Ayn Rand on Christian Egoism

Posted by TheChristianEgoist 10 years, 10 months ago to Philosophy
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“Christianity was the first school of thought that proclaimed the supreme sacredness of the individual. The first duty of a Christian is the salvation of his own soul. This duty comes above any he may owe to his brothers. This is the basic statement of true individualism.” -Ayn Rand

Read the article via the link above.
SOURCE URL: http://thechristianegoist.wordpress.com/2014/01/29/ayn-rand-on-christian-egoism/


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  • Posted by $ WillH 10 years, 10 months ago
    This is the form of Christianity I subscribe to. I have not been able to communicate it as well as her, but that is no surprise.

    I call this being a Religious Objectivist. I place my self as an individual as my responsibility before helping anyone else do anything else. I may choose to help someone do something, but it is never in the form of a sacrifice.

    You will never hear me saying "Oh I want to die and go to heaven" or "Oh life is so hard" because I love my life. Because of this philosophy my relationship with god is my own, and I do not "belong" to a church. All of them I have ever found focus on the bad there is to life as if it is some giant struggle filled with sacrifice. I do not see it that way.

    Thank you so much for posting this, as it is what I have been meaning, but lacked the words to communicate properly.
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    • Posted by Hiraghm 10 years, 10 months ago
      I agree; too many organized churches either focus on the bad there is to life, or subsuming my free will to God. If God wanted to control every aspect of my life, He could have made me a robot, and I wouldn't have needed salvation.

      On almost a daily basis for the past couple of years I've considered eating a bullet because I want to go to heaven and see my loved ones again. Ironically, one of the reasons that keeps me from doing it is the belief that it would guarantee that I never do.
      That, and my last remaining virtue; I won't quit. Maybe that's why Rearden is my preferred hero over Galt in AS, followed by Dagny. He's beat on from all sides, he's flawed, but he won't quit.

      I had to find a purpose to my life, to continue living, and integral to that was the belief that He still wants me here for some reason. I don't want to die a failure.

      I too am glad TheChristianEgoist shared this. It helps reconcile the conflicts I still feel between Objectivism and Christianity.
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      • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
        Hiraghm,
        If you are struggling with conflicts between Objectivism and Christianity, I invite you to read and follow my blog (www.theChristianEgoist.wordpress.com)

        I am currently working on a book which does just that: reconciles the conflicts between the two worldviews. It is called 'The Galt-Like God: Meditations of a Christian Egoist'. The blog is a collection of side thoughts in order to inspire people as I work on the book. I think you would be very blessed by the ideas presented in my work (I know many others have been).
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      • Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 10 months ago
        You should talk this way more often, rather than spending all that energy in pot stirring and arguing with people who wouldn't acknowledge a valid point if it kicked them in the head.
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    • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
      If you like the quote, you'll really like the article. Click the link to read it, or just check out www.theChristianEgoist.wordpress.com
      I'd love to hear your thoughts on the rest of my writing.

      -The Christian Egoist
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      • Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 10 months ago
        You do a great job of explaining things. I usually find reading the study of philosophy very mind mushing. I think it's because after years of thinking, there are somethings t didn't need to be told. Your writing makes it flow. I have to go back now and read all that you wrote.
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      • Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 10 months ago
        This is a very true statement "They make little to no distinction between the logically possible and the circumstantially possible."
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        • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
          Thank you. There are some very fine "cracks" (mistakes) in the Objectivist epistemology and metaphysics which lead directly to their atheism and other irrational positions. This is one of them.
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          • Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 10 months ago
            Here is where the problem lies "The failure to recognize that logic is man’s method of cognition, has produced a brood of artificial splits and dichotomies which represent restatements of the analytic-synthetic dichotomy from various aspects. Three in particular are prevalent today: logical truth vs. factual truth; the logically possible vs. the empirically possible; and the a priori vs. the a posteriori.

