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Greatest I am

(235 posts)
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 07:26 AM Sep 2018

Satan gave man love. Was it worth the hate?

Satan gave man love. Was it worth the hate?

Adam thought so. He instantly and without argument or hesitation ate of that knowledge when Eve offered love to Adam.

Without Satan causing Original Sin, mankind could no know of love or hate as love and hate are subject to being good or evil.

Would you do as Adam did?

Was Satan right in opening our eyes to love and hate?

Should we venerate Satan more than Yahweh who tried to deny mankind love?

Regards
DL

47 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Satan gave man love. Was it worth the hate? (Original Post) Greatest I am Sep 2018 OP
"Hail Hydra" qazplm135 Sep 2018 #1
I read the tale of Forbidden Fruit as the moment that humans rejected the role of pets. Girard442 Sep 2018 #2
I read it as the authors, ie priests, telling everyone they should obey unconditionally muriel_volestrangler Sep 2018 #47
Were Adam and Eve real people? trotsky Sep 2018 #3
Personally, I don't care. I don't read any scripture as divinely inspired or as a history book... TreasonousBastard Sep 2018 #6
Probably the best way to look at it marylandblue Sep 2018 #7
The OP speaks as if they were. trotsky Sep 2018 #22
Ancient argument-- can there be good without evil to compare it to? TreasonousBastard Sep 2018 #4
Buddhism, Hinduism, and Zoroasterism all acknowledge the essential role what we call "evil" plays Nitram Sep 2018 #9
Yes, I'm aware of that, and when I first heard it, a lot of things became clearer... TreasonousBastard Sep 2018 #13
Well put. I lived 21 years in Japan, and married a Japanese woman. Nitram Sep 2018 #15
Just curious, where are you located? masmdu Sep 2018 #27
Charlottesville, Virginia. Nitram Sep 2018 #43
Such a sweet fairy tale, filled with love, understanding, relationship building... Ferrets are Cool Sep 2018 #5
Reality is not sweet, it is filled with love, understanding, relationship building... Nitram Sep 2018 #10
To be fair, the bald man didn't actually send any bears Mariana Sep 2018 #21
Thank you for the correction. Ferrets are Cool Sep 2018 #30
Exactly. God could have told Elisha to get a grip. Mariana Sep 2018 #31
Why is love and hate dependent on good and evil? marylandblue Sep 2018 #8
I rather doubt that animals feel hate, as we know it. I suspect what they feel is directly Nitram Sep 2018 #11
I have seen it in dogs marylandblue Sep 2018 #12
Dogs are pack animals, and their behavior reflects that. Nitram Sep 2018 #14
Our notions of good and evil may be no more than sophisticated pack behavior marylandblue Sep 2018 #16
Yes, I'm certain we are hard wired for some pack behavior. But as cultural-anthropologists Nitram Sep 2018 #17
Chimpanzees fight wars and are worse than us marylandblue Sep 2018 #18
Chimpanzees are not pack animals. Nitram Sep 2018 #19
The differences between pack animals and animals MineralMan Sep 2018 #35
A troop of Chimpanzees engages in social behavior that is exponentially more complex than Nitram Sep 2018 #42
As are people Major Nikon Sep 2018 #46
hate is too strong qazplm135 Sep 2018 #39
From your posts Voltaire2 Sep 2018 #41
Voltaire, I'm not sure to whom you were addressing your comment above, but... Nitram Sep 2018 #44
It was you. Voltaire2 Sep 2018 #45
Do animals experience those emotions, guillaumeb Sep 2018 #29
Research shows other mammals seem to experience the same basic emotions we do marylandblue Sep 2018 #32
The key word is, of course, "seem". guillaumeb Sep 2018 #34
No matter the qualifier or lack thereof I put, you would have argued the point marylandblue Sep 2018 #36
I have read a little. guillaumeb Sep 2018 #37
Read more then, and think a little too marylandblue Sep 2018 #38
Well, now, what research have you read on that subject, guillaumeb? MineralMan Sep 2018 #33
I'll ask Zeus and get back to you. SamKnause Sep 2018 #20
It's just a story. A story told around campfires by MineralMan Sep 2018 #23
Ooga Booga. Iggo Sep 2018 #24
I think cavemen knew right and wrong. LakeArenal Sep 2018 #25
Pure fantasy and fiction. masmdu Sep 2018 #26
I prefer the Santa Claus myth. Corvo Bianco Sep 2018 #28
Hail Santa! nt uriel1972 Sep 2018 #40

