(January 13, 2016 at 11:03 am)wallym Wrote: I don't see a need to believe anything has true value.
When we do a good action, for example, a courageous one, does it can inherited or does it's value just matter how much we appreciate the act or others appreciate? Or does it actually increase the objective value of who we are? You will notice, you believe people's good actions inherit part of them. When you do a good act, you are in a state. That state is not lost but is inherited to the value/scale/measurement of your soul.
This is one of the evidences of it. Surely one who perceives our true value and makes us inherit the actions exists.
We appreciate actions because we believe in the value of the state of the person was in, not merely out of utility. We appreciate the love, the generosity or the courage of the person for example in the state. We don't simply assign value to it, but we believe there is a value to it, and we praise it, and then we acknowledge that person has inherited that action. This is our nature. We all act like this even if we don't acknowledge it outwardly. This is how we act. It's like we all acknowledge the spiritual world, it's system, and it's Lord but are playing pretend I don't see nothing all because it's not detected by the five senses, but is perception within our souls.