Freedom of Thought and JW Opposers

by dunsscot 137 Replies latest jw friends

  • dunsscot
    dunsscot

    Faraon,

    So that you do not think I'm a dunce when it comes to 'puter matters, I did copy and paste Farkel's post to a file on my 'puter and then tried to copy and paste his remarks and my replies to the message board. But othing happened. I tried following the code procedure and again nada (nihil). But thanks for the help. You're okay for a JW opposer. :)

    Night,
    Dan

    Duns the Scot

  • seven006
    seven006

    Dunsscot,

    Look pal, I'm going to put this in plain English so both you and those of us with an average EXJW ejakation can understand. Put down your "UCLA Student Dictionary of Really Big Words to Confuse and Influence Idiots" and answer Alan's post. All us little people need to get on with our chores we been fix'n to do, so get on with it. And hurry up damn it, our popcorn is gett'n cold.

    Barney Fife once said if you put the worm on the hook and throw it in that there lake you just might catch yer self a really big fish.

    You threw the hook in pal, now deal with it or go bowling.

    Dave

    OK, Alan where's my money?

  • Hmmm
    Hmmm

    Since I couldn't possibly reason with Dunsscot any better than many who already have, I'll play to my strenghts: wit and sarcasm, your individual appreciation of which may vary.

    Furthermore, Kant suggests that we are locked up in our minds. Thus, we can only deal with phenomena, not noumena.

    Would this be positive noumena, or negative noumena? Never mind, it was all double-speak anyway.

    I think that no matter what religious organization one chooses to commune with, he or she has to exercise his or her critical thinking abilities.

    So you joined one that punishes its members for doing just such a thing?

    Read GWF Hegel and you will get my drift.

    Let me recommend a higly respected Doctor for you to read. Dr. Seuss knew how to write to an audience. His writing is simultaneously simple and thought-provoking. He uses made-up nonsense words, as well, but at least he's entertaining.

    Introspection said:

    You seem like a well educated fellow,

    he seems to me like that guy in Good Will Hunting; the guy in the bar who is trying to pick up Minnie Driver by embarrassing Ben Affleck. Matt Damon exposes the guy as a fraud who is parroting his latest textbooks, and who will be parroting a new theory next semester, and a new one after that, but who has no real understanding or opinions of his own (at least I haven't been able to locate more than one or two actual thoughts in all Duns' gibberish.)

    Secondly, part of Spirit's unfoldment involves (in this case) believing that the part equals the whole at times.

    So let me get this straight: You say that we can't be sure that 2+2=4, but in order to accept JW dogma we must be willing to say that 2=4? Makes perfect sense, considering that we're also asked to believe that 1884=1914=1922=1925=194?=1975=before the end of the 20th Century.

    Our cognitive powers do not function as they should in our infralapsarian state.

    Ah, so you believe in Grace? Finally, an opinion! But it was discovered long long ago, in a galaxy far far away, that our infralapsarian state can be combatted by reversing the metachrystal in the Heisenberg Discombobulator until the fronian leptons align properly. This is hard to do, but if one uses the Force, it can be accomplished. "There is no try. There is only do" (Yoda)

    We must deal with a form of inertia that affects our very being or existence.

    Could you enlighten me as to what, if any, form(s) of inertia does NOT affect our being/existence?

    Thus the imperfect men of the GB may stress conformity to certain ideas that are not in fact fully formed. But we must not be hindered by such small details. The whole is more important than its constituent parts: I look at what the JWs teach as whole.

    Just prior to this, you said that a part can equal the whole. Then you say the GB can be wrong about parts. Then you say you look at (accept) what the GB teaches as a whole. So you accept the wrong parts, which make up the whole, becoming the whole wrong of GB teachings? Interesting.

    Each autonomous subject IS an end in itself"

    JWs aren't autonomous subjects. They're heteronomous subjects.

    Descartes aptly writes that I cannot establish with any certainty that I am either awake or asleep.

