be tortured forever. More than he wants eternal paradise. If you showed me such a man, I would not consider him a rational person who should be culpable. There's something wrong with that guy.

    If I thought for a second that the god of Islam/Christianity was real or even was likely to be, I'd be out of here in a second, I'd be the most pious and devoted woman the world has ever seen. I don't like either religion on a personal level, but I'm not that stupid. Sometimes I burn my fingers trying to get toast out of our weird old toaster and I gripe about it for hours. No thank you to eternal fire.

    Besides, if they know Islam is true, and knowing the truth but not actively acknowledging it is the criteria for going to Hell for disbelief in your opinion, is that really disbelief in the first place? It just seems awfully odd that the Quran and hadith are always coming down so hard on the disbelievers and promising that they will be the losers on the last day if it's really only going to be a few totally crazy, stubborn guys? I guess this stance is just one I will always have a hard time with.


    I am sad to say lua that I have met such people before. You can often see comprehension on a person's face, and you see them thinking, and then you see the rejection appear nonetheless. People can be emotional, arrogant, stubborn, and many other things =/.

    This honestly can apply to anyone. Often I will speak to a Muslim about a topic, and will see the refusal to accept. Sometimes I've had people say things like 'even if you're right, I'm just never going to accept it.' Quite an irrational thing to say, but this is the reality of choice. Everyone can make choices, and it is up to them to do so. You might think someone who accepts that mermaids are real is nonsensical as there is no such thing, but that's only because you see it clearly. They might see it from the another perspective. I am completely convinced beyond any doubt this universe has a Creator, but I also understand that there are sincere atheists hence they must have a reason for their perspective and so I discuss =).

    The fact that to you its so obvious that if the universe had a Creator then you'd become extremely devoted shows your sincerity. But alas many people are not like this. Don't you interact with people that when you tell them something correct they start making excuses? It's not as if they don't understand or don't know, they just don't want accept it as true or they just don't want to do it.

    And as for what you said about choosing minor pleasure over everlasting pleasure, alas this is a choice many human beings make all the time. The one who forgoes school to party it up for a few years, only to struggle for the next decade or two. Or the one who chooses to rape a woman for temporary pleasure, only to face justice for years after (or even death).

    We want instant gratification. But the mind is the arbiter on what decisions to make, so we understand that we cannot simply take food when we are hungry, we must first have ownership over the food before we can consume it. The less the mind is used, the more instinctual human beings become. Many of the modern societal issues are simply a regress in human thinking =/.
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #31 - June 23, 2014, 06:35 AM

    Because truth is still truth. The responsibility is not removed from the neck of the truth-bearer, rather the truth-bearer must speak what is true about reality for the sake of mankind. To let people bask in the ignorance of what is false is not only a lack of compassion, but also a lack of accountability and responsibility. This goes for anything that's true, whether the reality of fire burning, or the eventuality of death, or other truths.

    In fact, the comprehension is that this is guidance from the Creator of the universe. Naturally if the universe has a Creator, one would want to follow the direction of the Creator instead of based on the knowledge of one's own self or the knowledge of mankind.

    Both reasons are compelling in the absolute sense to continue to speak.

    This will go in the direction of epistemology though, so maybe a new thread in the philosophy section =).

    Well, let's explore this, focusing on the highlighted part. Let's imagine you have a friend or acquaintance that isn't a muslim who you know full well would be a failure of a muslim.

    So you know someone, let's call him Bob, who is ignorant of islam. Now you know Bob well enough that your gut instinct is that he won't be able to handle islam, for whatever reason you like, maybe he's weak willed, maybe his personality is just completely opposed to what's needed to follow islam successfully, whatever. Point is, you don't think he'd be a good muslim, try as he might. He's not a bad person, he'd never hurt anyone, isn't racist or sexist or homophobic or bigoted, just an average bloke.

    Now, looking at your friend Bob, you have two choices. One, you try to convince him of the truth of islam, and he lives his life, doesn't hurt anyone, dies, and goes to hell. Or two, you keep quite, and he lives his life, doesn't hurt anyone, dies, and goes to heaven.

    So, how is you ensuring Bob doesn't go to heaven a lack of compassion? Why is the compassionate thing to send him to the fires, knowing full well what with how vivid islamic descriptions of hell are, what awaits him? Your statement about letting people "bask in the ignorance of what is false" being "a lack of compassion" makes no sense.

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #32 - June 23, 2014, 07:11 AM


    A very practical example is for instance school. Most people put up with the cost of suffering in school for the benefit of gaining money in the future. Some people don't want to, they prefer to just have fun throughout their early life. But then we see they got their benefit early on, and they will simply pay a cost later (usually). And usually its more severe. This is also why we have things like retirement funds and the like. Human compulsion to guarantee the future, if you look at economic models or financial instruments you'll notice how much of it revolves around trying to deal with future costs/benefits. This is why =).