            The logical-factual dichotomy opposes truths which are validated “merely” by the use of logic (the analytic ones), and truths which describe the facts of experience (the synthetic ones). Implicit in this dichotomy is the view that logic is a subjective game, a method of manipulating arbitrary symbols, not a method of acquiring knowledge.

            It is the use of logic that enables man to determine what is and what is not a fact. To introduce an opposition between the “logical” and the “factual” is to create a split between consciousness and existence, between truths in accordance with man’s method of cognition and truths in accordance with the facts of reality. The result of such a dichotomy is that logic is divorced from reality (“Logical truths are empty and conventional”)—and reality becomes unknowable (“Factual truths are contingent and uncertain”). This amounts to the claim that man has no method of cognition, i.e., no way of acquiring knowledge." Ayn Rand Lexicon. If they use a calculator to arrive at a conclusion for example multiple dimensions. They did not see feel or touch the dimensions but they will claim they exist and at the same time chastise us for using our logic to deduce the vast number of happy coincidences suggest intelligent design. The big bang does not explain the first particle. More on this later.
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            • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
              Keep in mind that logic is a method. It will make non-contradictory connections and highlight contradictory ones to be reexamined or cast out as false. It's only as good, however, as the assumptions made from the beginning. If you make false assumptions, you will make other non-contradictory connections that may be false using logic. If you make true assumptions, you will make other non-contradictory connections using logic. Truth is not derived by the number of non-contradictory connections made. My point is, you can be logical (from your starting assumptions) and false.

              Assumptions must be brought forth and examined. What assumptions are you making that allows you to connect happy coincidences to god? What makes you think intelligent design means that the designer is still living? The intelligent lightbulb designer is dead after all.
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              • Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 10 months ago
                I don't debate about the existence of God. I have seen those debates on here many times, it is usually a never ending diatribe where everyone comes out the other side in the same place they started or people take the low road and start name calling which to me is illogical and unproductive.I see you are having a good discussion with theChristianEgosit. I may possibly read that.
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                • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                  I was referencing my atheism: the case against god book and this made me think of you:

                  "In order fully to understand the nature of a philosophical conflict, one must grasp the fundamental difference that give rise to the conflict. One must investigate the basic issue and apply this knowledge to the disputed issue.

                  "A debated subject is often a symptom, a surface manifestation, of a more basic underlying disagreement. Unless this area is explored -- and unless some agreement is reached -- the conflict will continue, while becoming repetitious and dull. The result is a kind of "intellectual atrophy," where the argument proceeds without significant progress, where no new material is introduced, and where the participants know beforehand that neither side will convince the other." -- A:TCAG
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    • Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 10 months ago
      Hi Will. Based on the churches you described. I wouldn't want to go there. I enjoy the uplifting when I go. I wonder if you are in the right religion or just haven't found the right church. Talk with friends about their churches.
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  • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
    I hate to break it to you, but there is no reconciliation between Objectivism and Christianity. One accepts faith as a valid means to knowledge and the other does not. Now let's put her thoughts into its full context.

    "Playboy: Has no religion, in your estimation, ever offered anything of constructive value to human life?

    "RAND: Qua religion, no—in the sense of blind belief, belief unsupported by, or contrary to, the facts of reality and the conclusions of reason. Faith, as such, is extremely detrimental to human life: it is the negation of reason. But you must remember that religion is an early form of philosophy, that the first attempts to explain the universe, to give a coherent frame of reference to man’s life and a code of moral values, were made by religion, before men graduated or developed enough to have philosophy. And, as philosophies, some religions have very valuable moral points. They may have a good influence or proper principles to inculcate, but in a very contradictory context and, on a very—how should I say it?—dangerous or malevolent base: on the ground of faith." -- playboy interview 1964 (http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/religi...)
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    • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
      I hate to break it to you, but nowhere in the Bible is faith considered a valid means to knowledge. It is always the emotional and volitional response to what is certainly known - by reason (usually in the midst of a situation which may irrationally cause doubt). See the following article:
      http://thechristianegoist.wordpress.com/...