    I must confess that I'm not as up on my Descartes as I would like to be. Does he address whether you are either Watchtower or asleep? Aren't they synonymous? (OK, that was a little below the belt)

    My thoughts on blood transfusion are as follows. There is no explicit command to abstain from blood transfusions, but there seems to be a Bible principle that suggests one should not ingest blood in any way. Should taking blood thus be a matter of conscience? I personally think it should. And by this statement, I do not mean that we should consider those who take blood transfusions to be our former brothers, who have shown they did not want the truth. A matter of conscience should be a matter of conscience.

    Yet you support an organization that spiritually kills people if they don't follow their conscience if it leads them to accept blood? You support an organization that kills people physically and/or spiritually, with the excuse that you're not sure whether you're dreaming or not?

    maybe you should rename yourself after the person who REALLY inspires your writing style:
    "It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

    Hmmm

    PS If you're having trouble pasting quotes into text, I can't help you other than ctl+c and ctl+v. To make it LOOK LIKE a quote, click on the link below your message window when posting: "Use Forum Code in your message"

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Eusebius Hieronymus:

    Of him it is said: "In the heat of controversy he often uses expressions which seem to go to extremes and even to contain heresy. His language is frequently obscure; a maze of terms, definitions, distinctions, and objections through which it is by no means easy to thread one's way."

    You mean to say that he was an amoral moron with really good recall too?

  • dunsscot
    dunsscot

    AlanF writes:

    :Having read your responses to a number of people, dunsscot, (with the exception of responses to myself and Farkel, who it is obvious you're afraid to deal with) it has become evident that you're little more than a moron with a college degree in philosophy.:

    Why should I be afraid to deal with Farkel or you? Neither one of you gentlemen have said anything that I haven't heard before in all of my years online. Farkel and AlanF are simply limited, finite, impotent, ignorant existents like every other man or woman living in the realm of GH.

    Moreover, your comments above indicate how little you know about philosophy, human nature, or Duns the Scot. You read a few of my posts and make a snap judgment that I'm some moron with a "basic" degree in philosophy. You then seek to call me on a number of terms I have utilized when interacting with the denizens of this forum in the past few days. Personally, I think you better stick to astrophysics or WT research, because a philosopher you ain't, as I'll show below.

    :Unfortunately, while you use much esoteric jargon and seem to understand it, you don't understand a more fundamental truth: if you use opaque jargon on the uninitiated, you don't really understand what you think you're talking about.:

    Here is one place where your snap judgments start to manifest their insidious quiddity. Yes, I am using esoteric "jargon" in this forum. But I thought one was supposed to speak freely here. That is what Farkel and others have contended hitherto. Yet when I (one of Jehovah's Witnesses) choose to speak in a tongue that I find useful and pragmatic, I am castigated and denigrated by those who desire to spew vituperative statements at me in the hopes of stifling my personal conative or spiritual efforts. Such anti-intellectual, anti-conative, anti-JW tactics will not succeed. Furthermore, I am not using "jargon," but trying to be precise when discussing the philosophy of religion or the ramifications of religious epistemology.

    :Great scientists such as Einstein understood this well. Einstein understood that trying to talk about four-dimensional space-time tensors with a general audience was worse than useless. Your education, therefore, does others no good, since you do not understand what you've learned well enough to explain your ideas to others without resorting to the opaque jargon of your narrow specialty.:

    Mr. "pop" psychologist, how do YOU know that I cannot explain my ideas to others without employing what you call, "opaque jargon"? You know nothing about me, outside of this board. It is no wonder that the proverb says that one who replies to a matter before he(she) hears about it is foolish and humiliating. You've never attended a lecture that I've given to the hOI POLLOI. How would you know what I can or cannot do in this regard?