    Sorry my reply was long, I just wanted to add more perspective!


    This is a very flawed example if indeed you are using this as equally comparable to a person willfully rejecting a truth they know, Islam, for the fun they want to have first.

    Most children do not stick school out because of a long term financial or career goal ahead of them, they stick it out at first because they are forced to, by parents, then the state that will fine their parents, or imprison them if the child leave schools before 16-18 (soon to be 18 all over the UK).

    Those who abandon school for fun, have no real understanding of the impact this will have on their later lives.  Indeed the right to vote for example, is not given to anyone under the age of 18, because it is believed they are incapable of making an informed decision.  

    Your example suggests they are fully cognisant of the choice they are making, and so on a level with someone who rejects the knowledge they actually accept and believe about heaven or hell, in favour of earthly pleasures, when in reality your example is to use those who are considered too young to understand such long term effects.  

    You also then go on in later posts to convince yourself that you see a look of acceptance and then rejection pass across the faces of those you are convinced exist, that would willfully reject something they know to be true in favour of frolicking around on earth.  Again, I disagree.  The look could easily be one that says "your argument is interesting, but still unconvincing".  

    Like there is no argument you could produce to me that would convince me that allowing a husband to beat me as a last resort, is something that will ensure I get in to heaven in the long run.  No clever debate about the delicacy of translating that passage, or that it serves as a warning for men not to beat their wives, will work.  I would not be rejecting something I accept, since I flat out do not accept it.  

    To add, it is not that I refuse to accept something I believe to be true.  There is no part of me that believes there is a truth to be rejected here.

    Inhale the good shit, exhale the bullshit.
  • Re: Re-introduction
     Reply #33 - June 23, 2014, 07:20 AM


    Those people are not screwed, because the issue is they are not convinced. Only the person themselves knows if they are sincere and true to themselves or not. If they truly aren't convinced then they are judged based on what they are convinced of. And the responsibility actually then falls upon the Muslims, because they were not collectively doing a good enough job conveying why the belief is correct. The person who has looked into it and is not convinced is instead held to account based on the things they actually do know.



    Traumatic abandonment, hagar, muhammad, Khadijah and her central importance to revelation?

    You do realise what the outcome of this hermeneutical approach is, right? It is the authoritarians and hardline traditionalists (who's sole desire is to seek vengeance) that are in actuality the true kafirs. They cannot acknowledge that their weltanschauung is predicated on objet petit a. I'm interested in the implications of such a view, because ostensibly that would mean that the language of islam is an induction into the symbolic order in order to tame the imaginary, which correlates with the sufistic understanding of nafs, actually. A marxist (such as myself) might call this psychosomatic false consciousness.

    This departs us at an interesting juncture: on one hand those who adamantly try to coerce people into believing in eternal damnation manifest a death drive, (insofar as it can be conflated with desire) but on the other hand it is hard to know what this death drive exactly is. Woman as a veil? Not only in the classically islamic sense, arousing passions, but insofar as the unveiled woman is entropy (ordered chaos) phallic castration.
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #34 - June 23, 2014, 07:59 AM

    Hello there Truth Seeker. As a tradition receive a bunny from me bunny Smiley. I have a question for you too. Do you think that shirk is such a great sin that you have to be roasted in hell eternally for it?
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #35 - June 24, 2014, 02:48 AM

    I am sad to say lua that I have met such people before. You can often see comprehension on a person's face, and you see them thinking, and then you see the rejection appear nonetheless. People can be emotional, arrogant, stubborn, and many other things =/.

    This honestly can apply to anyone. Often I will speak to a Muslim about a topic, and will see the refusal to accept. Sometimes I've had people say things like 'even if you're right, I'm just never going to accept it.' Quite an irrational thing to say, but this is the reality of choice.
    [...]


    One thing I do agree with that you said is that I've seen a few people on here say something like, "Even if Allah were real, I would rather go to Hell than bow down to such an evil creature," and so on and so forth. If I were to accept for a moment that Hell were real and Islam was totally true, I'd secretly (not so secretly? I guess the fellow is sitting behind my jugular vein, but whatever) have moral objections to lots of things in Islam, no matter how simple you make it. I'd even have a moral problem with the Quran. However, you bet your sweet ass I'd bow down to Him! I may not like it, but I'll do it! Grin

    If someone here had not an ounce of doubt about the truth of Islam, and not a speck of hope that they weren't going to be brutally tortured without end when the game is over, and still said "I'm still making this decision, I cannot agree with such an immoral god," and meant it? I would admire that person beyond words. And I would envy their bravery. And I would hope that God isn't listening to me think that. God made such a magnificently brave and decent creature, and he hates it and is going to torture it forever? It sounds like insanity to me, but whatever, it would be his call, I guess. But I will be honest...I think a lot of people who say that would change their minds if they knew, if they felt in their very bones that Islam was true and that the descriptions of Hell in the Quran was what was waiting for them.

