- 21 Feb 2019 16:13
#14989591
Technology has made it easier; but the size and scope of government started in "representative governments" long ago. The sheer amount of taxes, bureaucracy, and regulations in such nations is simply absurd. If the founding fathers knew what representative government would lead to; they wouldn't have fought the revolution.
I don't blame reason, but I do blame those who claimed to be basing their claims on reason rather than faith, or who disparaged faith as being the basis for tyranny. History has shown them not only to be hypocrites, but failures in regards to their claims.
That the proper use of reason happens to more align with those who never claimed it as their ultimate standard; namely the religious, is simply a delectable little irony of history in my opinion, but I would never say its a flaw in reasoning itself.
Bear in mind, I came into this thread as a mediating position between you and @SolarCross as I think your little spat on here is somewhat simplistic and counter-productive; since the three of us are probably the only three "generally pro-liberty" guys on the forum.
I would hardly call it equal, the 19th and 20th centuries created regimes with totalitarian powers that an Anglo-Saxon King could not have even conceived of, not in his wildest dreams. The "free" countries of this world have more control of the day-to-day lives of the citizenry than any previous regime in history before the advent of the revolutionary age.
Agree, once again, my post DID agree with you that reason should be the basis for determining political legitimacy. I NEVER said otherwise.
I am only noting the historical irony on the matter.
I would still say this is a bit simplistic; I would even argue that faith is the precondition of reason; Credo Ut Intelligam. BUT once again, the point is that all worldviews have unproven presuppositions; the religious are not unique in this; and this does not make them less "reasoned" per se.
But logic's universal nature is a metaphysical question where an appeal to logic to answer it would be circular by definition. Hence, if the answer is axiomatic or transcendental, then it is an appeal to an unproven, but necessary, presupposition. Which is my point; faith works in the same manner; its an unproven presupposition for the religious. This does not mean that such cannot be demonstrated, as axioms can be demonstrated, they just can't be "proven."
Well, if it rests on axioms, then it rests on faith of some kind; as axioms are by definition unproven, though necessary, assumptions.
Similarly, transcendental arguments seeks to demonstrate the existence of something as being a precondition for intelligibility; a manner of claim that is more or less arguing that some things are demonstrated as true in virtue of their universal necessity.
Hence (as an example), if God's existence were necessary for human thought to be intelligible; that would be an argument claiming that faith in the existence of God is a necessary precondition to reason. An argument like that would of course strongly disrupt the neat dichotomy of "faith" v. "reason."
Indeed, my own argument for God's existence is technically a type of transcendental argument; as my proof demonstrates that the Trinitarian God's existence is necessary for even the process of bare sensation to be intelligible.
My point in bringing that up is not to get into that argument specifically, but only to say that basing your worldview on unproven necessary assumptions is not to posit something fundamentally different than a faith-based position which argues for faith being the basis for reason as St. Augustine long ago argued and as many Christian apologists have maintained for over a millennia.
"It is when a people forget God that tyrants forge their chains. A vitiated state of morals... is incompatible with freedom."
- Patrick Henry
Sivad wrote:I don't know that government [in general] has become more tyrannically inclined but it has certainly become more capable of imposing tyranny, but that has nothing to do with culture or philosophy, that's all due to technological advancement.
Technology has made it easier; but the size and scope of government started in "representative governments" long ago. The sheer amount of taxes, bureaucracy, and regulations in such nations is simply absurd. If the founding fathers knew what representative government would lead to; they wouldn't have fought the revolution.
Sivad wrote:It's not fair to blame reason for lies, sophistry, and manipulation. Those are the enemies of reason. The most abusive forms of government since the Enlightenment can't really be considered reasonable by any stretch of the imagination. Reason has always guided us toward liberty, gulagism, fascism, imperialist crony capitalism, these are all products of madness.
I don't blame reason, but I do blame those who claimed to be basing their claims on reason rather than faith, or who disparaged faith as being the basis for tyranny. History has shown them not only to be hypocrites, but failures in regards to their claims.
That the proper use of reason happens to more align with those who never claimed it as their ultimate standard; namely the religious, is simply a delectable little irony of history in my opinion, but I would never say its a flaw in reasoning itself.
Bear in mind, I came into this thread as a mediating position between you and @SolarCross as I think your little spat on here is somewhat simplistic and counter-productive; since the three of us are probably the only three "generally pro-liberty" guys on the forum.
Sivad wrote:I would say the pseudo-rationalists and pseudo-skeptics have given us equally illegitimate government to their religious forbears.
I would hardly call it equal, the 19th and 20th centuries created regimes with totalitarian powers that an Anglo-Saxon King could not have even conceived of, not in his wildest dreams. The "free" countries of this world have more control of the day-to-day lives of the citizenry than any previous regime in history before the advent of the revolutionary age.
Sivad wrote:Not when you make the distinction between reason and sophistry.
Agree, once again, my post DID agree with you that reason should be the basis for determining political legitimacy. I NEVER said otherwise.
I am only noting the historical irony on the matter.
Sivad wrote:Well reason can be applied to faith(faith seeking understanding) and genuine faith is ultimately self-authenticating but faith is not predicated on reason and does not proceed on reason. Faith is in the heart, not in the head.
I would still say this is a bit simplistic; I would even argue that faith is the precondition of reason; Credo Ut Intelligam. BUT once again, the point is that all worldviews have unproven presuppositions; the religious are not unique in this; and this does not make them less "reasoned" per se.
Sivad wrote:I would say the laws of logic are self-evident and that logical contradictions are inconceivable so logic isn't even remotely a matter of faith.
But logic's universal nature is a metaphysical question where an appeal to logic to answer it would be circular by definition. Hence, if the answer is axiomatic or transcendental, then it is an appeal to an unproven, but necessary, presupposition. Which is my point; faith works in the same manner; its an unproven presupposition for the religious. This does not mean that such cannot be demonstrated, as axioms can be demonstrated, they just can't be "proven."
Sivad wrote:My worldview rests on self-evident axioms and rational skepticism.
Well, if it rests on axioms, then it rests on faith of some kind; as axioms are by definition unproven, though necessary, assumptions.
Similarly, transcendental arguments seeks to demonstrate the existence of something as being a precondition for intelligibility; a manner of claim that is more or less arguing that some things are demonstrated as true in virtue of their universal necessity.
Hence (as an example), if God's existence were necessary for human thought to be intelligible; that would be an argument claiming that faith in the existence of God is a necessary precondition to reason. An argument like that would of course strongly disrupt the neat dichotomy of "faith" v. "reason."
Indeed, my own argument for God's existence is technically a type of transcendental argument; as my proof demonstrates that the Trinitarian God's existence is necessary for even the process of bare sensation to be intelligible.
My point in bringing that up is not to get into that argument specifically, but only to say that basing your worldview on unproven necessary assumptions is not to posit something fundamentally different than a faith-based position which argues for faith being the basis for reason as St. Augustine long ago argued and as many Christian apologists have maintained for over a millennia.
"It is when a people forget God that tyrants forge their chains. A vitiated state of morals... is incompatible with freedom."
- Patrick Henry