this post was submitted on 01 Feb 2024
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Humanities & Cultures

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[–] Vodulas@beehaw.org 3 points 9 months ago

A couple of these quotes come off as pretty condescending. I'm not sure if that is because of lack of context, or just a general failing of the author to see outside their worldview.

This seems to the worst offender.

We teach children how to measure and weigh, but fail to teach them how to revere, how to sense wonder and awe. Modern man fell into the trap of believing all enigmas can be solved and wonder is a form of ignorance. Mankind will not perish for want of information, but for want of appreciation.

So many people around me have an appreciation for life and pass on wonder to their children. I think it is even more prevalent in my non-religious friends.

The rest of them are not as bad, but still don't sit right with me.

What is, is more than what you see; we are unable to attain insight into the ultimate meaning and purpose of things. We live on the fringe of reality and hardly know how to reach the core. Inaccessible to us are the insights into the nature of ultimate reality.

The author may not realize it, but this is a situation they supposed the answer in advance as they criticized in the first quote. They pre-supposed the existence of an ultimate meaning or that there is an ultimate reality beyond our current understanding.

Even what is revealed is incomplete and in disguise.

I am not sure what they mean by this. Are they claiming there is a supernatural element to everything?

Awe is an act of insight into a meaning greater than ourselves. Knowledge is fostered by curiosity; wisdom is fostered by awe. Awe is the awareness of transcendent meaning; loss of awe is a great blockage to insight.

“The ineffable” is a synonym for hidden meaning rather than for absence of meaning, a dimension so real and sublime that it stuns our ability to adore it. All creative thinking comes out of an encounter with the unknown.

These are both just kind of word salad that is trying to be deep. I could see if it was meant to be poetry, but if it is meant to be philosophy it kind of fails.

It is a fact of profound significance that we can sense more than we can say.

This is a very bold claim. What exactly is it that we can sense but not vocalize?

The world as scrutinized and depicted by science is but a thin surface of the profoundly unknown.

This is the entire basis of science. Science wants to find out the unknown. It is based in curiosity.

I am not trying to criticize belief. As long as your beliefs don't infringe on other people's lives, I am a-ok with them. What I am criticizing is the author's view on non-spiritually minded folks. The quotes presented here make it seem like those of us that aren't spiritual lack an awe for the world around us, lack curiosity, and lack creativity. That is condescending as hell.

Like I said, I may be missing context, but the quotes as presented rub me the wrong way.