Girard442

(6,401 posts)
2. I read the tale of Forbidden Fruit as the moment that humans rejected the role of pets.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 07:38 AM
Sep 2018

Satan told Eve that she and Adam would be on a par with God if she partook of the fruit and she went for it. If I were God, I'd be secretly proud that my children had grown up, but he didn't seem to take it that way.

muriel_volestrangler

(102,483 posts)
47. I read it as the authors, ie priests, telling everyone they should obey unconditionally
Mon Sep 17, 2018, 05:46 PM
Sep 2018

the god which they just happen to be the sole mouthpieces for.

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
6. Personally, I don't care. I don't read any scripture as divinely inspired or as a history book...
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:12 AM
Sep 2018

but more as a philosophical investigation.

Kind of like the best science fiction.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
7. Probably the best way to look at it
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:36 AM
Sep 2018

And perhaps, at least on unconscious level, the people at the time understood it they way too. They were looking for meaning in a bleak and dangerous world, so their God is loving but dangerous. Sort of like an abusive relationship.

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
4. Ancient argument-- can there be good without evil to compare it to?
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:09 AM
Sep 2018

A common Judeo-Christian view is that God allowed the temptation of Eve in order to give us free will. After all, if you don't know anything but worship and obedience, what's the point of it?

It means a lot more when you choose it. The thinking is that God's ultimate creation was given choice to see which way it would go. Not so well at times, ergo the Flood. But eventually he seems to have given up on us.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
9. Buddhism, Hinduism, and Zoroasterism all acknowledge the essential role what we call "evil" plays
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:48 AM
Sep 2018

in the dialectic we call reality. The Taoists call good and evil Yang and Yin, which have no meaning without the other to complete them.

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
13. Yes, I'm aware of that, and when I first heard it, a lot of things became clearer...
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:04 AM
Sep 2018

I rarely mention them, though, because I don't come from that background. I am more comfortable speaking from a Christian point of view, even though I don't believe much of it. I was just brought up that way.

I've seen is a lot of Jewish thought along those lines and would like to know more. I've found a lot of ancient wisdom in Judaism that doesn't seem to reach the rest of the world.

Anyway, religion is a lot like the elephant and the blind men. Everyone has a piece of the truth, but the whole thing evades them.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
15. Well put. I lived 21 years in Japan, and married a Japanese woman.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:11 AM
Sep 2018

I accompanied her to services at the family's Buddhist temple, and went on Buddhist meditation retreats with her. I'm not a Buddhist, but there are many things about Buddhism that resonate deeply with me. I'm not a Christian any more, either, but I love the message of forgiveness, compassion, and service to the poor and the sick that Jesus taught his disciples.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
43. Charlottesville, Virginia.
Sat Sep 15, 2018, 11:18 AM
Sep 2018

My wife's family is from Kumagawa in Fukushima, but she grew up in Tokyo.

Ferrets are Cool

(21,957 posts)
5. Such a sweet fairy tale, filled with love, understanding, relationship building...
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:12 AM
Sep 2018

incest, murder, hate, racism, death and dire warnings. Much better than Hans Christian Anderson.
I especially love the compassionate story where an old man sent bears into a town to kill all the inhabitants, even the children, because they mocked him.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
10. Reality is not sweet, it is filled with love, understanding, relationship building...
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:51 AM
Sep 2018

incest, murder, hate, racism, death and dire warnings. Good people are killed along with the bad in natural disasters, disease, and at the hands of other people. It's just an attempt to understand reality as it is rather than as we wish it was.

Mariana

(15,118 posts)
21. To be fair, the bald man didn't actually send any bears
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:41 AM
Sep 2018

to tear the children who made fun of him to pieces. God did that.