    For the rest, I'm afraid we will still have to disagree. Like Berberella said, that look you speak of could easily be anything, even someone just trying to be polite and show that they are listening and engaged. To paraphrase Mohammad, who knows what is in his heart but God? You can't look at him and know what he believes.

    I do think it is a mistake, and a common and understandable mistake, to throw out these comparisons like studying for exams, working for a good job, pursuing x or y in life, or going to college.  But if you really think about it, it's just not even comparable, not only for (again) the reasons Berberella mentioned, but also for the fact that the future in life is so uncertain, there's always the chance that things will work out without work and that things will come crashing down around you even if you do everything right, and certainly none of us believe for a second that we will be transported into Hell the instant we fail our math exam.

    The stakes of any earthly decision will never be so high and so certain as the decision to be pious would be to a true believer. You really can't look at other dissimilar situations and extract a lesson about human nature and paste it onto this incredibly unique situation. There is nothing on Earth that carries such a high cost. There is no comparison to be made for avoiding eternal hellfire. There is nothing that comes even close, it's not like anything you can imagine in this world.

    On a side note, your beliefs sound interesting and I want to know more about it, but I'm going to try to not totally bombard you with questions and overwhelm you in your introduction thread. I think you might be the only active Muslim right now (?), and I hope you stick around!  parrot
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #36 - June 25, 2014, 05:00 AM

    Well, let's explore this, focusing on the highlighted part. Let's imagine you have a friend or acquaintance that isn't a muslim who you know full well would be a failure of a muslim.

    So you know someone, let's call him Bob, who is ignorant of islam. Now you know Bob well enough that your gut instinct is that he won't be able to handle islam, for whatever reason you like, maybe he's weak willed, maybe his personality is just completely opposed to what's needed to follow islam successfully, whatever. Point is, you don't think he'd be a good muslim, try as he might. He's not a bad person, he'd never hurt anyone, isn't racist or sexist or homophobic or bigoted, just an average bloke.

    Now, looking at your friend Bob, you have two choices. One, you try to convince him of the truth of islam, and he lives his life, doesn't hurt anyone, dies, and goes to hell. Or two, you keep quite, and he lives his life, doesn't hurt anyone, dies, and goes to heaven.

    So, how is you ensuring Bob doesn't go to heaven a lack of compassion? Why is the compassionate thing to send him to the fires, knowing full well what with how vivid islamic descriptions of hell are, what awaits him? Your statement about letting people "bask in the ignorance of what is false" being "a lack of compassion" makes no sense.


    Well let me extract some of the key points =).

    You mention that 'who you know full well would be a failure of a muslim.' However, the reality of a human being is that they change according to the concepts they adopt about reality. So a person can change in the complete direction due to a change in concepts, for example the historical example of the man named umar bin al khattab, or even say malcolm X. Even quite the opposite, for example an ex-muslim. So we never know what a person will be until we give them the information to make the informed decision. This breaks your analogy

    The second point you mention, which is very indirect, is actually the foundation of secular humanism (ie the golden rule, 'be a good person,' etc). However, this is actually the premise to an entire way of life, which brings into question what is the basis for this even being a standard for mankind? Is there any rational or philosophical foundation to it? You will find that there is not, except in the case of the communist who has an entirely different argument. Since I categorically reject this paradigm, we are at a point where we would be forced to first discuss the foundations like the point of existence, how one seeks knowledge what is considered correct knowledge, etc.

    The third point you mention is actually the fallacy of a false dilemma, where you have given choices which lead to one answer, or rather restricted the choices in such a way that is not representative of reality.

    But say we go with it anyways for arguments sake. The previous two points I made in my previous post still stand: that since it is guidance from the Creator it is naturally always better, whether the human being comprehends the why or not, and that the responsibility of speaking truth is still not removed from the neck of the one who knows it because to give comfort on a lie is still a lie and that leaves me personally accountable for spreading a lie.

    Hope that clarifies.

    This is a very flawed example if indeed you are using this as equally comparable to a person willfully rejecting a truth they know, Islam, for the fun they want to have first.

    Most children do not stick school out because of a long term financial or career goal ahead of them, they stick it out at first because they are forced to, by parents, then the state that will fine their parents, or imprison them if the child leave schools before 16-18 (soon to be 18 all over the UK).

    Those who abandon school for fun, have no real understanding of the impact this will have on their later lives.  Indeed the right to vote for example, is not given to anyone under the age of 18, because it is believed they are incapable of making an informed decision.  

    Your example suggests they are fully cognisant of the choice they are making, and so on a level with someone who rejects the knowledge they actually accept and believe about heaven or hell, in favour of earthly pleasures, when in reality your example is to use those who are considered too young to understand such long term effects.  

