_Z_
from far far away
as half an ‘orange’ is a fraction of the seed, what is a whole orange? ~ an argument of epic ‘proportions’ [e.g. is god whole and complete or is he a part of the same universal we belong to].
half an orange is a fraction of an orange, which in turn is a fraction of the tree, which then is a fraction of an orange. although we think of the world in terms of wholes and fractions, this is simply a misrepresentation of the reality presented to us. primarily we must regard reality as only composed of fractions, infinitely divisible abstract entities, although they to are not descriptive as exact parts.
without further ado i think we can jump straight to the main principles...
i. there can be no examples of completeness.
ii. all things are part of another.
iii. the whole cannot be composed of any entities it may contain.
...i.e. no amount of abstract entities can add up to the whole, and the whole cannot be ‘of something’/an object. i would imagine this as an infinite block of stone, even if it were nothing it would fill the whole philosophical space.
so may we define reality as abstracts within an infinite ‘whole’, where abstracts cannot properly be defined as factions nor wholes, and where the whole may not be a ‘entire’ thing?
more to the point, we cannot have two wholes which compose reality! there can only be infinity and its expressions. the god of completeness cannot be beyond this and must either be a part of it or not at all - i state.
for me this brings us a living god, one that is part of us and we it, rather than some obscure occult deity beyond any horizon. not sure if we can rightly define infinite intelligence/consciousness as god yet, but it is something like what we visualise ~ or at least what i do.
what i mean by the orange analogy is that; half an orange [or anything] may be considered to be a whole entity. equally a whole orange [any given whole] may be thought of as part of a tree, or indeed the tree may considered as part of the orange from which its seed came from.
perhaps that idea just confuses things, what i am saying is that we cannot rightly define anything as either a fraction or a whole. in terms of ‘epic proportions’ we cannot thence have a ‘something’ god/infinite being/whatever that is a whole and complete thing, all we have is emptiness/infinity as not a thing, and abstract entities. these abstracts are so abstract that we cannot completely describe them mathematically ~ ergo math itself is abstract from reality.
i would go so far as to say there is no such thing as finite, empiricism seams to rely on objective/subjective arguments yet there are no ‘objects’ purely distinguishable as complete entities, this is due to many factors including uncertainty, quantum dynamics and relativity. so as there are no examples of completeness in finite terms and a whole and complete entity would consume the entire ‘philosophical space’ [not allow for anything else], we are left only with a universality to which both we and god [if existent] both belong.
there is an intimacy between infinities of a set and the whole set, this due mainly to the fact that there isn’t anything to divide them. so where does god fit in? infinity is incomparative, we cannot contrast it with anything else bar it, so we have to use a different language of explanation. in short god may be an infinity without cardinality, and we infinities with cardinality i.e. of the infinite set.
the point i am making then, is that god isn’t over there somewhere beyond the horizon, a whole and complete entity in and of itself, both god and we are both part of the greater universality that is reality without edges!
...or something like that.
half an orange is a fraction of an orange, which in turn is a fraction of the tree, which then is a fraction of an orange. although we think of the world in terms of wholes and fractions, this is simply a misrepresentation of the reality presented to us. primarily we must regard reality as only composed of fractions, infinitely divisible abstract entities, although they to are not descriptive as exact parts.
without further ado i think we can jump straight to the main principles...
i. there can be no examples of completeness.
ii. all things are part of another.
iii. the whole cannot be composed of any entities it may contain.
...i.e. no amount of abstract entities can add up to the whole, and the whole cannot be ‘of something’/an object. i would imagine this as an infinite block of stone, even if it were nothing it would fill the whole philosophical space.
so may we define reality as abstracts within an infinite ‘whole’, where abstracts cannot properly be defined as factions nor wholes, and where the whole may not be a ‘entire’ thing?
more to the point, we cannot have two wholes which compose reality! there can only be infinity and its expressions. the god of completeness cannot be beyond this and must either be a part of it or not at all - i state.
for me this brings us a living god, one that is part of us and we it, rather than some obscure occult deity beyond any horizon. not sure if we can rightly define infinite intelligence/consciousness as god yet, but it is something like what we visualise ~ or at least what i do.
what i mean by the orange analogy is that; half an orange [or anything] may be considered to be a whole entity. equally a whole orange [any given whole] may be thought of as part of a tree, or indeed the tree may considered as part of the orange from which its seed came from.
perhaps that idea just confuses things, what i am saying is that we cannot rightly define anything as either a fraction or a whole. in terms of ‘epic proportions’ we cannot thence have a ‘something’ god/infinite being/whatever that is a whole and complete thing, all we have is emptiness/infinity as not a thing, and abstract entities. these abstracts are so abstract that we cannot completely describe them mathematically ~ ergo math itself is abstract from reality.
i would go so far as to say there is no such thing as finite, empiricism seams to rely on objective/subjective arguments yet there are no ‘objects’ purely distinguishable as complete entities, this is due to many factors including uncertainty, quantum dynamics and relativity. so as there are no examples of completeness in finite terms and a whole and complete entity would consume the entire ‘philosophical space’ [not allow for anything else], we are left only with a universality to which both we and god [if existent] both belong.
there is an intimacy between infinities of a set and the whole set, this due mainly to the fact that there isn’t anything to divide them. so where does god fit in? infinity is incomparative, we cannot contrast it with anything else bar it, so we have to use a different language of explanation. in short god may be an infinity without cardinality, and we infinities with cardinality i.e. of the infinite set.
the point i am making then, is that god isn’t over there somewhere beyond the horizon, a whole and complete entity in and of itself, both god and we are both part of the greater universality that is reality without edges!
...or something like that.