    :Philosophy, of course, being about the softest of the 'soft sciences', is of necessity full of opaque jargon. And you're a moron not so much because you think you know a lot more than you actually do, but because you have taken on the role of 'JW defender' even after having learned a little, in basic philosophy, of why you ought not.:

    Your hasty, careless disposition again manifests itself. You know next to nothing about philosophy, and it shows. Secondly, you say that I've learned a little "basic philosophy." How would you know the nature of my didactic background? Do you know how long I've been studying philosophy? Do you know the nature of my degree(degrees) in philosophy? No, you do not. The fact is that I have more than a knowledge of "basic philosophy." Excuse the ignorance on my part, but I know more about metaphysics, epistemology, ontology, deontological and teleological ethics, the transcendental apperception of unity, and eideational intuition than you'll ever know. I'm also versed in a number of different languages as well as theology, the Bible, psychology, etc. You have no idea who you're dealing with, my man. I'm ignorant--I know that it is nothing that I know--you are ignorant and walk around totally unaware of your abysmal lack of gnwsis.

    :So your stated goal of defending JWism by means of philosophy is doomed to failure, both on general principle and because of your own personal practice.Here are some examples of your bloated jargon that convey little or false meaning without the reader doing a double-take:Using "autonomous subject" instead of "person" or the equivalent.
    Using "the cognitive workings of finite agents" rather than "the thinking of mere humans".:

    An autonomous subject may be a person, but a person is not necessarily autonomous or a subject. I think that Herman Dooyeweerd even rejected the notion of autonomy in human subjects. He prefers instead to speak of the pretended autonomy of certain humans. The notion of autonomy vis-a'-vis humans is in fact a relatively new concept. A number of thinkers have documented the rise of the autonomous individual idea and associated it with Immanuel Kant or the Aufklarung.

    :Using "ecclesia" instead of "congregation".:

    I think most folks know what ecclesia or ekklesia means. Give the peeps here some credit!

    :Using "epidermal schema or existential situation" instead of "skin color or cultural background".:

    I might grant you that one.

    :Using "those removed from God's clean organization." instead of "those who had enough moral sense to reject the Watchtower Society".:

    Why would I, a JW defender (as you say), think that those who "reject the Watchtower Society" (your words) have ANY moral sense?

    :Here's a particularly good one with respect to bigboi's observation that you're "Talkin loud, but aint sayin nothin": "When one delves into the abstract depths of each man's thought, however, he or she begins to tap the surface of a brilliance that has hitherto been unrealized." Right. In other words, when bullshit words pull the wool over a lot of peoples' eyes, "the emperor's new clothes" syndrome reigns supreme. Duh! Fodeja is perfectly right: your writings are entirely without substance.:

    And your writings lack an awareness of basic philosophy or irony. As Lewis R. Gordon notes, words create worlds. They are there for our use as they obtain in an infinite state of potentiality waiting to play their part in building actual worlds extending to infinity (either possibly or actually). There is a tremendous amount of power in a signifier or a set of graphemes strung out along a page. Irony may also communicate that which "plain" language cannot. So can paradox.

    :Let me comment on some of this glop, in the hope that you're not purely a troll:"To Larc, Introspection, and others" you wrote: "I want to examine how human cognition functions in an environment where ex-JWs thrive and flock." This statement might be fine in a philosophy paper where wordiness is valued over substance, but when you're talking to real-word people a simple, "I want to understand how online ex-JWs think" would suffice.:

    Your lack of philosophical GNWSIS again shines through. I said what I meant and meant what I said (an example of antimetabole).

    I am here to examine how cognition functions amongst ex-JWs. Cognition entails more than "thought." Any good dictionary or basic psychology book will you that.

    :You also wrote, "I want to ... show that the very structures that make knowledge possible are inclined to seek and know an infinite horizon of being." This is complete bullshit. It is meaningless, bloated jargon. "Structures" are insentient and are not "inclined to seek and know" anything.:

    Does a thing have to be sentient to be inclined toward something? In this case, I think not. The structure that I referred to using the plural form of the morpheme, structure, is actually the transcendental structure of human consciousness. That is, the very transcendental ("lying at the base of experience") a priori conditions that make cognition possible. Now do you understand, AlanF?

