<< Back to Off-topic Forum   Search

Posts 31 - 47 of 47   <<Prev   1  2  3  
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 09:31:23

wct
Level 56
Report
Fascinating stuff, knyte. I'm a big fan of Indian/Hindu mythology, ever since I watched an 8 hour dramatic version of the Mahabharata on PBS TV when I was a teen. Actually, I'm pretty much a fan of most mythology, but I do have a soft spot for Hindu stuff.
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 11:30:07


l4v.r0v 
Level 59
Report
Ramayana is also pretty cool as a piece of literature, although they never told me the ending when I was a kid (kind of ruins it all imho). But obviously worthwhile as a cultural/historical piece, as long as we don't end up in the weird "Indian kulcha best kulcha" arguments where we try to overcompensate for our third-world status by invoking notions of cultural superiority through a very hilarious take on the noble savage meme.

Edited 12/14/2015 11:31:09
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 12:40:23


Hitchslap
Level 56
Report
A new article about reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit. I thought this was relevent to the conversation...
http://journal.sjdm.org/15/15923a/jdm15923a.pdf

They used Deepak Chopra random quote generator and studied who was more likely to find the quote as profound or rightly detect it as bullshit. (http://www.wisdomofchopra.com/)

I haven't read the article yet, but it looks like it is going to be entertaining
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 16:19:08


[AOE] JaiBharat909
Level 56
Report
Hinduism is an umbrella term for multiple worldviews that don't share the same metaphysical framework (although many of them borrow concepts from one another- turns out horizontal transfer occurs in religions, too). There are variants/sects that are atheistic, monotheistic, or polytheistic. I've personally mainly been involved with the vaguely polytheistic variants that are super-common in India as well as a strongly monotheistic one that's more or less a cult centered around a single man; there are multiple schools of thought, with some being far more predominant than others

The main similarity between members of the set of worldviews described as "Hinduism" is regional- i.e., they're more or less grouped (largely by outsiders and later in the process of nationalistic unification) based on the proximity of the cultures they influence (as well as the tendency of their texts to be written in some Indo-Aryan language, commonly Sanskrit)

Can't argue with you here. Hinduism is a broad-based term for everyone past the Hindu-Kush mountains and was denoted first by the Northern Asian invaders to the peninsula. Its stuck more or less. A better term would be sanatham dharma.

Before some mystic declares themselves intellectually superior and claims that you aren't able to understand the "metaphysics" of Hinduism, keep in mind that it's not very complicated (although I'd argue it's still interesting because it doesn't quite follow the same patterns as Western religions) and definitely should not be elevated to the level of high philosophy, just as ancient Indian medicine should not be considered a form of science. I understand that there's a tendency to be edgy/trendy and claim intellectualism for other/marginalized cultures, but remember that in the process of doing so you are likely engaging in patronization and (more importantly) nationalistic revisionism of cultural backgrounds. Hinduism, especially since 1947 (when India has struggled to separate itself from Pakistan in a way very similar to how the former Yugoslav republics have shifted their identities to distinguish themselves, inventing new languages in the process) has been redefining itself and rewriting its own history as part of a set of campaigns in the realm of identity politics.

I would disagree with the characterization that the metaphysics of Hinduism is not complicated. This is undercutting the socio-cultural and historical value of a religion older than Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. I was mistaken previously in saying it would be intellectually difficult for someone to understand it. But I stand by my statement that it is culturally difficult for Western people to understand it without a strong foundation or knowledge that is grossly under taught in the current education system (personal opinion because I wouldn't have people regularly mistake me as a muslim then). That being said religion is itself incorporates philosophy and so I don't understand what your criteria for "high philosophy" is. Could you elaborate here? And no I'm not trying to make Hinduism edgy/trendy in order to claim intellectualism for a marginalized culture...I'm not a SJW or some radical minority rights activist. Nice attempt in turning the argument into a blatant character assassination of me though. Hinduism is very stagnant and I see no evidence of the religion as a splintered group trying to redefine itself or rewrite its own history. I don't know what evidence you have of this but if the point was pretentiousness you succeeded.