      Regarding context, you seem to imply that I am not taking her thoughts in full context, but if you read the article linked to in the OP of this thread, you would have noticed that I am well aware of the full context of her positions on religion (and particularly Christianity) and that a follow-up blog is already in the works to cover what Rand calls a "great, basic contradiction in the teachings of Jesus".

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      • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
        So you redefine the common use of the term faith to mean instead abstract thought... deep abstract thought.

        In you're view, is this abstract thought derived from perceptual concretes?
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        • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
          I don't redefine it. If people wish to use it to mean belief apart from reason, they are certainly welcome to -- but that is never the way that the Bible uses it and it is not the way that it *should* be used in Christianity. The anti-intellectual Christians who have made it mean "belief apart from reason" in common culture are the ones who have redefined it.

          In my view, this abstract thought is derived from reason, in general (a combination of perceptual concretes and logical deduction).
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          • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
            Ok, what series of perceptual concretes and logic leads you to conclude that god exists? Please define god as well.
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            • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
              The answer is spelled out in good detail in the following post, and the comments under it:
              http://thechristianegoist.wordpress.com/...

              Please be sure to read the comments, as they will likely deal with any objections you may have. However, if you think there is something which has not been covered, I invite you to submit a comment or objection.
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              • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                The only issue that can be taken with your logical argument within the link is with number 4:

                "There cannot be an infinite regress of accidental actions. An infinite regress of a series cannot exist because a series must have a beginning in order to exist."

                I read the comments, and I don't think you addressed sward of apollo's essential argument against 4 (granted he added non-essentials, which you did address).

                Why do you think an infinite regress of a series (or an unbounded series) cannot exist? The number line is abstractly unbounded as the sward of apollo pointed out. Distance in any direction could be physically unbounded.

                If an unbounded series exists and is possible, why do you think accidental actions are necessarily bounded? If you think an infinite regress of un-purposeful actions is necessarily bounded, then why do you think an infinite regress of purposeful actions is not bounded? Or do you think both are finite and bounded?

                Or to put it in the positive, what's wrong with this logical series:

                1. Existence exists, has always existed, and will always exist -- the axiom of existence.

                2. The actions of existents and the interactions between existents occur due to the nature of the existents possessing identity -- causality.

                3. Existents may or may not act or interact with purpose -- distinction between life and inanimate matter.

                4. Since existents have and will always exist, they have and will always act or interact with or without purpose -- integrating 1, 2 and 3.

                5. An unbounded set of un-purposeful actions is possible -- conclusion.
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                • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                  This was addressed in the comments, but I will re-address it here.

                  The important thing to remember is that we are speaking of a series of inter-connected, real events -- in which every event is contingent upon the event prior to it for its very existence.

                  The existence of an accidental action is impossible apart from the existence of some prior action. The very nature of accidental action demands a prior action -- whether you are speaking of a singular accidental action, or a *seemingly* infinite number of accidental actions, it does not change the fact that accidental action is impossible apart from some prior action.

                  Therefore, to speak of a large number of actions (or an "infinite number") is really just to attempt to confuse the subject in order to evade the reality that no accidental action in the universe would exist apart from an original purposeful action.
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                  • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                    So where do you see an error in my five steps leading to the conclusion that an unbounded set of un-purposeful action is possible?

                    You say (essentially) it's necessary for purposeful action to cause un-purposeful action, otherwise, the later wouldn't exist. What makes you think that the former coming first is necessary? According to my five steps, no first action of any kind is necessary or possible -- existence is eternal.
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                    • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                      "What makes you think that the former coming first is impossible?"

                      The exact reasons I listed above -- which you re-stated quite well:
                      "it's necessary for purposeful action to cause un-purposeful action, otherwise, the later wouldn't exist."

                      Yes, "existence is eternal" -- but that does not mean that every existent and every type of action available to all existents is eternal.

                      "So where do you see an error in my five steps leading to the conclusion that an unbounded set of un-purposeful action is possible?"

