Moderator: Dan~
Artimas wrote:I think we should settle it as perception is the thing that is super-natural or gives appearance of such to other things in observation or thought.
Bob wrote:This whole topic is so superficial that anybody really concerned with the truth doesn't really know where to start.
The first question is: have you have got your words right?
Greatest I am wrote:Artimas wrote:I think we should settle it as perception is the thing that is super-natural or gives appearance of such to other things in observation or thought.
The supernatural, by it's description, cannot be perceived.
If it could and was real, then there could be another layer of supernatural behind it that it would not perceive any better than we perceive ours.
Think matrix and fractal math.
God over god is as old as Gnostic Christianity and Hollywood has used that theme many times.
Regards
DL
Artimas wrote:Greatest I am wrote:Artimas wrote:I think we should settle it as perception is the thing that is super-natural or gives appearance of such to other things in observation or thought.
The supernatural, by it's description, cannot be perceived.
If it could and was real, then there could be another layer of supernatural behind it that it would not perceive any better than we perceive ours.
Think matrix and fractal math.
God over god is as old as Gnostic Christianity and Hollywood has used that theme many times.
Regards
DL
If it cannot be perceived then we could not speak about or of it because there is no experience to speak of. So how can we label something of which we try to talk about of which cannot be talked about?
Supernatural is not a well defined word, for example. This is a philosophy forum. Part of philosophical discussion is making sure we use words the same way in the specific dialogue.Greatest I am wrote:If you and I have to debate the meaning of well defined words, then we will not get anywhere.
Discussions and posters who cannot think analogically are doomed to get bogged down in definitions. That is why most philosophers say that the definition of word that might be suspect are done after a general chat.
But we can talk about it because we experience it all the time. There are natural things and there are super natural things.
The things Jules Verne talked about were not natural at that time . They were fiction. Ghosts are not natural yet we talk about them as they were. We create the line which separate natural and super natural things.
Greatest I am wrote:Bob wrote:This whole topic is so superficial that anybody really concerned with the truth doesn't really know where to start.
The first question is: have you have got your words right?
If you and I have to debate the meaning of well defined words, then we will not get anywhere.
Discussions and posters who cannot think analogically are doomed to get bogged down in definitions. That is why most philosophers say that the definition of word that might be suspect are done after a general chat.
Regards
DL
Yes, this is important. Two meanings get mixed together, often - one is that supernatural means stuff that does not follow the laws of the universe, is transcendent. The other is that it is stuff not yet verified through science. The latter of course could be natural. One could believe in wood spirits and psychic phenomena and ghosts and deities, but consider these natural. If one never teases out which of these meanings, you just get people talking past each other. And often the skeptics think they have proven something by saying that you cannot know supernatural things, since they cannot be experienced, since they are transcendent. Which is just sophistry based on framing the issue with one definition of 'supernatural.' Which is precisely what greatest does.Bob wrote:In addition to this, your use of the word supernatural is so unclear that the question of belief in it cannot be addressed.
Can one experience without perceiving?
It was stated that supernatural is something we cannot perceive and if it cannot be perceived then I am curious on how it can be discussed as if it were.
It was stated by some. IOW if someone says superhatural things cannot be perceived and ghosts are superatural things, then we can rule out ghosts, they are just framing the issue in a random way as if it is a proof. Perhaps ghosts end up in the category supernatual merely because they are not confirmed by science but are perceived by some.Artimas wrote:Can one experience without perceiving?
It was stated that supernatural is something we cannot perceive and if it cannot be perceived then I am curious on how it can be discussed as if it were.
Artimas wrote:But we can talk about it because we experience it all the time. There are natural things and there are super natural things.
The things Jules Verne talked about were not natural at that time . They were fiction. Ghosts are not natural yet we talk about them as they were. We create the line which separate natural and super natural things.
Can one experience without perceiving?
It was stated that supernatural is something we cannot perceive and if it cannot be perceived then I am curious on how it can be discussed as if it were. If there is no perceiving of it or experiencing through perceiving it then there can be no discussion that holds logical merit. If something was experienced or perceived that seems odd then that is not super natural by the apparent definition that was stated above. Nature and reality is odd, for sure.
Meno_ wrote:Artimas wrote:But we can talk about it because we experience it all the time. There are natural things and there are super natural things.
The things Jules Verne talked about were not natural at that time . They were fiction. Ghosts are not natural yet we talk about them as they were. We create the line which separate natural and super natural things.
Can one experience without perceiving?