    You also then go on in later posts to convince yourself that you see a look of acceptance and then rejection pass across the faces of those you are convinced exist, that would willfully reject something they know to be true in favour of frolicking around on earth.  Again, I disagree.  The look could easily be one that says "your argument is interesting, but still unconvincing".  

    Like there is no argument you could produce to me that would convince me that allowing a husband to beat me as a last resort, is something that will ensure I get in to heaven in the long run.  No clever debate about the delicacy of translating that passage, or that it serves as a warning for men not to beat their wives, will work.  I would not be rejecting something I accept, since I flat out do not accept it.  

    To add, it is not that I refuse to accept something I believe to be true.  There is no part of me that believes there is a truth to be rejected here.


    There are a few things to point out =).

    To start with, when making analogy one extracts what are the root elements (in arabic rukn), which are foundational to the analogy. This works both in Islamic usul and in the fundamentals of logic. For example, when looking at a text that talks about 'riding a camel' one first determines when the text refers is linked to the camel or the riding. Then when an analogy is made (say to driving a car), what is extracted is what is needed for the analogy, which in this case is 'riding' because the structural link is the aspect of being transported from one location to another.

    So in the case of the school example I used, you highlighted an issue not with the structural link of the example, but rather with details of the example not linked with analogy. For instance, I could easily argue back "Well person X I know did know in advance but they chose so anyways." The point was not the example itself and how common its appearance was, but rather the analogy itself =).

    This is true for both the point you make about the reality of 'most children being forced by parents [...] government,' and the point you make about 'have no real understanding of the impact.'

    The scenario of people is usually one of three:

    -A case of sincere ignorance, ie they just don't have the information
    -A case of willful ignorance, ie they know but they choose not to.
    -A case of intellectual ignorance, ie they do not actually understand the information

    You are disputing the second one, ie there is no such thing as an insincere person because no one is ever in willful ignorance. However this is absolutely false, as you can see the reality with politicians, many CEOs, etc.

    As for what I mentioned about 'the look of acceptance and rejection,' this is actually a face-reading skill. It is qualitative as opposed to quantitative, and there is an art to doing it. I have been trained (not too extensively) in reading facial muscles and psychological profiling due to the nature of my work and my background. So what you dispute here is actually the skill (ie I am incompetent at this skill). Either that, or reject the art/skill itself, I'm not sure which. Suffice to say, while you may not find it an argument that is beyond a shadow of a doubt, it cannot be dismissed as evidence itself. Regardless this is not the point at all, rather it was what I mentioned before, I just said that piece more informally because I don't want to turn the introduction thread into a formal debate =).

    Finally you end by talking about you yourself not falling under the second category I highlighted above. However, I did not claim that, and you alone are not a sufficient example for the entire human race. Rather you must give a deductive argument for that reality.

    Let us take even the example you used of a husband who 'beats [his wife] as a last resort.' You said 'there is no argument you could produce to me that would convince me." This means the conversation on that topic is closed in the absolute sense, meaning no discussion can be had because no amount of information will change your mind, hence the mind is closed on the topic.

    All in all this topic will eventually lead us to the topic of morality, which will of course lead to epistemology.

    If I might ask, do you happen to be a secular humanist?

    Hello there Truth Seeker. As a tradition receive a bunny from me bunny Smiley. I have a question for you too. Do you think that shirk is such a great sin that you have to be roasted in hell eternally for it?


    Hi Rubaya!

    Well I do like bunnies, I always wanted one as a pet =).

    I think I indirectly addressed that question no? =/.

    One thing I do agree with that you said is that I've seen a few people on here say something like, "Even if Allah were real, I would rather go to Hell than bow down to such an evil creature," and so on and so forth. If I were to accept for a moment that Hell were real and Islam was totally true, I'd secretly (not so secretly? I guess the fellow is sitting behind my jugular vein, but whatever) have moral objections to lots of things in Islam, no matter how simple you make it. I'd even have a moral problem with the Quran. However, you bet your sweet ass I'd bow down to Him! I may not like it, but I'll do it! Grin

    If someone here had not an ounce of doubt about the truth of Islam, and not a speck of hope that they weren't going to be brutally tortured without end when the game is over, and still said "I'm still making this decision, I cannot agree with such an immoral god," and meant it? I would admire that person beyond words. And I would envy their bravery. And I would hope that God isn't listening to me think that. God made such a magnificently brave and decent creature, and he hates it and is going to torture it forever? It sounds like insanity to me, but whatever, it would be his call, I guess. But I will be honest...I think a lot of people who say that would change their minds if they knew, if they felt in their very bones that Islam was true and that the descriptions of Hell in the Quran was what was waiting for them.

    For the rest, I'm afraid we will still have to disagree. Like Berberella said, that look you speak of could easily be anything, even someone just trying to be polite and show that they are listening and engaged. To paraphrase Mohammad, who knows what is in his heart but God? You can't look at him and know what he believes.