                      The error (or rather evasion) is in 2). Existents have particular types of natures in respect to action (as has been thoroughly covered), and to drop the context of those particular types of natures in a discussion which hinges upon those very natures is evasive.
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                      • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                        Could you stop accusing me of evasion? I would appreciate it very much. It's distracting since it's false and accusing me of evasion is not helping you explain yourself any better.

                        I am not refusing to think. I happen to simply disagree with you about the nature of actions for reasons I think are valid. I'm looking for the error (the contradiction) if I made one, and I expect that you're doing the same if you made one. We can assist each other in identifying the error. I currently don't see mine, if I made one, and you currently don't see yours, if you made one. This is not evasion. It's a process necessary to correct an error.

                        Continuing on with the productive side of our discussion. I believe you're making an error of circular reasoning. Essentially, I hear you say purposeful action must come first. Why? Because un-purposeful action requires purposeful actions to initiate it. Why? Because purposeful action must come first. Why? Ect.

                        So I asked myself if you're not relying on a circular reasoning, then what is it that you observed that breaks this loop? I see you discuss the nature of actions. Correct me if I'm wrong, but you essentially generalize that all chains of consequences could be followed back to the purposeful initiation of action. This can be observed by following some un-purposeful actions back to purposeful action, but not all -- some we just don't know. I think that this generalization is invalid because given the data, it's not necessary -- i.e., it's inconclusive. For any generalization to be valid it must be necessary.

                        So assuming that you think the above generalization is necessary, I asked myself why do you think it? Again correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't see you disagreeing with the fact that we can't trace all accidental actions back through history. So then I thought, to force this generalization to be necessary, one could assume a first cause. If there is a first cause, then a first accidental action must be ruled out since an inanimate entity by its nature cannot initiate action. Again correct me if I'm wrong, but I see you imply a first cause by seeking a first action. If I'm correct so far, then I found the error. A first cause or action contradicts the axiom of existence. If the axiom of existence eliminates the possibility of a first action, then the problem of finding a first action and actor disappears.

                        The axiom of existence eliminates a first cause because existence is eternal, so the stuff that exists is eternal, so their actions are eternal, so there is no first action by definition of them being eternal.

                        If you think I'm still wrong at this point, the question that remains for me is: Why do you think a first action (regardless of the type of entity that made it) is possible, necessary, and logically consistent with the axiom of existence?
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                        • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                          I apologize. I did not mean to give offense. I was mostly referring to the argument as evaseive -- not necessarily yourself. I have run into many Objectivists who were very evasive using similar argumentation.

                          The above has made it clear that you have followed my reasoning rather well -- though not in the way I would put it.
                          You are correct that I take the 'generalization' to be true based on the (logical) necessity of it. And this is in part due to the idea of a first cause/action.

                          I think you are mistaken here:
                          "A first cause or action contradicts the axiom of existence... The axiom of existence eliminates a first cause because existence is eternal, so the stuff that exists is eternal, so their actions are eternal, so there is no first action by definition of them being eternal."

                          The axiom of existence means that existence, as such, is eternal; that something has always existed. It does not follow that everything which exists is eternal (this is obviously false) or that every action of any existent is eternal (this is also obviously false).

                          All that can be concluded from the axiom of existence is that there has never been non-existence. It does not say or imply anything about the action(s) of particular existents.

                          In fact, a bit of a topic changer, but I would challenge the Objectivist here:
                          You say "existence exists" (i.e. is eternal). I ask "WHICH existent?". ;) But that is more of a beginning to an ontological proof for the existence of God. For now, I'd rather stick to the cosmological -- which I think has been shown to withstand your latest objection of being contrary to the axiom of existence.
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                          • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                            Thank you, apology accepted.

                            It seems the kernel or source of our disagreement is deeper than either of us thought -- let's keep digging.