    :The phrase "an infinite horizon of being" is completely meaningless without a great deal of explanation -- which you have not given, and are clearly incapable of giving.:

    We are hasty and presumptuous, aren't we (used in the editorial sense), AlanF? I think you better watch those snap judgments. Until you've seen me present information to the uniniated on the subject of being qua being. I suggests you refrain from saying what I am capable or incapable of doing.

    Additionally, "an infinite horizon of being" is a well-known phrase used by the late Roman Catholic theologian, Karl Rahner, who used the formulaic construction to refer to (gasp!) God. Read Rahner's work and get on track. And if you need help after class, I'll be glad to stick around and help you struggle with Rahner's notion of an infinite horizon of being as well as his theological approach wherein he employs transcendental reflection to elucidate the OUSIA of God and the notion of obediential potency vis-a'-vis human subjects.

    :Perhaps in your philosophy classes this phrase was beaten to death, and so you understand what you mean -- but no one else does.:

    Take a poll. Even a prepubescent child would know what an "infinite horizon of being" was. Give the "ignorant rabble" (Voltaire) some credit.

    :This is a good illustration of the fact that you don't understand your philosophical material well enough to know the difference between what specialists and laymen will understand or fail to understand when you use jargon. Again, in your chosen field you're a moron.:

    Let me guess. You're not a moron in your field, right?

    :To TD you argued, in essence, that it is hunkey dory for the Governing Body to disfellowship good people merely for disagreeing with their teachings, even if those teachings are false.:

    Watch the use of those two signifiers, "in essence," for they can really have the effect of misconstruing your interlocutor's contentions if you're not careful. I never argued, "in essence," that its okay for the GB to disfellowship "good people." Moreover (autem in Latin), I never said that the GB's teaching on blood transfusions is "false." I'm careful how I use that particular lingual sign. I prefer to say the GB's ideas are not fully formed at times. They are in the embryonic stage, but the GB may sometimes think that an embryo is a fetus or a full grown child.

    :But in so doing, you've proved one of my basic contentions: Jehovah's Witnesses do not first worship God, but give their first loyalty to the Watchtower Society. You've also ignored the most important teaching of the Bible: Jehovah is the God of truth. You've also ignored specific biblical condemnations of the behavior of these leaders of Jehovah's Witnesses: "Anyone pronouncing the wicked one righteous and anyone pronouncing the righteous one wicked -- even both of them are something detestable to Jehovah." (Proverbs 17:15)"You are to keep far from a false word. And do not kill the innocent and the righteous, for I shall not declare the wicked one righteous." (Exodus 23:7)In its history, how many times has the Watchtower Society declared "the wicked one righteous"?:

    Are you a biblical literalist, AlanF? Have you forgotten that YHWH is a reasonable God, who forgives the ones fearing Him. Furthermore, you are using your own subjective criteria to determine who is wicked and who is righteous. What is more, before I could answer your contention about falsehoods, you would have to delineate the quiddity of a falsehood, and then distinguish between different types of "falsehoods" or lies. Then you would need to outline the gravity that attends a particular kind of mendacious statement (that is a lie, for the hOI POLLOI). I suggest Thomas Aquinas' S.T. for starters.

    :How about J. F. Rutherford, a drunkard and an adulterer?:

    Do you have "proof" that Rutherford was a drunkard and an adulterer? Can I track down such "proof" and verify it for myself?

    :How many times has the Society declared the "righteous one wicked?":

    Didn't you already ask this question? Talk about pleonastic language! But I don't have an exact count on such figures, and I am in no position to say that this person condemned by the society was righteous, and that person judged by the Society was wicked.

