- June 7th, 2018, 6:42 pm
#312847
Belinda, I don't think we can assume that nature - Spinoza's god - is lacking in mentality. It might be, but an entity much smaller than us would not perceive us to be conscious either, or even necessarily alive. When captive within a system, there are aspects of containing systems that can't be probed.
I think much of the confusion relates to the Maslow's hammer concept, to quote: "I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail". Pareidolia is an example, where we can see faces and eyes in almost everything. So the dynamics of entities that are ostensibly without mentality, or have a completely different kind of flexible complexity, are reflexively attributed with humanlike minds and personalities by many. As with everything, how strong the projection tendency is will vary, the variations probably mappable as a Bell curve, and may well correlate with belief.
Brain dynamics and subtle interactions with environment can thus be interpreted as "speaking with God", and maybe in a sense that is what those interactions are? Or maybe not? (After all, I'm an agnostic :).
Sometimes I have the impression that theists and atheists alike are perceiving more similarly than they realise and simply describing their perceptions differently. To a fair extent I find a disconnect with theist and atheist language. Theists usually tend towards metonymy and other poetic devices, rhetoric and regularly use the terminology and language of ancient mythology. By contrast, atheists tend to use modern technical and scientific language.
The difference is so marked on forums that this use of language, with a few exceptions, might be considered a signifier of group membership - like accents or in-group jargon and slang.