    I do think it is a mistake, and a common and understandable mistake, to throw out these comparisons like studying for exams, working for a good job, pursuing x or y in life, or going to college.  But if you really think about it, it's just not even comparable, not only for (again) the reasons Berberella mentioned, but also for the fact that the future in life is so uncertain, there's always the chance that things will work out without work and that things will come crashing down around you even if you do everything right, and certainly none of us believe for a second that we will be transported into Hell the instant we fail our math exam.

    The stakes of any earthly decision will never be so high and so certain as the decision to be pious would be to a true believer. You really can't look at other dissimilar situations and extract a lesson about human nature and paste it onto this incredibly unique situation. There is nothing on Earth that carries such a high cost. There is no comparison to be made for avoiding eternal hellfire. There is nothing that comes even close, it's not like anything you can imagine in this world.

    On a side note, your beliefs sound interesting and I want to know more about it, but I'm going to try to not totally bombard you with questions and overwhelm you in your introduction thread. I think you might be the only active Muslim right now (?), and I hope you stick around!  parrot


    Well since you referenced Berberella so much perhaps you could just read my reply to her =). I'm avoiding jargon as much as possible because then the discussion gets so bogged down haha.

    I think we could really shrink the discussion if we addressed two topics:

    1) The topic of morality, both its source and the method of adoption we have for it
    2) The logical inconsistency between what the brain adopts and what the heart feels

    I think that discussion would address everything you said =).

    You know you could always just PM me instead. It's better that way because what we talk about won't get hijacked and I'd actually be pretty interested in what you have to say!
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #37 - June 25, 2014, 05:29 AM

    You mention that 'who you know full well would be a failure of a muslim.' However, the reality of a human being is that they change according to the concepts they adopt about reality. So a person can change in the complete direction due to a change in concepts, for example the historical example of the man named umar bin al khattab, or even say malcolm X. Even quite the opposite, for example an ex-muslim. So we never know what a person will be until we give them the information to make the informed decision. This breaks your analogy

    It doesn't break my analogy because you changed it and then used the change to sidestep.


    The second point you mention, which is very indirect, is actually the foundation of secular humanism (ie the golden rule, 'be a good person,' etc). However, this is actually the premise to an entire way of life, which brings into question what is the basis for this even being a standard for mankind? Is there any rational or philosophical foundation to it?

    Yes.


    You will find that there is not, except in the case of the communist who has an entirely different argument. Since I categorically reject this paradigm, we are at a point where we would be forced to first discuss the foundations like the point of existence, how one seeks knowledge what is considered correct knowledge, etc.

    Rather than writing a long reply about why I think you're wrong it'd be easier and simpler if I knew why you hold this view, including why communism is the sole exception.

    The third point you mention is actually the fallacy of a false dilemma, where you have given choices which lead to one answer, or rather restricted the choices in such a way that is not representative of reality.

    It actually leads to two answers, one is yes, the other is no. The situation I came up with doesn't have to represent reality in a factual way because it wasn't the basis of my question. My question was actually quite simple. If faced with the option of telling the truth of islam or keeping it to yourself, in a situation where you honestly believe telling the truth would result in a good person going to islamic hell, or keeping quiet which results in a good person going to heaven, what would you choose? And if the former, how is knowingly ensuring Bob goes to heaven a lack of compassion, the compassionate thing, I'm assuming, damning him to eternal torment?

    But say we go with it anyways for arguments sake. The previous two points I made in my previous post still stand: that since it is guidance from the Creator it is naturally always better, whether the human being comprehends the why or not, and that the responsibility of speaking truth is still not removed from the neck of the one who knows it because to give comfort on a lie is still a lie and that leaves me personally accountable for spreading a lie.


    Why is it naturally always better? You're giving this as an answer as though we've had a conversation on the matter. We haven't. I don't know what your views are. Is god the best way by default? Does god command something because it's good, or is something good because god commands it? If god raped a baby, would it be an example to follow? Or is baby rape bad even if god does it?

    But first I would like to get this out of the way. Unrealistic though the situation is, this is the situation. Allow Bob to bask in ignorance, he goes to heaven. Tell Bob about islam, Bob goes to hell. Again, I realise the situation is unrealistic, but those are the options. Ignorance, heaven. Truth, hell. Which do you choose?

    `But I don't want to go among mad people,' Alice remarked.
     `Oh, you can't help that,' said the Cat: `we're all mad here. I'm mad.  You're mad.'
     `How do you know I'm mad?' said Alice.
     `You must be,' said the Cat, `or you wouldn't have come here.'
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #38 - June 25, 2014, 10:46 AM

    Rather than writing a long reply about why I think you're wrong it'd be easier and simpler if I knew why you hold this view, including why communism is the sole exception.