Ferrets are Cool

(21,957 posts)
30. Thank you for the correction.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 12:33 PM
Sep 2018

All he did was curse them. God did the tearing apart of the children using the bears as his pawns.

In this setting, as Elisha approached Bethel, no less than 42 “little children” came “out of the city, and mocked him, and said unto him, Go up, thou bald head; go up, thou bald head” (verse 23).

Elisha “turned back, and looked on them, and cursed them in the name of the Lord.” Then “there came forth two she bears out of the wood, and tare forty and two children of them” (verse 24).

Mariana

(15,118 posts)
31. Exactly. God could have told Elisha to get a grip.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 12:44 PM
Sep 2018

Why is God indulging such a ridiculous temper tantrum from his prophet? You'd think a man of God ought to be able to deal with taunting from little children, without demanding that God kill them for it.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
8. Why is love and hate dependent on good and evil?
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:41 AM
Sep 2018

Animals experience the emotions of love and hate, but they don't seem to have a concept of good and evil. Or do they?

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
11. I rather doubt that animals feel hate, as we know it. I suspect what they feel is directly
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 08:55 AM
Sep 2018

related to survival: fear causes a fight or flight response. The fight response might look like anger or hate to us, but I think it is much more impersonal than that. As for love, it sure looks like love, so I won't speculate.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
12. I have seen it in dogs
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:04 AM
Sep 2018

Dogs definitely seem to feel love, as all dog owners can attest. But sometimes a dog takes a dislike to another dog even without any obvious initial threat. They just start acting aggressive towards one another every time they see the other. Sometimes the other dog doesn't respond aggressively, it just seems to wonder why the other dog hates it.

Also, I think in humans, hate is usually based on fear. If someone makes us fearful enough, we start to hate them.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
14. Dogs are pack animals, and their behavior reflects that.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:07 AM
Sep 2018

They see relationships in terms of hierarchy, and their place in that hierarchy. When two dogs are competing for ascendancy, they will have a very uneasy, and sometimes violent, relationship. If one of the dogs submits to the other, peace is restored (unless one walks too close to the other when he's eating!).

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
16. Our notions of good and evil may be no more than sophisticated pack behavior
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:12 AM
Sep 2018

Good is what the pack and its leader says is good. Evil is what they say is evil. Certain things are always evil - like unlimited killing within the pack, because no pack could survive that. Other things may vary, like how you react to other packs.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
17. Yes, I'm certain we are hard wired for some pack behavior. But as cultural-anthropologists
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:17 AM
Sep 2018

have pointed out, we are far more murderous than any pack animal. If an animal in a pack submits to another by lying down with the neck exposed, it is virtually impossible for the other animal to kill them. Humans do not have that hard-wired into their brain.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
18. Chimpanzees fight wars and are worse than us
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:21 AM
Sep 2018

They will tear each other apart and never accept surrender.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
19. Chimpanzees are not pack animals.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 09:23 AM
Sep 2018

Very complex social interactions compared to dogs and wolves. Just like us.

MineralMan

(147,578 posts)
35. The differences between pack animals and animals
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 02:37 PM
Sep 2018

that form social groups are very difficult to describe, really. Social animals, like chimps and humans, are related to the pack animals, but are more intelligent, generally, and so relate to each other in more complicated ways. The two types of organization are, however, related in many ways, as well.

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
42. A troop of Chimpanzees engages in social behavior that is exponentially more complex than
Sat Sep 15, 2018, 11:15 AM
Sep 2018

Last edited Tue Sep 18, 2018, 09:25 AM - Edit history (1)

that of a pack of wolves.

Some excerpts from the article at the link below:

Family relationships are vital to chimpanzees. They live in extended family groups of as many as 20-120 individuals. They have a fission-fusion social organization in that they break off into smaller interchangeable groups and periodically come together. The hunter-gatherer lifestyle of early human communities is thought to resemble that of chimpanzees.

Chimpanzees acknowledge and respect a hierarchy within their groups. Dominance relationships are influenced by alliances, and coalitions are formed by males—chimpanzee politics.

Mothers and sons typically have lifelong bonds, as do other individuals within an extended social group. Upon reaching sexual maturity, females migrate to neighboring communities while males stay in their natal group. Sometimes females will migrate to mate but return to their natal group. Because chimpanzees have babies only once every five or six years, mothers are able to nurture and teach their children intimately. Babies are not weaned until they are about five years old, and remain close to their mothers for the first decade of their lives.

http://www.releasechimps.org/chimpanzees/chimpanzee-society

Voltaire2

(14,715 posts)
41. From your posts
Sat Sep 15, 2018, 08:36 AM
Sep 2018

I think you are making a couple of claims:

1. Human subjective experience is categorically different than (all?) other animals.
2. Other animals are “hard wired” and do not have subjective experiences of emotions.

Is my understanding correct?

Nitram

(24,611 posts)
44. Voltaire, I'm not sure to whom you were addressing your comment above, but...
Sat Sep 15, 2018, 11:30 AM
Sep 2018

I would agree with #1 except I wouldn't say "all" because I believe the great apes may also experience emotions that are closer to ours than other animals. I would disagree with #2. Insects, for example, are totally hard-wired with, I would posit, no emotions and no learning behavior(or extremely rudimentary learning behavior). I think all mammals, and probably birds and perhaps even reptiles, probably have some form of emotion, although without the self-consciousness that distinguishes our experience of emotion. We are aware of emotions such as love, hate, sadness as we are having them. I doubt that any but the great apes share that distinction.

Voltaire2

(14,715 posts)
45. It was you.
Sat Sep 15, 2018, 02:56 PM
Sep 2018

You’ve clarified that you don’t believe (2). As far as (1) goes, more and more other animals are passing theory of mind tests that are generally considered to be good evidence of subjective conscious experience. It ain’t just apes.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
29. Do animals experience those emotions,
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 12:05 PM
Sep 2018

or is that your interpretation of what their motivation must be?

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
32. Research shows other mammals seem to experience the same basic emotions we do
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 01:53 PM
Sep 2018

Last edited Fri Sep 14, 2018, 02:23 PM - Edit history (1)

There is a large and growing body of literature on this.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
36. No matter the qualifier or lack thereof I put, you would have argued the point
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 02:44 PM
Sep 2018

Last edited Fri Sep 14, 2018, 03:21 PM - Edit history (1)

I put the word "seem" solely for your benefit. I think the research actually proves it, but I thought if I said that, you'd argue it.

Go review the research and get back to us when you've come up to speed. The research literature also defines the basic emotions. It's interesting research, but I am not competent enough to explain it to you.

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
37. I have read a little.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 02:50 PM
Sep 2018

And from my limited understanding, the basic emotions relate mainly to more instinctive behavior.

Anger is understandable on a purely physical level.
Fear the same. Fear of the dark.
Surprise the same. The surprise of a prey animal upon seeing a predator.
Happiness and sadness are things that we can infer upon observing a non-verbal animal. Is a dog happy that he is being groomed, or is it simply a reaction to a physically pleasurable act?

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
38. Read more then, and think a little too
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 03:14 PM
Sep 2018

Your example of a dog being groomed is a strange one for any one familiar with dogs. Dogs all react differently to being groomed. On the other hand, dogs all act the same when they see their owner, and it could not possibly be physical pleasure.

MineralMan

(147,578 posts)
33. Well, now, what research have you read on that subject, guillaumeb?
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 02:09 PM
Sep 2018

Do tell. There is a good deal of it, actually. You will not find it at religiousnews.com, though. If that's where you do your research, you are not gaining much knowledge.

MineralMan

(147,578 posts)
23. It's just a story. A story told around campfires by
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 10:42 AM
Sep 2018

nomadic tribes. There was no Adam nor Eve. No Satan. No Yahweh. They're all just characters in a campfire story.

The story tellers weren't there. Not one of them. It's a decent story about origins, but that's all.

Mythology.

LakeArenal

(29,804 posts)
25. I think cavemen knew right and wrong.
Fri Sep 14, 2018, 11:24 AM
Sep 2018

As Hawking and DeGrasse-Tyson say,

Existence or lack of spiritual beings is irrelevant to evolution.

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