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norton ash wrote:But what's also recurring is the tenacious 'It's Dawkins and you scientific atheist bastards against those of us of more generous spirit.' Which is resentful, and divisive, and reductive, and not true.
There is no intellect without faith. And if you're going to insist on a definition of faith, then I don't mind offering you one: faith is the body, which is the same thing as the senses, which is the same thing as the soul, all of which precedes intellection and is a precondition for it.
See Michael Polanyi, Gregory Bateson, R.D. Laing and (goddammit) Wilhelm Reich, just for example.
MacCruiskeen wrote:norton ash wrote:But what's also recurring is the tenacious 'It's Dawkins and you scientific atheist bastards against those of us of more generous spirit.' Which is resentful, and divisive, and reductive, and not true.
It's true. See AD's incessant supercilious one-line Thritical Crinking homework assignments throughout this thread, which have indeed been resentful, divisive and destructive, and epistemologically deeply naive to boot, for all their impenetrable smugness. He has sabotaged a potentially interesting thread by bullying C_w shamelessly. If we're talking intellectual soundness, then quite frankly (and I say this after having suffered patiently through 30-odd pages of this boring nonsense), AD's argument is as thick as shit. It is deeply stupid. And it's the way of the world in the 21st cenntury, which is why it urgently needs opposing.
...
Canadian_watcher wrote:AD the devil is right on your tail, man. Probably has been for years. You're playing his tune.
Dissociation of sensibility is a literary term first used by T. S. Eliot in his essay “The Metaphysical Poets”[1] It refers to the way in which intellectual thought was separated from the experience of feeling in seventeenth century poetry.
Eliot used the term to describe the manner by which the nature and substance of English poetry changed “between the time of Donne or Lord Herbert of Cherbury and the time of Tennyson and Browning.” In this essay, Eliot attempts to define the metaphysical poet and in doing so to determine the metaphysical poet’s era as well as his discernible qualities.We may express the difference by the following theory: The poets of the seventeenth century, the successors of the dramatists of the sixteenth, possessed a mechanism of sensibility which could devour any kind of experience. They are simple, artificial, difficult, or fantastic, as their predecessors were; no less nor more than Dante, Guido Cavalcanti, Guinicelli, or Cino. In the seventeenth century a dissociation of sensibility set in, from which we have never recovered; and this dissociation, as is natural, was aggravated by the influence of the two most powerful poets of the century, Milton and Dryden.
Theory of dissociation of sensibility
The theory of dissociation of sensibility rests largely upon Eliot’s description of the disparity in style that exists between the metaphysical poets of the sixteenth and early seventeenth century and the poets of the late seventeenth century onward. In “The Metaphysical Poets,” [1] Eliot claims that the earlier grouping of poets were “constantly amalgamating disparate experience” and thus expressing their thoughts through the experience of feeling, while the later poets did not unite their thoughts with their emotive experiences and therefore expressed thought separately from feeling. He explains that the dissociation of sensibility is the reason for the “difference between the intellectual and the reflective poet.” The earlier intellectual poet, Eliot writes, “possessed a mechanism of sensibility which could devour any kind of experience.” When the dissociation of sensibility occurred, “[the] poets revolted against the ratiocinative, the descriptive; they thought and felt by fits, unbalanced; they reflected.” Thus dissociation of sensibility is the point at which and the manner by which this change in poetic method and style occurred; it is defined by Eliot as the loss of sensation united with thought.
Eliot uses John Donne’s poetry as the most prominent example of united sensibility and thought. He writes, “[a] thought to Donne was an experience; it modified his sensibility.” Eliot’s apparent appreciation of Donne’s ability to unify intellectual thought and the sensation of feeling demonstrates that he believes dissociation of sensibility to be a hindrance in the progression of poetry. Eliot asserts that despite the progress of refined language, the separation between thought and emotion led to the end of an era of poetry that was “more mature” and that would “wear better” than the poetry that followed.
At the heart of democratic ideals is the contrast between legitimate and illegitimate persuasion. To a large extent, the difference is marked by the ways that forms of persuasion respect - or fail to respect - what Simone Weil called our “faculty of free consent.” The lecture will explore what we should make of the distinction and what its implications are for political action when democratic governments become more secretive, more authoritarian and more reliant on spin.
http://www.law.unimelb.edu.au/index.cfm ... aryID=5390
In a recently screened BBC documentary, UK neuroscientists suggested that the brains of Apple devotees are stimulated by Apple imagery in the same way that the brains of religious people are stimulated by religious imagery.
People have often talked about “the cult of Apple”, and if a recent BBC TV documentary is to be believed, there could be something in it.
The program, Secrets of the Superbrands, looks at why technology megabrands such as Apple, Facebook and Twitter have become so popular and such a big part of many people’s lives.
In the first episode, presenter Alex Riley decided to take a look at Apple. He wanted to discover what it is about the company that makes people so emotional. Footage of the opening of the Cupertino company’s Covent Garden store in central London last year showed hordes of Apple devotees lining up outside overnight, while the staff whipped up customers (and themselves) into something of an evangelical frenzy. This religious-like fervor got Riley thinking – he decided to take a closer look at the inside of the head of an Apple fanatic to see what on earth was going on in there.
Riley contacted the editor of World of Apple, Alex Brooks, an Apple worshipper who claims to think about Apple 24 hours a day, which is possibly 23 hours too many for most regular people. A team of neuroscientists studied Brooks’ brain while undergoing an MRI scan, to see how it reacted to images of Apple products and (heaven forbid) non-Apple products.
According to the neuroscientists, the scan revealed that there were marked differences in Brooks’ reactions to the different products. Previously, the scientists had studied the brains of those of religious faith, and they found that, as Riley puts it: “The Apple products are triggering the same bits of [Brooks'] brain as religious imagery triggers in a person of faith.”
http://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/ ... cientists/
Canadian_watcher wrote:I object to the recent assertion that this is some sort of 'militant atheists' versus 'spiritual people.' Is it that? I don't see it that way. I do see that there is a prejudice, and that some otherwise perfectly open-minded, forward thinking, out-of-the-box type people (the best kind of people, IMO) are blinded by a bias they don't see that they have.
In light of any assertion by anyone that 'that stuff doesn't exist at RI' (meaning that a prejudice against people of faith doesn't exist at RI) I am forced to counter by saying that it does. I've felt it, seen it, read it, experienced it. I am not really offended by it nor do I feel oppressed by it, rather I think it is a shame. It is a crying shame.
.. .AND also neatly brings the thread back around towards wacko David Icke type conspiracy lore, which is kinda how this thread all started- remember?
You insisted on the DMT elves thread that David Icke was so spiritual and it was obvious that his intentions were good so the anti-Semitism and Reptilian Theory either didn't exist or didn't matter.
I seems to recall that when this was not affirmed from all quarters, you insisted that some people were just not open to spirituality, or something like that.
And then I seem to recall that you jumped ship on that thread and went and started this thread, which framed things a bit differently...
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