Message from @Revolt Against Everything

Discord ID: 690018382606893063


2020-03-19 01:48:10 UTC  

I see, what about the different interpretations?
Can it be interpreted differently that the Bible does condemn slavery?

2020-03-19 01:50:21 UTC  

Now that i thought about it, maids and butlers are quite similar to slaves

2020-03-19 01:54:01 UTC  

There is an argument that slavery is less dignified than freedom, and it would be charitable to not take them as a slave.

2020-03-19 01:54:31 UTC  

Yes of course there is that

2020-03-19 01:55:14 UTC  

I remember that American African guy who has told me about how his great great grandfather used to love his owner

2020-03-19 01:55:52 UTC  

Both the Old and New Testament condemn slave trading and such.
```Deuteronomy 24:7
[7]If any man be found soliciting his brother of the children of Israel, and selling him shall take a price, he shall be put to death, and thou shalt take away the evil from the midst of thee.```

2020-03-19 01:55:59 UTC  

Amen

2020-03-19 01:56:50 UTC  

Say, will there be another one like Saint Thomas Aquinas?

2020-03-19 01:58:36 UTC  

its very hard to argue against Aquinas

2020-03-19 01:59:25 UTC  

Aquinas was a man that brought huge theology to The Church regarding God and all

2020-03-19 02:00:13 UTC  

I mean, I think Aquinas the was last Saint that brought that much to the table. There was Augustine and Anselm and such before him. After him I'm not sure if there was anyone better.

2020-03-19 02:01:26 UTC  

There have appeared either people that have brought ideas that have been condemned or people that realized their "unsual" ideals have been brought up and kinda accepted

2020-03-19 02:01:39 UTC  

Nothing is truly new under the sun, they said to themselves

2020-03-19 02:02:55 UTC  

Palamas is sort of like the Orthodox Aquinas

2020-03-19 02:03:38 UTC  

Gregory Palamas

2020-03-19 02:03:52 UTC  

Ye

2020-03-19 02:05:06 UTC  

Personally I think the EE introduces a composition into the Godhead, but that's something that I leave to those more well read on that area of the theology

2020-03-19 02:05:29 UTC  

Thats where i kinda stepped in

2020-03-19 02:05:33 UTC  

<:sniff:591452013682753536>

2020-03-19 02:06:22 UTC  

I'm that guy who spend their time wondering about God and His Power, all the claims about paradoxes and such

2020-03-19 02:06:42 UTC  

Just to then find himself digging endlessly into it most of the times

2020-03-19 02:07:04 UTC  

Well I'm huge into scholasticism, just specifically the EE is something I havent read much on

2020-03-19 02:07:17 UTC  

If I'm addressing the orthodox I'll debate the filioque or such

2020-03-19 02:08:12 UTC  

Most people would just say "God is unconprehensible" and leave it at that
Old me didnt leave it at that, i dig further and further

2020-03-19 02:09:23 UTC  

I then found myself confident enough to answer questions like "how does God's Omniscient will allow my Free-Will to work" and such

2020-03-19 02:09:55 UTC  

Oh hey did you know there's a way of thought that makes free will and determinism non-contradictory?

2020-03-19 02:10:13 UTC  

Can you tell me then?

2020-03-19 02:10:25 UTC  

Because i have my own case here

2020-03-19 02:11:02 UTC  

Oh yeah it's actually a very interesting argument

2020-03-19 02:11:45 UTC  

On a practical level we could say that the universe is ultimately deterministic, because everything has to have a cause, and for every cause there is always another cause until the first cause

2020-03-19 02:13:17 UTC  

But, when making decisions as humans, we do not feel those constraints; we are unable to. Every decision we make is influenced by our environment, our genetics, etc. But we are not the subject upon which all those factors are acting, we are the sum total of those influences, and we are in turn taking our actions as free beings.

2020-03-19 02:13:44 UTC  

Therefore this argument states that a man is not independent of the factors that influence him, he is in fact the sum total of those factors, and that is why he is free.

2020-03-19 02:15:18 UTC  

But yeah, there are some arguements that claim refute it
But the reason why i said "claim" because the refute can be refuted if we were to take the Freedom Action upon Situations arguement

2020-03-19 02:16:00 UTC  

I do not understand what you said

2020-03-19 02:16:08 UTC  

I personally find that argument rather unconvincing and similar to the Lockean explanation. If the causal laws that determine the flow of water are determining your actions it isn't free will imo.

2020-03-19 02:16:28 UTC  

@Eoppa Do you reject determinism?

2020-03-19 02:17:06 UTC  

Cause and Effect

2020-03-19 02:17:12 UTC  

Not necessarily, I define my causal laws that everything that is in act receives its act from itself or from another.

2020-03-19 02:17:25 UTC  

I've taken a Thomistic approach that I sort of developed myself

2020-03-19 02:19:18 UTC  

In that there are plenty of things in the world that are more qualia than a physical relation. In the same way God can cause our free will by causing it's existence, yet we maintain our own causal power that isn't necessarily determined by that initial cause by God.

2020-03-19 02:20:56 UTC  

Comparing God, Time itself and all that we could and could never thought of will never be anything big if it were to be presenced