Spiritual Leo
On Holiday
- MBTI
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- Thinker
In William James's lecture, 'The Reality of the Unseen,' he presents an argument which clearly declares that humans naturally have a tendency to find unseen realities more real than concrete realities. As James begins his lecture, he discusses some of the psychological peculiarities that associate with the belief of objects that we cannot see. As he furthers his argument, he informs us that, "All our attitudes, moral, practical, or emotional, as well as religious, are due to the "objects" of our consciousness, the things which we believe to exist, whether really or ideally, along with our-selves(James,61)." From this we can understand that people can believe in an abstract thought just as strong as they can believe in something concrete. A memory of an experience, for example, whether good or bad, often brings more feeling to the individual then the experience itself. He furthers his argument by presenting a variety of different beliefs, experiences, and objects, but let us begin with Immanuel Kant's doctrine before we go into any further detail.
Immanuel Kant holds a different view on the subject which objects what William James is presenting to us. Kant's belief is that beliefs of God, after-life, and the soul are just objects without knowledge. In fact, he believed that words like God, after-life, and soul offer nothing significant. I disagree with mister Kant on this one.
I don't have much time to type, so I will end with a small paragraph.
Throughout the argument, it becomes clear, to me, that all people have abstract thoughts and without abstract thoughts, we couldn't conceive of anything to be beautiful, significant, or just. Clearly, then, abstractions are needed to conceive of anything, whether it be real or ideal.
In my first year of college, I wrote a long ass paper about this and ended up pulling off the A in the course, but I'd like to here some feedback from some INFJ'S instead of my professor. This is more like a summary because I can't seem to find the paper, but I still have the book. The Varieties of Religious Experience by William James.
Thank you-
Enjoy your Easter tomorrow
Immanuel Kant holds a different view on the subject which objects what William James is presenting to us. Kant's belief is that beliefs of God, after-life, and the soul are just objects without knowledge. In fact, he believed that words like God, after-life, and soul offer nothing significant. I disagree with mister Kant on this one.
I don't have much time to type, so I will end with a small paragraph.
Throughout the argument, it becomes clear, to me, that all people have abstract thoughts and without abstract thoughts, we couldn't conceive of anything to be beautiful, significant, or just. Clearly, then, abstractions are needed to conceive of anything, whether it be real or ideal.
In my first year of college, I wrote a long ass paper about this and ended up pulling off the A in the course, but I'd like to here some feedback from some INFJ'S instead of my professor. This is more like a summary because I can't seem to find the paper, but I still have the book. The Varieties of Religious Experience by William James.
Thank you-
Enjoy your Easter tomorrow