Quahom1 said:
1. An articulated form, does not have to be a form that we currently understand, yet do sense, yes?
I'm not sure if my replies will satisfy your objections. Like Juantoo3, you appear to assume that I'm offering evidence for the non-existence of God in a much larger sense than I intended. I tried my best to point out that I'm only taking about the idea of God as a quasi-human personality, not about God in a more abstract, sophisticated or absolute sense. Anyway, I'll assume it's my faulty expression and carry on the best I can!
Now, when I talked about the universe being "formless" it was in the context of lacking a form we can reasonably relate to notions of a personal God. Whether in the final analysis the universe is formless, or whether it turns out to have a vast & at present inconceivable form may have something to do with the notion of God in the absloute, transcendent sense, but it has little to do with a belief in God as personality. We may experience this vast form you're talking about, but it doesn't follow that we necessarilly define this experience as an encounter with a personal God.
Quahom1 said:
The little voice in our minds that we constantly communicate with...what is it? Consciousness? Us babbling at ourselves? Random thoughts? Then why do we often become angry with what it is telling us about our current state?
I hate to fall back on mere psychology, but voices in our head obviously don't require metaphysical explanations.
Quahom1 said:
2. A divine signature...have you considered running PI on your computer? Be warned it will take a long long time to see a pattern. Years on a PC I suspect. Tell your computer to calculate PI to the 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000th
decimal point and, print the results while calculating PI, in Binary code...this is not infinity, but your computer's CPU would fail from overheating well before completing the task, and should you have enough printer paper and ink to see this through, you might be surprised at what you see just beginning to form...a perfect circle of 1. Tell your computer to calculate PI in three dimensions, and you find the resultant graphics to be the beginnings of a perfect sphere of 1s surrounded by 0s....It is the ultimate shape, and a nice signature.
Way cool, Q. I remember reading a science fiction story, called something like the Million Names of God. I realize now the writer was probably stealing from Jewish mysticism, but the idea was this super computer would go through all possible combinations of the Hebrew alphabet (which those Kabbalah dudes do for fun, I'm told) to form all the secret names of God; once it finished poof! the universe disappears!
On the other hand: cool story, but no sale! Nature generates fantastic patterns every day, and much closer at hand.
Quahom1 said:
3. A single biographical arc, or story line. Who's Gods? Or ours as a collective? Based on the number of "religions" that have come and gone, and are here today, man has never considered that there is no God, until recently...Aeithism, is a "relatively" new concept. Though Humanism is not (grant you that).
I'm not sure what your point is here, except that while the story of God has varied among different peoples, every people has had one to tell. And I agree that where there's smoke there's fire; there is a reality which I would not complain about anyone calling God. But again my evidence was against the literal idea of a god of a single identifiable personality, who acts in history, as is maintained for example in the Abrahamic tradition. (Notice I said evidence against the
literal idea in the Abrahamic tradition, not against the tradition itself.)
As for atheism, I think good points have been made on that topic in previous threads. I think of it as a reactive formation, making a point about religion itself from a variety of motivations. I mean, why else even make the annoncement? I think the greatest fault of atheism is to fixate on logic and ignore the experience. I happen to think that the logic of religion is usually suspect, but the best of it, the core experience, is real.
Quahom1 said:
4. A single integrated, unitary personality. Humans don't have integrated, unitary personalities...why should a God have one? Perfect integration perhaps? The problem with this line of thinking is that we attempt to place "God" within the confines of human existence. In otherwords, we put our limitations and expectations on our concept of God.).
Presto! Chango! This is exactly what I have been saying. The personality we project onto God has its uses, it fits into our narratives, is an aid to morality perhaps, but is finally too small and too simple to do justice to its referent, God in the inconceivable absolute.
Quahom1 said:
But I submit to you that we can't even step back into yesterday (even to observe). Yet the Concept of "God" is above time as we know it. Therefore our "rules" for determining the non existence of God begin to break down.
Again, let me remind you that I was not offering evidence nor rules for determing the non-existence of God. In fact, I was saying almost precisely what you're saying here, but applied to the idea of "rules" for determining God as a "personality". Those rules break down because they are based on the faulty analogy between human personality, and the personality we like to imagine of God. Monotheism is famously not supposed to be anthropomorphic, but here I think we have a residual anthropomorphism.
Quahom1 said:
In short Devadatta, we hobble ourselves, in order to show lack of evidence for the existence of God, which in turn, makes our point mute and contradictory. "Catch 22"..
You seem to be saying that here I'm creating an obstruction to the experience of God by applying human, all-too-human categories to disprove his/her existence. Now I hope you understand that I was proceeding quite otherwise. I was providing evidence for the idea that our human, all-too-human projections of personality on God, when these projections are taken literally, are truly the obstructions that keeps us from the experience of God.
Anyway, I think the real distinction between our points of view isn't touched on here. In a thread on the previous page, I tried to make what think is the true distinction between us. I'll paste it below for your review.
Thanks for coming back at me, and the cool parts of your reply.
A basic distinction in religious attitudes:
1. The theistic, metaphysical, absolutist path which creates articulated steps between, and includes theories of emanation, incarnation, the personhod of God, Divine Will, the trinity of Christianity, the ten sefirot of the Kabbalah, - but the variety is endless.
2. The non-theistic, anti-metaphysical, pluralist path which is experiential, relying on direct approaches between the individual and the absolute, and which is represented by various types of yoga, Buddhism, Santana Dharma (Hinduism) at its core, and by the mystical strands of all traditions.
I more than lean toward Door #2, which is why I've presented the kind of evidence I have, but I don't oppose Door #1 as a path for others, and in fact in the all over scheme these are complementary realities, always implicated one with the other and never appearing in a pure form. (And again, my evidence is presented against a literal belief in the personality of God, not against the deployment of the idea within a spiritual tradition.)