Belindi wrote: ↑February 11th, 2023, 9:36 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 10th, 2023, 3:18 pm
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 10th, 2023, 12:46 pm
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑February 8th, 2023, 9:51 am
I commented that philosophers considering God must consider a 'typical' or 'averaged-out' God, and not use any particular conception of God. [Unless our intention is to consider one particular interpretation, of course.] This is in contrast to the individual believer, who does have a very particular idea of the God they believe in.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 8th, 2023, 4:02 pm
Averaging out is dicey. The universe's deity supply appears to be much like its energy supply - when you average all the deities out, they equal zero. If you look at all creeds, there are almost no universals, which is why there are so many different notions. You end up analysing a model of a deity or deities that no one believes in, where your proofs will be readily dismissed by any theist as regards their own deity.
It's not just about the particular qualities that people give to their deity. Gods, like us us, are generally best defined with a collection of qualities that makes us unique, not particular qualities we share with others.
Hmm. I suggest that, in the case of God, there can be no "analysis" — there is no data after all, no evidence to analyse! — and therefore no "proofs", and no firm and justified conclusions.
Theologians may beg to differ :) One can analyse any character of mythology. Zeus, Odin, Yahweh, Buddha etc. The only one you need to be careful about is Allah because some idiot Islamic wannabe might try to kill you to earn his place in heaven with seventy-two virgins (who are presumably in hell).
These are all gods that someone has defined. Muhammad is not called The Holy Prophet for any superficial reason. Muhammad is said to have received God's intentions without any Muhammad-subjectivity. Despite this clever juxtaposition of God and Muhammad, Islam is very explicit about the danger of idolatry in the important sense of 'idolatry' so that Allah, unlike the Christian God, is never defined.
Only overtly. This misconception is driven by the inherent materialistism of the Abrahamic worldview. Simply, the Abrahamics figure that if they don't describe an entity physically, then they haven't described it. It is reminiscent of Islam hiding women's faces and bodies so men can pretend that women's desirous parts don't exist for long enough to keep their libido under control.
Note that Muslims claim that it's impossible to know anything about Allah, yet they manage to describe Allah in great detail because they "know" exactly what Allah likes and dislikes, what the deity wants in any given situation. Knowing someone's mind is, of course, far more penetrative than knowing someone's physical qualities.
Likewise, the idolising of Allah, Mohammed, the Koran, Mecca, mosques etc (not to mention Christianity's superheroes - Jesus, Mary, God, etc) is really just plain old idolatry, sans the statues and figureens.
Again, it's Abrahamic materialism, pretending that if an idol is not familiarly physical, then it is not an idol. The edicts about graven images and the like were largely about distinguishing Muslim and Christian brands from pagan sects, because there wasn't a lot of difference back then and they could easily be confused. Early Abrahamic religions borrowed liberally from their pagan neighbours, and then basically spat on them.