    :How about the "silentlambs" whom the Society has relegated to obscurity but are now beginning to speak out?:

    I don't know who "silentlambs" truly is. Yes, I see an entity of some kind running a website and posting here under the name, "silentlambs," but I have no way of verifying silentlamb's story. How can anyone on this board prove that silentlambs is telling the truth? That's what cracks me up about this forum. People are willing to readily believe anything negative about the Society and quick to dismiss anything positive said about the Witnesses. Why don't you hold silentlambs to the same standard of proof that you hold Witnesses to?

    :You (sic) answer, dunsscot, or lack of answer, to these questions, will determine in the minds of readers whether you're a sincere Christian or a mere troll.As for your claim that you have difficulty reading books, such as the "book" I wrote in response to your first bit of silliness, I will guarantee this: unless you can respond to and deal substantively with every issue I raised, you will have no credibility whatsoever, on this forum or in terms of objective truth. Only one of your fellow JWs will fail to understand this.:

    How do you know you're speaking "objectively"? You and every other autonomous agent reasons from his or her own personal preunderstandings to certain conclusions. You forget that the "facts" you present are not necessarily brute. They are filtered through certain presuppositions and thus may not represent "objective truth." No, you don't have to thank me for the sage reminder. :-)

    Lastly, as we say in Latin, flocci non facio. I.e., I don't give a hoot what you or anyone else participating in this form thinks about me. But I loves you all.

    Said with love,
    Duns

    Duns the Scot

  • dunsscot
    dunsscot

    Dear Hmmm,

    Thanks a bunch! I guess I do need compters for dummies after all. :-)

    Dan

    Duns the Scot

  • dunsscot
    dunsscot

    Okay Dave,

    You can finish up the popcorn and go take care of those chores now, buddy. I delivered a knockout blow to Mr. "pop." Now I'll just sit back as he rummages his basic philosophy textbooks or Einstein's work on relativity trying to come up with something that will dig him out of this deep hole he dug for himself.

    Its a lovely day,
    Dan

    Duns the Scot

  • julien
    julien
    you would have to delineate the quiddity of a falsehood

    You have got to be kidding me. Here is julien delineating the quiddity of dunscott: "I know big words and things famous smart guys said, I act smart, therefore the Society is justified in everything they do. I ignore the tough questions and answer the easy ones"

    You can finish up the popcorn and go take care of those chores now, buddy. I delivered a knockout blow to Mr. "pop."

    Yeah that was quite a "knockout blow" there. As this autonomous agent predicted you ignored completely the more relevant first post by Alan, concentrating on defending your thesaurus driven vocabulary lessons..

    I am starting to suspect you are somebody's AI project.

  • fodeja
    fodeja

    DDr. Dannyboy,

    again, you have chosen to spew forth enormous loads of fancy language, this time with an added measure of arrogance (true Christian behaviour?). However - and you may kick and scream and quote like there's no tomorrow - so far you have presented zero, zilch, null, ja aber sowas von absolut gar nichts, of substance. You have neither asked good questions, nor have you given good answers (or any answers at all) - to me, these are the simple cornerstones of any philosophy.

    Do you, deep inside, feel that you have anything to say? Now, please, don't grind this sentence into tiny little bits and give me your free-flowing stream of associations with whatever Leibniz or Hegel or whoever said. It's a very simple question, I want a simple answer. Of course, you know that "die stillschweigenden Abmachungen zum Verständnis der Umgangssprache sind enorm kompliziert" - you'll have to use the tiny bits of intuition and (eek! bad word!) common sense that may be left in your brains.

    f., just one of the hoi polloi

    p.s.: Speaking of old Ludwig, consider 4.116 - and of course, 7. His language was exceptionally clear and succinct, even more than Kant's, who also didn't feel the need to throw smoke around his ideas and boast with his grand knowledge. Now where's that Bible verse that says something about "puffed up"...?

  • fodeja
    fodeja
    I am starting to suspect you are somebody's AI project.

    You may be on to something, julien. Anybody here remember RACTER (circa 1980s)? I think someone's abusing us for a large-scale Turing test of release 2.0.

    f.

    Si tacuisses...

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