Jai is a nationalist tool. Be a little bit careful before you sip his Kool-aid. I can't do much but I can at the very least contest him when he claims to speak from authority about Hinduism, so feel free to hit me up there. (Yes, I am nonreligious now- no I'm not here to circlejerk about it either.) Moreover, if you're looking for the logical conclusion of Jai's ideology, simply join any predominantly-Indian Facebook group (especially one with religious nationalist undercurrents) and rejoice that you don't encounter the same third-world ideology every day. (That said, some of us still see India as a secular republic, but of course I've run away from the land of designated shitting streets).

I'm not claiming supreme authority on the subject of Hinduism (please show me where I say this). All I simply said was that cultural differences make it extremely arduous and complex to write about Hinduism for the Western mind. That being said I am not rejecting a person if he wants to learn more. Please I would love to talk to specific people if they have questions or want to learn more about certain misconstructions or misinformation about the religion as a whole. In fact this was my job as President of my high school's Hindu-American Cultural Association. Knyte seems more intent on dragging Hinduism, India, and me in the mud then engaging in an actual point. He uses the term nationalist as if its a crime to love one's ancestral nation. And he speaks as if I have uttered some great lie that threatens to destroy the entire perception of Hinduism by other cultures. This is called escalation and liberals are amazing at it. Also I've never discussed my "ideology" here so I have no idea how he can make an analysis of it. This is like me assuming Knyte is the supporter of the Maoists in Eastern Indian and has a secret desire to turn India into a quasi-marxist nation run by militants.
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 16:44:15


Beren Erchamion 
Level 64
Report


Edited 12/14/2015 17:25:43
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 19:46:49

wct
Level 56
Report
Pretty darn good response to knyte, Jai. Much more reasoned than your first comments appeared to be. Looks like there's potentially lots of interesting sub-topics to explore if you guys were so inclined, though personally I don't have enough background of Hinduism to participate much (if at all) in those details.

That's why I often try to dig deeper than the surface details and question *why* people believe what they do, because everybody has beliefs, so it's something we can all relate to, regardless of what those specific beliefs happen to be.
This is undercutting the socio-cultural and historical value of a religion older than Christianity, Islam, and Judaism.
Personally, I'm not convinced that theistic religion per se has any particular special value above and beyond plain 'culture' such as mythology, shared communal rituals and events, etc. I just don't see how tossing in a belief in an actual god or gods actually adds anything beneficial on top of all that. And, I would say that, all other things being equal, if you believe in something that's not actually *true*, you tend to be worse off than if you didn't.

In other words, if you don't have any good reasons to believe something (whether a god, or any other belief at all), then you're better off not believing it by default. After all, there are limitless possible things you could believe in, and you can't believe them all (especially since so many of them are mutually contradictory), so it is best to simply withhold belief from any particular idea until compelling reasons amass to indicate that the idea holds some actual positive merit on its own.
Hinduism is very stagnant and I see no evidence of the religion as a splintered group trying to redefine itself or rewrite its own history.
The claim that Hinduism is stagnant seems surprising to me. Again, I don't know either way, but most religions tend to have many numerous sects and offshoots, so Hinduism would be an exception in that case. Are you sure it's so stagnant? Where did you learn this from?
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 19:59:34

wct
Level 56
Report
A new article about reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit.

I lol'd when I opened it and the actual title really is, "On the reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit"! Pretty daring title, I love it!
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 20:01:46


[AOE] JaiBharat909
Level 56
Report
The claim that Hinduism is stagnant seems surprising to me. Again, I don't know either way, but most religions tend to have many numerous sects and offshoots, so Hinduism would be an exception in that case. Are you sure it's so stagnant? Where did you learn this from?

Hmm okay I should clarify this. What I meant to say is that I see no evidence of the trend that Knyte is arguing for (e.g. Hinduism is trying to redefine itself or rewrite its own history). I'm not sure what Knyte meant when he said this so I was really asking for more clarification or specific examples. Is Hinduism evolving in the sense that there are new offshoots and branches being formed - yes. Is there evolution in how the spiritual heads interpret religious scriptures, how Hindu sects are organized structurally, how women and marginalized groups (LGBT and those who preform abortions) are treated, etc - no. Again I can speak from experience within my own sect of Hinduism (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bochasanwasi_Shri_Akshar_Purushottam_Swaminarayan_Sanstha) which is very rigid in its practices - all lectures are given in Gujarati (no english lectures), women and men are separated within the temple, there is strict rules on behavior, etc. That being said the current climate in India is such that Hinduism is becoming more insular, trying to defend itself against the external forces dictating changes to the religion (e.g. Western values, business interests, human rights activists). This is why Hinduism is very stagnant. Although I would certainly change that opinion if Knyte presented evidence to the contrary...I just haven't found any myself.
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 20:32:28

