Re: How Do You Understand the Idea of 'God'?
Posted: January 17th, 2023, 6:44 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑January 16th, 2023, 7:44 pmTribal gods pertaining to the same tribe are not all the same god. Some tribal gods are creator gods of the deist sort. Some gods are ancestors. Some tribal gods such as Ba'al are gods of place. The ancient Israelites made a portable housing for their god so he was a sort of god of place, but with the capability to change into a bigger manifestation of tribal protection + mores. The fact that the Israelites were nomadic and successfully aggressive was a substantial cause of the development of Jahweh/God into a god capable of universal appeal.JackDaydream wrote: ↑January 16th, 2023, 6:16 pmI see no reason to divide humanity between those who belief in ancient deities and those who don't, no more than I would parse us based on whether we approved of the Roman Empire or not.Sy Borg wrote: ↑January 16th, 2023, 5:40 pmI never believed in Zeus, but I have known a few people who were pagans and did believe in many deities. I found the ideas of van Daniken, Zachariah Sitchkin and Graham Hancock, on gods who came from otherworlds interesting at one stage, but did conclude that the viewpoint was too concrete, in failing to distinguish the symbolic point of view.JackDaydream wrote: ↑January 16th, 2023, 2:56 pmI am just so surprised that so many people claim to be so certain one way or another.It's surprising how many people doubt Zeus's existence.
Why can't they keep an open mind? How can they be so sure that Zeus is not real?
It is likely that some people have a more open mind and others don't. It may be partly dependent on the background one comes from and partly about one's own approach in thinking. While many on this forum view the idea of any belief in God as absurd, in real life a large proportion of the people I know, including close friends, regard lack of acceptance of God as ridiculous.
To some extent, I wonder to what extent we even choose our beliefs. Of course, there is the extent to which anyone chooses to pursue various ideas and worldviews. I have chosen to follow through different worldviews and would not have done so if any one stood out as the ultimate one. Some are more inclined to sit on the fence looking in on all the various horizons. I am not sure that the fence is the most comfortable place to be rather than in a safe field with familiar territories, rather than meandering around in the wastelands in between.
Ultimately Yahweh was the Israelite response to their hated rivals, the Canaanites, whose deity Ba'al was once the most powerful and expansive one around. So the Israelites borrowed a number of attributes from Ba'al to beef Yahweh up, until it was the strongest deity. Sacred stories of many ancient cultures intermingled constantly.
So we can say that today's God evolved from Yahweh. In the end, it's just giving credit to humanesque characters for the extraordinary achievements of the Sun and the Earth. It's not miles from politicians being apportioned credit or blame for global economic conditions. The driver is the same. Ego and solipsism.
Is there consciousness within other complex systems in the universe? I'm open to it, though many aren't. If we lived within a conscious system, how would we know? In this, we need to be cautious of confirmation bias.