Belief in God is rational. Everything has a cause. So unless there is a first cause, then you would have an infinite regress. And then nothing could exist. Therefore there must be a first cause. Therefore God, the first cause, exists. QED.
17.7.22
General Robert E Lee. And the Union was voluntary. So it is like you have a marriage where both enter into the agreement voluntarily, and then one starts to abuse the other. Is there any question that one has the right to leave that arrangement? What right would the other party have to bring guns and cannon to the table to make the other party stay?
I was thinking about General Robert E Lee and his devotion to do what is right at all cost. So I thought about what was he thinking at the beginning of the Civil War? And it occurred to me that he must not have been thinking about secession as much as the Constitution itself.(And as far as slavery went, the Supreme Court had decided the issue based on the Constitution in the Dred Scot decision. For the Constitution itself never addressed the issue so automatically it went under the 9th and tenth ammendment that everything not addressed in the Constitution goes to the states.). So as far as anyone could see, the North was trampling's the rights of the states. And the Union was voluntary. So it is like you have a marriage where both enter into the agreement voluntarily, and then one starts to abuse the other. Is there any question that one has the right to leave that arrangement? What right would the other party have to bring guns and cannon to the table to make the other party stay?
15.7.22
Rav Israel Salanter began the Musar Movement with the awareness that to be a mensch [good character] is a main thing-- even though this might not be clear from a straight reading of the Oral and Written Law. to be aware of the importance of 'midot tovot' good character really takes faith in the Rishonim. But this message has been lost in time. Even in the great Litvak yeshivot where Musar is learned, this emphasis on good character traits has been lost while religious fanaticism has taken its place [or all sorts of other weird ideas]. What ever happened to straight Torah? The best idea therefore is to renew the Musar Movement--but this time not to mix it with foreign ideas. Just straight Musar of the Rishonim [and the books of the disciples of Rav Israel Salanter that go along with that approach.]
And remember what the Rif and Rosh wrote about "Outside books" ספרים חיצונים [that one loses his portion in the next world by reading]-books that explain the Torah in ways other than the Midrash of the sages. Most religious books come under this category.
Why Rishonim are important is that in philosophy and logic the Middle Ages excelled in rigorous logic even though the axioms were often faulty. After the Middle Ages even the best of authors were often guilty of circular logic..
13.7.22
Even though there is a lot to be learned in the Litvak world, I think that the essential flaw is making use of Torah for the sake of making a living. But if that would be all that was problematic I would say one could depend on the Beit Yoseph in his commentary on the Rambam where he defends this practice. But where I find the problem is that it leads to the attitude: "I deserve your money because in my merit the whole world stands". I mean, this sort of odd attitude of the religious that they are somehow superior beings that the rest of us low-lives are supposed to support.
[However I must make an exception for the great roshei yeshivot that I knew, Rav Friefeld of Shar Yashuv, and Rav Shmuel Berenbaum of the Mir.--who were really sincere and dedicated to Torah for its own sake.]
review once per day for a long extended period
12.7.22
I do not see anything wrong with slavery. You have it in Exodus and in Leviticus. In Exodus it discusses the laws concerning a Hebrew slave. Six years he serves and is let go in the seventh. In the end of Leviticus, it also goes into the laws of a Hebrew slave that sells himself in order to pay for a a debt. Then it also brings the law of a gentile slave--who must not be let go of.
In the New Testament also this issue is brought up several times. There the exhortation is for slaves not to rebel but rather to serve their masters faithfully. No where is it suggested that a owner of slaves should let them go.
Beside this I might mention that one who does a favor for someone who does not appreciate it is as he threw a stone at Markulit, an idol that its worship was by throwing stones at it. Few black people feel gratitude towards the USA. Just the opposite. Most are determined to destroy the USA.