It was stated that supernatural is something we cannot perceive and if it cannot be perceived then I am curious on how it can be discussed as if it were. If there is no perceiving of it or experiencing through perceiving it then there can be no discussion that holds logical merit. If something was experienced or perceived that seems odd then that is not super natural by the apparent definition that was stated above. Nature and reality is odd, for sure.
The same knife separates the Natural from the Supernatural as that which separates Theism from atheism : faith.
The mytais supernatural events described in the bible can be either ascribed to truthful reporting, or fake observation.
But it can be that both kinds of descriptions are merely different ways of apprehending And understanding of such events.
Remember this one thing in favor of the later, God reveals Himself only to those He deems worthy÷
Artimas wrote:Greatest I am wrote:Artimas wrote:I think we should settle it as perception is the thing that is super-natural or gives appearance of such to other things in observation or thought.
The supernatural, by it's description, cannot be perceived.
If it could and was real, then there could be another layer of supernatural behind it that it would not perceive any better than we perceive ours.
Think matrix and fractal math.
God over god is as old as Gnostic Christianity and Hollywood has used that theme many times.
Regards
DL
If it cannot be perceived then we could not speak about or of it because there is no experience to speak of. So how can we label something of which we try to talk about of which cannot be talked about?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Supernatural is not a well defined word, for example. This is a philosophy forum. Part of philosophical discussion is making sure we use words the same way in the specific dialogue.Greatest I am wrote:If you and I have to debate the meaning of well defined words, then we will not get anywhere.
Supernatural can, for example, mean something about ontology. It is events that, as you say, at one point, cannot be perceived.
But it can also mean, events that some people perceive but that others think they do not.
And people have been wrong before about what some people claimed to perceive. Both thinking they were right and then also thinking they were wrong.
So one can blithely go forward in a discussion using supernatural one way, the first, and thinking one is proving something, while other people mean something else by the term and so the conversation is useless.
Useless. Cross purposes.
To rule out the discussion of the meaning of terms in a philosophy forum is to be confused about where one is.Discussions and posters who cannot think analogically are doomed to get bogged down in definitions. That is why most philosophers say that the definition of word that might be suspect are done after a general chat.
I doubt most philosophers say that, but then I don't think it is clear what they would mean if they did say that. Which makes me think it is even more unlikely most would say that.
Bob wrote:[ your arguments do not allow for experiences that can only be explained by metaphor, allegory, analogy or myth. Many scriptures describe how an experience felt for lack of words. Your whole approach cancels these out without consideration. I know of many people who have had experiences that have guided them in life, but which they cannot explain. Very often it has been life changing.
In addition to this, your use of the word supernatural is so unclear that the question of belief in it cannot be addressed. It is the same when in Britain people are asked whether they believe in Brexit - what does that word entail? What are we talking about?
Depends on what one means by supernatural. It depends on the belief in question and how it formed. Did one acquire the belief simply because someone said it, but one has no experiential or consequential phenomena otherwise? That could certainly be problematic. Though, obviously, intelligent people can have problems or make mistakes or be mislead, so the framing of the thread and this question is unnecessarily insulting and binary (read: confused).Greatest I am wrote:Is belief in the supernatural an intelligent person’s game?
The ancients? Some did not think the supernatural - depending still on the definition of that term did not. Many did. I believed I mentioned before that practices can lead to experiences that many people think confirm. IOW if one read this one would think the only way to come to a belief is to listen to/read others, iow to be convinced via language.Nothing that I know of, other than personal renderings or hear say, has ever been produced or provide to show the existence of a supernatural realm or entities. The ancients did not seem to think the supernatural was a reality. https://bigthink.com/videos/what-is-god-2-2
The Alice experiment shows that children can be convinced someone is there who is not. This doesn't cover the various ways people come to believe in supernatural entities - however that term is being defined.I think that those who believe in supernatural entities are being taken advantage of by fraudulent preachers who recognize our propensity of over imagination, which we all have, as shown in the Princess Alice experiments. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWx_uVDh4Cw
This is incorrectly binary, since many people arrive at their beliefs in supernatural entities without the presence of preachers, sometimes despite what the preachers tell them it is ok to notice/experience. It also assumes that the preachers are lying, as rule, rather than that they are genuine believers, which is obviously the case, and, in fact your own arguments indicate that that is likely, since they were once children.Is belief or faith in the supernatural a worthy idea for us or is it a tool used by lying preachers intent on fleecing sheeple?
1) if there is no God it does not automatically follow that one should seek a human leader or spiritual guide.If there is no supernatural god, should we not seek a human leader or spiritual guide instead of idolizing imaginary supernatural gods that are demonstrably less moral than humans?
