PLAY PODCASTS
Jeremiah's Philosophical Argument with Jehovah

Jeremiah's Philosophical Argument with Jehovah

Monday Night Philosophy analyzes biblical roots of philosophical inquiry. A god and his prophet may disagree on tactics, but it's something else to disagree about goals. Is this the kind of disagreement that can lead to philosophical insight?

Commonwealth Club of California Podcast

March 12, 20191h 4m

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (traffic.megaphone.fm) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

Monday Night Philosophy analyzes the biblical roots of philosophical inquiry. Accepting your divinely ordained lot in life, as Job did (but ironically Lot did not), is often lauded in the Bible. A few dared negotiate with Jehovah (Abraham, Lot and Moses), and quite a few even tried to outsmart omniscience. But Jeremiah makes it clear he has a problem with the whole prophetic game, even as he was fulfilling his role as the messenger of dire and accurate prophecies. One element of his argument with Jehovah involves his passionate complaints about the uselessness of delivering precise but unpatriotic predictions. Even more fundamentally, Jeremiah's hope for a future where organized religion disappears, along with its crucial concepts of sin and punishment, expresses his emotional frustration with the ineffectiveness of Jehovah's ancient plan for instilling virtue. A god and his prophet might disagree on tactics, but it is something else to disagree about goals. Come hear why that is exactly the kind of fundamental disagreement that can lead to philosophical insights. MLF Organizer Name: George Hammond Notes: MLF, Humanities

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices