“This creature was truly different from all other creatures, because he was a creator as well as a creature”
— GK Chesterton
@micahredding
Rationalist, Futurist Christianity. Expanding, lasting life. Religion and the roots of scientific progress. Former musician, one-time world traveler, current Nashville-ian, Christian transhumanist @christiantranshumanism.org
“This creature was truly different from all other creatures, because he was a creator as well as a creature”
— GK Chesterton
My most embarrassing opinion:
The Scots-Irish actually did come closest to recovering the spirit of early Christianity
I spend most of my "social media" attention and posting budget at Substack these days
substack.com/@micahredding
In retrospect, this was the high point of civilization
youtu.be/JqnO40AGRSc?...
I’m kinda like an alternate history buff, except the history I believe in is the conventional history, lol
Asked ChatGPT who to interview, and it suggested me...so that's...flattering?
Jordan Daniel Wood covers the Cosmic Christology of Maximus Confessor, the secular and transhumanist reception of Christian ideas—Teilhard de Chardin, Frank Tipler, Julian Huxley and more.
youtu.be/huVz1u8a25U
Every day, I think how lucky I am to have a refrigerator with WiFi—so I can login and fix the settings it automatically screwed up overnight.
Installed a mosquito trap on my back porch.
Is this creating inexcusable amounts of insect suffering?
Neuralink and Faith—Noland Arbaugh's Spiritual Journey
(direct link, cause this is Bluesky!)
youtu.be/xw2Y258hCpU
I know this is a gag, but I’m glad you’re here
So if you try to erase enlightenment liberalism, it erases the connection to Christianity.
But if you center enlightenment liberalism, you center the connection to Christianity.
Lots of countries (England, etc) are explicitly, legally, Christian nations. America is not.
And that's because America was founded on enlightenment liberalism.
But enlightenment liberalism was a Christian philosophy.
"America was founded as a Christian nation" always seemed to me like an attempt to reject America's founding philosophy (enlightenment liberalism), or to ignore the deists.
But this is a paradoxical subject.
🤔
The modern Christian take on sex, does not match the ancient Christian take on sex.
This is a problem no one talks about.
Nashville to Yellowknife, Canada
Thinking about a road trip
Newest interview! Critical Rationalism and Religion with Bruce Nielson and Peter Johansen from the Theory of Anything Podcast
We explore Critical Rationalism, religion, faith and reason, many worlds theory, the omega point, and how it ALL connects.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gzml...
Which is silly, because you can just establish the category by definition.
"First cause"
"Greatest good"
"What we worship"
I mean, this is mostly what they do. The main question that actually arises is whether these things can be calculated or not. Is there a meaningful "greatest" or "first"?
Arguments for the existence of God typically use "God" as a placeholder, and avoid specifying who or what that God is.
This is kind of suspicious to me. It's like they push all the most interesting questions into a footnote, and just focus on establishing the conceptual category.
There are clearly aspects of human psychology that are isomorphic to demons.
I don’t know whether that’s “demythologizing” or not. They’re in our minds, but they do exist.
They should rebrand "Corporations" as "Cooperations"
The God who promises theosis is the God who makes sense as the Father of Jesus.
I really respect the kind of analytical, highly-differentiated thought you get in academics.
Except that, in a large number of cases, it seems clear people are not actually doing that, they're just hiding behind terminology.
The power of Eastern Orthodoxy is tradition.
The power of Catholicism is centralization.
The power of Protestantism is open-ended critique.
I've enjoyed exploring Dr. Allison's thesis on miracles and super-normal human capabilities
youtu.be/YRc0w6AHcRo?...
I find theosis compelling, not because I’m interested in possessing any particular attribute of God, but because I’m compelled by a God who wants to share all of his attributes with us.
A philosopher saying people don't get stuck, is interesting because it seems like people get into philosophy because they get stuck.
Sometimes the anticipations of prior eras sound like snake oil...
Because they succeeded more than we expected, and that leads us to expect dramatically more in the future.
The more I think about The Beach Boys, the more confused I am