                            I understand you to mean that something always existed but not necessarily the things that exist today. Things that exist today were caused by things that existed before, which you say is obviously evident. If the evidence necessitates that this is true then my statement that the stuff that exists is eternal would be false, which seems to be the crux leading to the logical conclusion that there is no first cause/action problem. I think that by removing this crux the first cause/action problem actually vanishes again. The first cause/action problem would be eliminated by this new line of logical thinking: something (not necessarily the same thing) will always exist, so causes/actions would still be eternal since something (again, not necessarily the same thing) that causes and acts will always be there, would it not? If so, there cannot be a first cause problem if something always existed, even if the same things don't always exist -- so long as something exists they act.

                            I want to challenge this notion: the axiom of existence doesn't mean that the things that exist today necessarily existed prior to today. My logical series in my last post relies on this notion to be false. What is existence as such besides the things that which exist? Without the things that exist, there is nothing that exists and the concept of existence or existence as such is meaningless. Additionally, how do you overcome the seemingly absurd idea that nothing can be caused to be something? If nothing is a zero, then how does anything cause a zero to do anything? What is it that you're causing to act? Within that same vein, how do you turn something into a zero? Where would that something go? You can't interchange a zero with something and here's why. Science has demonstrated a law of nature explaining this relationship between something and a zero: matter/energy can neither be created or destroyed. The matter/energy that exists today has always existed, though it's forms may change. E (energy) cannot and does not equal zero, which would be necessary if you could turn something into nothing; it equals mc^2. The USA has demonstrated this conservation of mass/energy relationship very thoroughly in Japan near the end of WWII with two bombs.

                            But you say everything that exists is eternal is obviously false. I wonder what observation you see that makes you think that this is obvious, and I thought perhaps you mean something like life. It is true that life exists and is created and destroyed all the time. The life that is you or me may be destroyed under the right conditions and we each may create life under the right conditions. So in a sense, it's true -- everything that exists is not eternal. That was not the sense I meant, however, when I said "the stuff that exists..." I meant all the physical stuff that makes up all the physical entities (living or non-living) is eternal. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't see you disagreeing with that last statement.

                            So within that sense of existence, do you still think I made an error in stating that a first cause or action contradicts the axiom of existence... with all the rest that follows (it may require a reread)? If you still do, then I wonder where do you see room for a first cause problem? What did I miss?
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                            • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                              " If so, there cannot be a first cause problem if something always existed, even if the same things don't always exist -- so long as something exists they act.”

                              The problem is not whether the same things have always existed or whether different things have always been in existence. The problem that you seem to be missing is: the nature of those things. “so long as something exists they act”. But existence does not automatically equal action. As covered in my argument, there are two types of existents in respect to action: those which can only act accidentally, and those which can act purposely. Suppose there are things which can only act accidentally which existed in ‘eternity past’ -- there would have never been any action among them apart from an original purposeful action.

                              We both agree on the eternality of existence, but that in no way demands the eternality of action -- and it certainly does not demand the eternality of accidental action. That last (eternal accidental action) is a contradiction in terms.

                              Regarding the rest about matter and energy, it is an interesting discussion, but it does not add anything to the essentials of the philosophical discussion we are having, so I'd rather leave it as it would inevitably become a rabbit trail.
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                              • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                                Hallelujah, we've found the kernel (I think). I say things that exist necessarily act, you say they don't necessarily act. This is the contradiction to be resolve before we can make further progress.

                                In support of your position I see you essentially say existence exists but may not necessarily be acting and it's quite the (unfounded) leap to suggest that they do necessarily act. (Continuing from you) Nothing supports the idea that the things that exist necessarily act. (From you, in summary) It makes no sense to say that things may exist in the past to eternity and act unless one of those things act first to set it all off.

                                This is were we meet at our first cause disagreement.

                                Before I go on to support my position, let me "poke at a holes" that I see, if you don't mind. What caused the first causer? Does it make sense that any cause (purposeful or not) to be isolated from previous causes? Every cause we know of (purposeful or not) is the product of causes as far as we know, is it not? If not, then please give me an example. All the examples I can think of are caused by something, or it's undetermined due to lack of information.

                                My position is that the things that physically exist necessarily act. To give one example -- and what I believe is a sufficient example to prove this -- the things that physically exist (purposeful or not) are made up of matter/energy. Matter/energy is the un-purposeful cause of gravitational distortions in space in every direction at all distances -- a force that can be observed and measured. You cannot separate physical entities from this act -- it is part of their nature at all times. To conclude that physical things don't necessarily act would require one to separate the thing that exists from its nature.

                                Do we make progress from here or is the kernel somewhere else?
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                                • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                                  “What caused the first cause?” By definition, nothing, in one sense. The fact that we have never experienced a causeless action is an empirical argument from silence. However, if you were to say that a causeless action is logically impossible (meaning that action must arise from something with a sufficient nature in a sufficient context to allow that action), then you would be absolutely correct. But then, here we must distinguish between types of causes. The first type of cause being considered is automatic, material, cause and effect. The other type of cause (the one behind the “First Cause” is the conscious value and volition of the actor. I suppose, then, you may ask “what caused these things (the consciosness, value, and volition of the actor) and the answer to that really is nothing -- in all senses. The original actor’s consciousness, values, and volition must be eternal -- or else He wasn’t the original actor, and we must begin the whole process over again until we arrive at an original actor who IS eternal. All of that to say: there must be an eternal conscious actor with unchanging and unchangeable value and volition.

                                  Now, regarding your suggestion about matter, energy, and gravity. Gravity is the closes example you can come to of accidental action which could seemingly go back to infinity -- but it doesn’t work. Gravity requires at least two bodies to be in certain proximity to each other (with some distance between them), but how did those things get into those positions to begin with? Either they and gravity are all eternal, in which case they never would have been separate, or they arrived there by means of some prior action. So, gravity doesn’t really solve the problem. It still requires prior action -- which must have either been accidental or purposeful. The argument still stands.
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                                  • TheChristianEgoist replied 10 years, 10 months ago
                                  • m082844 replied 10 years, 10 months ago
                • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
                  I made a mistake editing my post:

                  "If you think an infinite regress of un-purposeful actions is necessarily bounded, then why do you think an infinite regress of purposeful actions is not bounded?"

                  It should have read: If you think un-purposeful actions is necessarily bounded, then why do you think purposeful actions is not bounded?
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                  • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                    Because the nature of accidental action is such that it requires a causal chain of prior action (no matter how long or short that chain may be). The nature of purposeful action is that it is not contingent, per se, on prior action, but merely the will of the actor.
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                    • Posted by Rozar 10 years, 10 months ago
                      So purposeful action requires a consciousness, and accidental action requires consciousness, so there had to be an original consciousness?
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                      • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
                        Bingo -- only don't read into that "an original consciousness which is conscious of nothing but its own consciousness" (The fallacy of The Primacy of Consciousness).
                        There had to be an original existent which was conscious.
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      • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
        If faith is not considered a valid means of knowledge within the bible, then do you consider this invalid? (I'll read the link in your response to find out.)

        Hebrews 11:1 "Faith makes us sure of what we hope for and gives us proof of what we cannot see."

        11:3 "Because of our faith, we know..."

        I've read your article in your main post before posting.
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        • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago
          I consider the inference you are reading into them to be invalid. Read the entire chapter (i.e. read the context) and you will see exactly what the author means. In fact, read my post (which you claim to have done) and you will get an exposition of the context which is very clear.

          Every instance of faith in the Bible is an instance of someone believing something that is true, in the face of irrational temptations to doubt it, because of more rational and more certain reasons to believe it.
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    • Posted by Hiraghm 10 years, 10 months ago
      "in the sense of blind belief, belief unsupported by, or contrary to, the facts of reality and the conclusions of reason." - Ayn Rand

      "The moral is to the physical as 3 to 1"
      - Napoleon Bonaparte.

