Spinoza's god, is not "him"; has no personality; not conscious; no volition; no need nor desire, nor conscience. God is nature.
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Felix wrote: ↑September 28th, 2019, 5:22 pmMans: Although discussion about pantheism takes us out from the main topic, it brings up the question of whether each of the elements and things in nature is a part of God? Do pantheists believe this?Not far from the main topic.... The panthesis is that God is omnipresent, so everything would be immanent in Him. However, the explicit meaning of that statement would depend on one's definition of "God." For example, if He is defined as Consciousness or Intelligence than It would be immanent in material reality, i.e., Consciousness/Intelligence would be manifest in it, but if not equally so, we would have the material polarities of conscious/unconscious, good/evil, etc.
If God was both Omnipresent and Omniscient, such polarities would not manifest, because they reflect a lack of consciousness or awareness of wholeness. Either way, the idea of omnipotence can be dispensed with.
The panthesis is that God is omnipresent, so everything would be immanent in HimBut your definition about pantheism has a key difference with the below definition that I found in Wikipedia:
Consul wrote: ↑September 28th, 2019, 9:53 pmThere's a distinction between pantheism and panentheism!"Panentheism considers God and the world to be inter-related with the world being in God and God being in the world."
I researched about pantheism and the final result was this definition: "Pantheism is the view that everything is part of an all-encompassing, immanent God."That definition is for panentheism not pantheism. Pantheism is the view that everything is God or Nature.
Although discussion about pantheism takes us out from the main topic, but it brings up this question that whether each on the elements and things in the nature is a part of God? Do pantheists believe in such the belief?
whether each on the elements and things in the nature is a part of God? Do pantheists believe in such the belief?Yes, they do. So do panentheists. They also believe that each minutest thing is a necessary thing.
Felix wrote: ↑September 29th, 2019, 3:29 amThank you, Consul, but I have doubts about the accuracy of that definition. How can God be identical to the material Universe? That's completely redundant, t'would make God superfluous. Panentheism makes more sense but it too circumscribes God if it asserts that he is only material substance. That doesn't add up.Anything can be called a god or God. For example, there's "hylotheism", according to which God = Matter; but it's certainly just a pseudotheism, a theism in name only. Equally, as Schopenhauer says, "pantheism is only a euphemism for atheism."
Pantheism is the view that everything is God or Nature.What does this mean? Do pantheists separate God and nature as two independent existence? May you interpret the quote and explain more?
Consul (quoting Schopenhauer) - For this demands a world-cause that is not only different from the world, but is intelligent, that is to say, knows and wills, and so is personal and consequently also individual; it is only such a cause that is indicated by the word 'God'.Franklin Merrell-Wolff makes the same point: he says that since all entities are derivative, a personal God would be too.
As for panentheism, if it regards God as a nonspatial, immaterial substance,Among the theorems and axioms of Spinozan panentheism is that we understand God or nature according to two perspectives; 1. eternity and 2. temporality.
Sculptor1 wrote: ↑September 28th, 2019, 6:33 pm The whole point of Spinoza is that "his god" is no goad at all.I agree with what you mean. However this is not "the whole point of Spinoza's god" . There is a lot more including the ethical and scientific import.
Spinoza's god, is not "him"; has no personality; not conscious; no volition; no need nor desire, nor conscience. God is nature.
Belindi wrote: ↑September 30th, 2019, 7:43 amNot sure about "scientific". Unless you are referring to the "geometric method".Sculptor1 wrote: ↑September 28th, 2019, 6:33 pm The whole point of Spinoza is that "his god" is no goad at all.I agree with what you mean. However this is not "the whole point of Spinoza's god" . There is a lot more including the ethical and scientific import.
Spinoza's god, is not "him"; has no personality; not conscious; no volition; no need nor desire, nor conscience. God is nature.
Darshan wrote:Earthellism answers is that God is not here on earthell. God is in heaven and not here. God is omnipotent in heaven and God's love radiates here on earthell where God is only omnibenevolent here....Of all the various ideas as to what constitutes heaven and hell, this Earthellism thing seems to be among the most understandable in terms of human history on the planet Earth. Since at least anciet Greek times, people have looked at the heavens (the movements across the sky of the sun, moon, planets and stars) and noted the contrast with the messy, chaotic, dangerous world of hunger and predation on the surface of the Earth. It seems to me easy to understand how one would do that, see the predictability and precision of the movements of those heavenly bodies, and see that as a metaphor for a perfect realm in which humans could somehow dwell forever with no hunger, pain or fear.
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