    Marxism and its various offshoots are materialistic proper. Secular humanism is encumbered by metaphysical jargon, IE: unexplainable negative liberty, fre markets, etc. take for instance the libertarian philosopher Taleb who vehemently defends randomness (not difference and repetition.) For him cause and effect still plays a pivotal role, central planning leads to inefficient economies because his whole weltanschauung is predicated upon the libertarian silverr rule. Same goes for secular humanism which requires Kantian levels of god-like gnosis, categorical imperative, universalisable maxims for a societal morality, etc...

    But as Marxists we reject this paradigm entirely. The two aforementioned rules (as our argument goes) result from dialectical interactions and conflict in society, not a positivist metaphysical objective axiom in the tradition of Anglo-American moral philosophy.

    EDIT: Opinions differ here, but Hayekians are considered philosophers by me, albeit terrible philosophers.
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #39 - June 25, 2014, 06:26 PM

    Quote
    Well since you referenced Berberella so much perhaps you could just read my reply to her =). I'm avoiding jargon as much as possible because then the discussion gets so bogged down haha.

    I think we could really shrink the discussion if we addressed two topics:

    1) The topic of morality, both its source and the method of adoption we have for it
    2) The logical inconsistency between what the brain adopts and what the heart feels

    I think that discussion would address everything you said =).

    You know you could always just PM me instead. It's better that way because what we talk about won't get hijacked and I'd actually be pretty interested in what you have to say!


    Thanks for the offer! You're similarly free to PM me, but I actually think there's a lot of benefit to talking about this out in the open. You could even make a separate thread if you'd like, and we can all take it over there. But lots of people come by and read these threads. Someone in the forum might have something interesting to add, or someone might learn something from you, or maybe from me, or maybe they'll think we're both wrong and have a good laugh at us. Grin But if you'd like to continue with private messaging, please feel free to move it there, but at least for this response I'll just throw it up here. Like you suggested, I'll just treat the applicable responses to Berberella as ones to me.

    As for what I mentioned about 'the look of acceptance and rejection,' this is actually a face-reading skill. It is qualitative as opposed to quantitative, and there is an art to doing it. I have been trained (not too extensively) in reading facial muscles and psychological profiling due to the nature of my work and my background. So what you dispute here is actually the skill (ie I am incompetent at this skill). Either that, or reject the art/skill itself, I'm not sure which. Suffice to say, while you may not find it an argument that is beyond a shadow of a doubt, it cannot be dismissed as evidence itself.


    I didn't mean to say that you aren't good at reading faces or anything, sorry if it came off like that. That's a cool skill to have, by the way. I am terrible at it. But I do know there's a limit to that entire field. You just simply can't be sure that the gravity of any concept really hits a person or the nuances/conditions of their understanding of it by what they say or how they act, and, in this case, I fear the devil is in the details...But, sure, I will accept if you'd like to consider it as evidence toward your argument rather than proof.

    Quote
    So in the case of the school example I used, you highlighted an issue not with the structural link of the example, but rather with details of the example not linked with analogy. For instance, I could easily argue back "Well person X I know did know in advance but they chose so anyways." The point was not the example itself and how common its appearance was, but rather the analogy itself =).


    I must disagree. When you are looking at a scenario with no comparison and you attempt to demonstrate an outcome using examples where the functional aspect is lacking (and in this case it is the concept of infinite torture), you cannot claim to have an accurate result. I understand that you are trying to demonstrate something about human nature, I do really get your point. However, my point is that, since the consequences of this failure to act (believe?) are so high, there is nothing to compare it to in this world. All of your comparisons are not going to be applicable. You can try to counter with, "Well, I knew a guy who did know in advance..." like you said, but unless it's, "He knew he was going to be brutally tortured without end for all eternity and decided, sure, why not, and, in fact, that's where he is right now, in Hell being tortured as we speak after he made that decision," it's just not going to be a strong argument. You're lacking that key terrorizing aspect that is the very hallmark of the Hell concept.

    I do know people who make destructive decisions, sure. There are lots of reasons for that, very commonly things like depression will help this happen, or other kinds of mental illness/feelings of helplessness/substance abuse/what have you. For the rest, like the school/exam examples, the people failing to study or show up are probably not entirely convinced that it's a do or die scenario, they know life will probably go on, or they think they can cram study at the last minute. Definitely been there! And it usually worked out, but sometimes it didn't.  mysmilie_977

    But you want to demonstrate something about human nature and human instinct. It's interesting, because if you want to talk about human nature, there's little else more in our nature than self-preservation and the desire to avoid pain. That's very much an instinct that we all share across the board, no matter if you're a person who made all the right decisions in life, or someone who has, for whatever reason, taken more destructive paths. That's why these threats of Hell have been utilized by religions like Islam--or, if you prefer, this is why Allah describes Hell so often and so vividly in the Quran. It is to warn, to frighten, to paint a picture so truly terrifying that the natural human reaction is to submit.