OK, I went to the OP. I don't think the word 'supernatural' has any meaning in the OP.Greatest I am wrote:The bottom line is that if you or I do not trust that if either of us gets bogged down in our chat on the main issues of the O.P., due to having strayed to far out of range of our definitions, we will let the other know it.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:OK, I went to the OP. I don't think the word 'supernatural' has any meaning in the OP.Greatest I am wrote:The bottom line is that if you or I do not trust that if either of us gets bogged down in our chat on the main issues of the O.P., due to having strayed to far out of range of our definitions, we will let the other know it.
I don't think it has a clear meaning or a consistant one. I suppose I might be trying to get things back on track. Or on track. And since the title of the thread implicitly insults anyone who believes in something supernatural, I think it would likely be useful to know what he means. Obviously he includes the idea of deities, but the term usually counts for more.Arcturus Descending wrote:Karpel Tunnel wrote:OK, I went to the OP. I don't think the word 'supernatural' has any meaning in the OP.Greatest I am wrote:The bottom line is that if you or I do not trust that if either of us gets bogged down in our chat on the main issues of the O.P., due to having strayed to far out of range of our definitions, we will let the other know it.
Karpel Tunnel, So, you are not necessarily saying that the word "supernatural" has no meaning in the OP since obviously it does to GIA and would it not also to others as the focal point of the discussion?
You are just using that statement as a tool perhaps to get back on track?
The name "I Am" you might see as meaning something like, --- I think I have grown up thanks to having forced my apotheosis through Gnosis and meditation.
Karpel Tunnel, So, you are not necessarily saying that the word "supernatural" has no meaning in the OP since obviously it does to GIA and would it not also to others as the focal point of the discussion?
You are just using that statement as a tool perhaps to get back on track?
I don't think it has a clear meaning or a consistant one. I suppose I might be trying to get things back on track. Or on track. And since the title of the thread implicitly insults anyone who believes in something supernatural, I think it would likely be useful to know what he means. Obviously he includes the idea of deities, but the term usually counts for more.
I think it would likely be useful to know what he means
Say again?????
It made me laugh though to see you trying to come up with an example of that which cannot be perceived or named or even talked about.
He walks up to the mike and says, let's talk about
Artimas wrote:Greatest I am wrote:Artimas wrote:I think we should settle it as perception is the thing that is super-natural or gives appearance of such to other things in observation or thought.
The supernatural, by it's description, cannot be perceived.
If it could and was real, then there could be another layer of supernatural behind it that it would not perceive any better than we perceive ours.
Think matrix and fractal math.
God over god is as old as Gnostic Christianity and Hollywood has used that theme many times.
Regards
DL
If it cannot be perceived then we could not speak about or of it because there is no experience to speak of. So how can we label something of which we try to talk about of which cannot be talked about?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Depends on what one means by supernatural. It depends on the belief in question and how it formed. Did one acquire the belief simply because someone said it, but one has no experiential or consequential phenomena otherwise? That could certainly be problematic. Though, obviously, intelligent people can have problems or make mistakes or be mislead, so the framing of the thread and this question is unnecessarily insulting and binary (read: confused).Greatest I am wrote:Is belief in the supernatural an intelligent person’s game?The ancients? Some did not think the supernatural - depending still on the definition of that term did not. Many did. I believed I mentioned before that practices can lead to experiences that many people think confirm. IOW if one read this one would think the only way to come to a belief is to listen to/read others, iow to be convinced via language.Nothing that I know of, other than personal renderings or hear say, has ever been produced or provide to show the existence of a supernatural realm or entities. The ancients did not seem to think the supernatural was a reality. https://bigthink.com/videos/what-is-god-2-2The Alice experiment shows that children can be convinced someone is there who is not. This doesn't cover the various ways people come to believe in supernatural entities - however that term is being defined.I think that those who believe in supernatural entities are being taken advantage of by fraudulent preachers who recognize our propensity of over imagination, which we all have, as shown in the Princess Alice experiments. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWx_uVDh4CwThis is incorrectly binary, since many people arrive at their beliefs in supernatural entities without the presence of preachers, sometimes despite what the preachers tell them it is ok to notice/experience. It also assumes that the preachers are lying, as rule, rather than that they are genuine believers, which is obviously the case, and, in fact your own arguments indicate that that is likely, since they were once children.Is belief or faith in the supernatural a worthy idea for us or is it a tool used by lying preachers intent on fleecing sheeple?1) if there is no God it does not automatically follow that one should seek a human leader or spiritual guide.If there is no supernatural god, should we not seek a human leader or spiritual guide instead of idolizing imaginary supernatural gods that are demonstrably less moral than humans?
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