wct
Level 56
Report
Cool, thanks for the info. I find it interesting. I have a soft spot for India in general. In the coming decades, some people say the two big powers will probably be China and India. Personally, of the two, though I also have a soft spot for China/Chinese culture, I'm rooting for India to make some sort of transformative come-back (like an enlightenment or renaissance of sorts). I don't know why, I just would really like to see it. I'd also like to visit some day, though I don't know if I'll ever get the chance. (Not to live, probably, but visiting would be fascinating.)
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 20:34:23


Angry Koala
Level 57
Report
Zuist religion, best religion!

http://www.theguardian.com/world/shortcuts/2015/dec/09/zuism-the-growing-religion-of-iceland-that-offers-rebates-in-this-life


Already 1% of Icelanders converted to this religion in the past fornight!

Praise God Enlil!

Edited 12/14/2015 20:35:42
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 20:34:49


Hitchslap
Level 56
Report
I lol'd when I opened it and the actual title really is, "On the reception and detection of pseudo-profound bullshit"! Pretty daring title, I love it!


I know right! you probably didn't didn't expect an actual scientific paper too :)
New Scientist twitted about it today:

relgion vs: 12/14/2015 21:07:55


[AOE] JaiBharat909
Level 56
Report
wct - It probably will be China purely because India's governing system has systematic corruption within it. Although it is most likely a generation problem, it is deeply ingrained. Also India will never be a military power in the sense of projecting its interests abroad...its mostly concerned with the Indian Ocean, the Middle East, and the Hindu Kush/Tibetan regions. Economically I think we could rise to 2nd or 3rd depending on whether the US manages to find a way to reignite growth.

India is a great place to visit. The most I've stayed in India consecutively is 3 months at a time. Best places to visit would be Delhi, Mumbai (more western), Varanasi, and Shimla. Don't hesitate if you have any questions though :)

Btw I also have a soft spot for chinese culture. I have no idea why. I would love to find out why...but I have no idea why.

Edited 12/14/2015 21:08:31
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 22:53:16

wct
Level 56
Report
Of all religions, Pastafarianism/Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster is my favourite: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Monster
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 23:02:40

wct
Level 56
Report
@Jai, but they have Bollywood! And call centres! Their culture is wired throughout the world. :-) Anyway, I still see lots of potential there. I believe you about the corruption, that's too bad. There seems to be a pretty modern sub-culture within the larger culture, though, valuing education, science, technology, etc. Maybe it's nowhere near majority, maybe it has no political power, but it still gives me some hope. Meanwhile, some in China are subject to basically thought-policing (e.g. bloggers who criticize the gov't, internet search censorship, etc.). That gives me the opposite of hope. (I know there are big problems in India too, you don't have to rub it in... :-( )

Edited 12/14/2015 23:03:34
relgion vs: 12/14/2015 23:45:05


Hitchslap
Level 56
Report
The Flying Spagetti Monster (Meatball and Parmesan Be Upon Him) is real yo. CNN confirmed it, His Noodly Appendage has been spotted on camera 4 months ago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eulZ21oJbu0
relgion vs: 12/15/2015 07:11:34


knyte
Level 55
Report
Don't wanna break the circlejerk but India's democracy also has pretty wide-reaching surveillance. Just read the Indian government's reaction to Snowden/PRISM. They are a democracy, sure, but they don't exactly share the sociopolitical values of the first world- like, you know, the first few parts of the Bill of Rights.
relgion vs: 12/15/2015 08:08:43


[Wolf] Relmcheatham
Level 56
Report
(I have only read the first post)


Atheists usually destroy Theists because alot of the smartest Atheists were Christian at one point, so they know both sides better compared to the Theist.
Posts 31 - 47 of 47   <<Prev   1  2  3