    So if you do happen to find a man who truly accepts that the reality of the world is that he is a visitor on Earth for around 70 years, and who can fathom infinity and understands that he will be ruthlessly tortured for it if he doesn't call himself Muslim for the first 70 years of eternity, and he still decides it's not even worth trying, I will politely introduce myself to him and then I will take your hand and we will run away from him together because that man is extra insane and we need to find help.

    But just to be thorough, let us now say that you are correct, and that human beings just have it in their nature to be so silly as to do such harm to themselves knowingly. That we are indeed such prideful creatures, so short-sighted, so unwise and all of that that it's not even going to be that uncommon to find men like the one I described above. I understand that you believe Islam to be the truth, and that what you feel about it morally might not even matter, so I may just be talking to myself on this point, but ain't that some shit? Grin God created us to be this way, to be liable to ignore all warnings presented to us, and he created some of us knowing that our fate is to suffer to an unimaginable extent for an unimaginable amount of time, and all this punishment for the weakness he gave us. You describe these people who have all of the information but simply cannot accept or process it. What makes you and I better than them that we deserve salvation if given this information? Our capacity for fear? I don't know, even if I were to accept Islam as true, then I'd still think the God of the Quran is talking himself up too much. The most merciful of the merciful? More so than I would be to my own child? Something doesn't seem right. I've known more merciful, and I consider myself to be among them! It would have been more merciful not to create that future tortured soul in the first place.

    I know the temptation is going to be there to say that it is a test like any other, like the exam at school, that it might be hard and this weakness is part of the hardship and we will be rewarded and all that...but again, it is not even close. To compare it to an exam in school, I'd have to be tortured forever if I didn't do well in the exam, I'd have little to no say in whether or not I showed up or performed well, and, on top of everything, I can't even be sure if that test exists or where to take it, and, by the way, there are infinite other exams that may or may not be going on at the same time and if I choose to go looking for the wrong one, I'm screwed. It's like that kind of school exam.

    Regarding:
    Quote
    1) The topic of morality, both its source and the method of adoption we have for it
    2) The logical inconsistency between what the brain adopts and what the heart feels

    I'd be interested to see what you have to say about it, although I must admit that I am not convinced that it will address my problem with the whole idea. But hey, I've been wrong before, so I'm around if you'd care to explain!

    P.S. I have had two pet rabbits in my life. Do not get them unless you have a ton of time, money, and patience, and you aren't fond of your wooden furniture, laptop cords, headphones, carpet and drywall. They're cute (really, really cute!), but I don't think I'm going to be doing that again. wacko

  • Re-introduction
     Reply #40 - June 25, 2014, 07:07 PM

    Hello, re-welcome!

    Now I found this thread a little late to jump into any conversation already in full swing. However there is one or two topics I would like to bring up.

    Now you talk a lot about different types of ignorance. However you seem to lump the lack of being convinced Islam is true within ignorance. Could I not level the same charge at your regarding macro evolution. You ignorance of it causes you to reject it. I could also level the same charge that your acceptance of Islam is due to ignorance of archaeology and anthropology. Again your ignorance of a history science is causing you to accept Islam. The lack of information regarding the religions which Islam is based on, Judaism and Christianity. My field of expertise is archaeology, with a mix of anthropology. So a lot of my rejection of Islam is based these two fields which are history, historic sciences, social science and biological science. If many of the foundation myth key to all 3 religion has no basis outside of theology why should I suspend not only my career views. I would be rejection not only mainstream views but also the methodology behind these views and within these fields as a whole.

    Your views on a creator are not unique to Islam what-so-ever. Many religions hold the same view, some far more developed fore centuries before Islam was even talked about. These views can be seen to prove Islam but also Hinduism, Greek mythology, Judaism, Christianity, Norse mythology etc. I think it is a poor argument as I have said one can use this argument to prove any religion or spiritual view they wish. Again this goes right back to my career path. I have learned that despite the theological arguments that such views are unique, these views are very common in the area and have been for millennia. Take the Kalam argument for example. It does not prove any religion as it does not prove God. It only attempts to prove a first cause. However the argument does not say this first cause is intelligent, loving, has a mind, etc. Also this is putting aside all objections to Kalam for the sake of a hypothetical argument.

