31 DEC 2025 by ideonexus
Why Are Religious Services Unintelligible?
(4) The Church will expect you to attend at least one of its
services regularly, every Sunday, and with very, very few exceptions
these are universally abominable. In the first place they consist
almost exclusively of talk. We tell God what to do and what not to
do, and give him information about things which, if he is
omniscient, he already knows. We attempt to celebrate his glory
with doggerels and religious nursery rhymes called hymns, mostly
set to military or sentimental tunes. And then ...Folksonomies: religion
Folksonomies: religion
31 DEC 2025 by ideonexus
Heaven Into the Head, Or Head Into the Heavens
G. K. Chesterton once said that whereas the philosopher tries to get
the heavens into his head, the poet asks only to get his head into the
heavens. So when one asks, in today’s lingo, “Where’s your head
at?” it would be ideal to answer that it’s in heaven. The problem is
that most of us now live in cities where the view of heaven is
blocked by ceilings and smog. People don’t even realize that every
home can be a home with a view—the view of the sky—since we
are living on the ...Folksonomies: mindfulness
Folksonomies: mindfulness
21 DEC 2025 by ideonexus
Polygenesis in Fantasy
Tolkien’s explanations of the differences between Good and Evil humanity – that the former descended from those who had greatest contactand affinity with the Elves in ancient times – does not obviously relate to pseudo-scientific explanations of racial difference; it smacks more of religious constructs of a “chosen people.” Turning from Tolkien’s delineation of human groups to his other species, however, reveals the influence of theories of polygenesis, according to which differen...Folksonomies: fantasy critical theory
Folksonomies: fantasy critical theory
30 OCT 2025 by ideonexus
How the Tarot Works
The Tarot is where the past and the present meet, where pictures and stories come together—that is how it works its magic. We tell stories about our lives constantly—both to other people and ourselves. Just remembering what happened last night or talking about your day involve storytelling. What's more difficult is understanding what is going on below the surface of these stories. One of the most difficult things any of us can do is to get a perspective on our lives from outside of our co...Folksonomies: tarot
Folksonomies: tarot
07 OCT 2025 by ideonexus
Locke's Philosophical Criticism Destroyed the Institution...
We must note two aspects of Locke’s method of analysis. One is that it was primarily a method of criticism, a method which by means of analysis subjected to critical scrutiny the many complex ideas which prevail in a society, and which because of their abstruse nature, cause confusion and misunderstanding. Locke proposed that all such ideas be analyzed into their simple components and examined critically so that the degree of their validity might be determined. The other aspect for us to no...05 OCT 2025 by ideonexus
Locke Rejected Innate Ideas as a Defense of Arbitrary Aut...
The first target against which he directed his criticism was the doctrine of innate ideas. Since Locke s position was that all knowledge is derived ultimately from experience, it was altogether natural that he should repudiate this Platonic doctrine; but there was another reason for his determination to discredit it. The doctrine of innate ideas had become a weapon for the defense of arbitrary authority, of superstition, and of ridiculous theories. Men in authority argued that their actions w...05 OCT 2025 by ideonexus
Locke Divided Experience into Sensation and Reflection
In his exploration into the nature of belief, seen from the psychological point of view Locke divided experience into two categories—first, sensation, or perception of external objects, and second, reflection, the activity in which the self observes its own state of mind, its own feelings and thoughts. According to Locke all human experience is embraced in these two categories; but the second, reflection, is based in and arises from the first, sensation. Sense impression of the external wor...Folksonomies: philosophy epistemology
Folksonomies: philosophy epistemology
Locke believed every individual was capable of rational thought, and wanted to understand how individuals came to their beliefs.
05 OCT 2025 by ideonexus
Cartesian Methodology Applied to Personal Intellectual Gr...
...Cartesian methodology calls for intellectual individualism; it emphasizes reason as the common possession of all men. The reason that people disagree is that their reason has been perverted by the wrong kind of education, or poisoned by superstition, or vitiated by preoccupation. Descartes held that all men had equal and natural ability to make sound judgments, and to distinguish the true from the false, until and unless these abilities were crippled or stunted by improper education or by ...Folksonomies: philosophy epistemology
Folksonomies: philosophy epistemology
05 OCT 2025 by ideonexus
How Descartes Broke With Classical Thinking
Classical thinking had assigned different natures to different things—minerals had one nature, stars another, plants another. But Descartes discarded these distinctions and looked upon all things as being equal in nature. The mystical distinction among the natures of things thus disappeared. For example, respiration in the human body and the circulation of blood were no longer inexplicable, or virtually magic phenomena; both could now be treated in terms of extension and motion. The circula...Folksonomies: philosophy epistemology
Folksonomies: philosophy epistemology
25 SEP 2025 by ideonexus