      Let me know if you don't understand my point.
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      • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
        Go on, I don't understand.
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        • Posted by Hiraghm 10 years, 10 months ago
          Napoleon was talking about the morale of an army being more important than its supplies or situation.

          A army that thinks it can win... can win... a army that thinks it can't win... can't, regardless of its relative strength to the enemy.

          Likewise, the positive beliefs in some religions, say Christianity, can create a mindset in the believer that will be conducive to success, even in dire straits. Some people find this in Scientology, others in Buddhism.

          It's the emotional effect of the belief, the effect on morale, that creates the positive influence.
          Or negative, if the chosen religious doctrine is negative...
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 8 months ago
    I like your perspective. Seems that you've codified many of my own thoughts on how to synthesize Christianity and Objectivism.
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  • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I honestly haven't been able to see how the two types of actions you've listed are relevant so I haven't really addressed it. It never occurred to me to ask why you think it's relevant. Here are my thoughts, though. The two types are not ruled by separate laws of causality, so why make the distinction? The same causal law produces many categories of types of actions, not just purposeful and non-purposeful. E.g., there is also the types: living actions and non-living actions. Or the types: magnetic actions and non-magnetic actions. Etc. why is purposeful and non-purposeful so crucial?

    Also, I'm not just saying that we haven't experienced a causeless cause -- the silent argument. I'm saying every cause we have experienced is caused and an un-caused cause is a contradiction in terms. If true, this is enough to necessitate the generalization: there is no such thing as a un-caused cause. We can honestly say every action we observe is caused -- even if we don't know what caused it. And here's the contradiction... The un-caused cause, if it is to cause anything physically, would need to physically exist to affect physical objects, but then it being physical would itself be subjected to physical causes -- it can't be un-caused. The un-caused cause, if it is not to be caused, would need to be non-physical to escape from being subjected to physical causes, but then it being non-physical wouldn't be able to affect any physical objects -- it can't cause. Any attempts to include a first cause (i.e., an un-caused cause) in the picture would require an entity that apparently exists outside of the law of causality -- i.e., a non-physical entity affecting physical objects, or a physical entity impervious to causality -- and therefore, an entity that exists outside the law of identity. This attempt seems to plant us in the realm of the irrational.

    If you agree that an un-caused cause is a contradiction, then how do we remedy the apparently irrational and this: "...or else He wasn’t the original actor, and we must begin the whole process over again until we arrive at an original actor who IS eternal." ? In short, we must accept on rational grounds, with the threat of accepting a contradiction if we don't, that there is no first cause (or un-caused cause).

    Unfortunately, parts of your last paragraph didn't make much sense to me.

    "Gravity requires at least two bodies..." Check, at least two things that produce gravity exist. Check and check.

    "...but how did those things get into those positions to begin with?" This is where you loose me. I'm not sure how this is relevant. We know at least two things exist today, and they must have existed yesterday.

    "Either they and gravity are all eternal, in which case they never would have been separate,..." There are other forces at play (i.e., weak and strong nuclear forces) that are just as fundamental to the physical objects as gravity is. These other forces would resist gravitational forces. I only listed one of the forces that's always present to demonstrate that physical entities always act.

    Gravity may not solve all problems, but it (and the other forces) solves the problem of figuring out whether or not physical objects always act. They do. They must. If you don't think so, do you mind clarifying why you don't think so? What evidence are you referencing to make your rational judgement?
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  • Posted by 10 years, 10 months ago in reply to this comment.
    And since we've practically run out of room to discuss this here, I recommend either continuing the conversation in the comments section of the "Immovable Mover" blog on my website or via email.
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    • Posted by m082844 10 years, 10 months ago
      absolutely! I have to apologize for taking a long time to respond. I didn't receive an email notifying me that you responded. I figured I convinced you and you were meditating, or you lost interest altogether. I lost patience and I came to ask where you were only to find out that I'm six days late. I'll repost my last comment on your blog on the immovable mover page.

      http://thechristianegoist.wordpress.com/...
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