    On a lighter note hello fellow Canadian! I agree that many Canadians hold religion as a private rather than public matter. The government has been slowly removing not just the UK enforce religious concepts within the Canadian systems. They have been removing a lot of the previous endorsed programs. Do you feel that this in the right action? The removal of religious courts, the de-funding of faith schools and the endorsement of multi-religious tolerance in the public sphere, etc.
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #41 - June 27, 2014, 12:21 AM

    If I were to accept for a moment that Hell were real and Islam was totally true, I'd secretly (not so secretly? I guess the fellow is sitting behind my jugular vein, but whatever) have moral objections to lots of things in Islam, no matter how simple you make it. I'd even have a moral problem with the Quran. However, you bet your sweet ass I'd bow down to Him! I may not like it, but I'll do it! Grin


    Too true.
    If I for one moment genuinely believed Islam and it's heaven and hell were real, I'd be up and down like a yo yo, salating (that's not even a real word, I know) like there's no tomorrow.
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #42 - June 27, 2014, 10:49 PM

    Hello there Truth Seeker. As a tradition receive a bunny from me bunny Smiley. I have a question for you too. Do you think that shirk is such a great sin that you have to be roasted in hell eternally for it?


    By the way what is the temperature of Hell for a proper roast?  The answer can be found at http://wikiislam.net/wiki/Farsideology:_The_Roasting_of_a_Jinn

    Kind Regards,
    Farside
  • Re-introduction
     Reply #43 - June 28, 2014, 10:00 PM

    Hi, are you sure you're convinced? I'm sure you still have some doubts  piggy

    Tell me why did Muhammad have to go check with Rabbis and Priests if he had doubts in Sura 10:94, then later on Allah curses these same people in Sura 9:30-9:32? That just gives the whole religion away as man-made.

  • Re: Re-introduction
     Reply #44 - June 29, 2014, 04:23 AM

    I must disagree. When you are looking at a scenario with no comparison and you attempt to demonstrate an outcome using examples where the functional aspect is lacking (and in this case it is the concept of infinite torture), you cannot claim to have an accurate result. I understand that you are trying to demonstrate something about human nature, I do really get your point. However, my point is that, since the consequences of this failure to act (believe?) are so high, there is nothing to compare it to in this world. All of your comparisons are not going to be applicable. You can try to counter with, "Well, I knew a guy who did know in advance..." like you said, but unless it's, "He knew he was going to be brutally tortured without end for all eternity and decided, sure, why not, and, in fact, that's where he is right now, in Hell being tortured as we speak after he made that decision," it's just not going to be a strong argument. You're lacking that key terrorizing aspect that is the very hallmark of the Hell concept.



    Let us indulge TS (and, by proxy, you) for a bit. Person X ascertains the authenticity of Islam and decides to capitulate to it. Is there not an obfuscatory trauma that we are missing? That is to say, the supplemental jouissance that the subject offers towards the divine is fractured when the phallic jouissance of the subject no longer exists. In other words, if one accepted Islam out of fear, they'd still be going to hell as they'd be castrated. In a sense, allah requires a supplemental jouissance (love and reverence) which can only really exist if one is ignorant of Allah's masculine anthropomorphic characteristics. We are thus all feminin to a degree. We possess the dangerous truth of Islam's libidinal economy.

    I do not think it is possible to conceive allah in the frame of the via negativa, that is to say a phenomenological experience wholly transcendent. Ever heard of pseudo-dionysius? If Islamic theology had a similar figure the end product would be a very natural (and, dare I contend, free flowing) atheism. In fact, there are fringe sufi tarikats in the west (if you can call them that) who argue for complete fana at the point of initiation. Apostasy as islam par excellence. Quite axiomatically, this is significantly at odds with sufism as practiced for over a millennium in the East.

    But just to be thorough, let us now say that you are correct, and that human beings just have it in their nature to be so silly as to do such harm to themselves knowingly. That we are indeed such prideful creatures, so short-sighted, so unwise and all of that that it's not even going to be that uncommon to find men like the one I described above. I understand that you believe Islam to be the truth, and that what you feel about it morally might not even matter, so I may just be talking to myself on this point, but ain't that some shit? Grin God created us to be this way, to be liable to ignore all warnings presented to us, and he created some of us knowing that our fate is to suffer to an unimaginable extent for an unimaginable amount of time, and all this punishment for the weakness he gave us. You describe these people who have all of the information but simply cannot accept or process it. What makes you and I better than them that we deserve salvation if given this information? Our capacity for fear? I don't know, even if I were to accept Islam as true, then I'd still think the God of the Quran is talking himself up too much. The most merciful of the merciful? More so than I would be to my own child? Something doesn't seem right. I've known more merciful, and I consider myself to be among them! It would have been more merciful not to create that future tortured soul in the first place.



    You're slightly missing the point here. What TS needs to do is prove that allah is transcendent without humanising him. But if he does that, his argument is susceptible to intrinsically falling apart.

  • Re-introduction
     Reply #45 - June 29, 2014, 05:13 AM

    Those are points that, if truthseeker comes back and continues chatting with us, I'll have to leave between the two of you. yes

    It's a fair point that that sincerity and love is required, but man, I'd still give it a shot! At least try to fake my way in. Grin I think that's the most interesting thing to me about the interpretation that truthseeker and my husband appear to have about these very specific situations in which a person is punished for his disbelief, this idea that someone could secretly know but not even want to try.
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