"How could any of this have come about out of a flurry of random happenings?"
seeds wrote: ↑Sun Oct 30, 2022 11:44 pm
First of all (and just for the record), I'm a "he," not a "she."
And secondly, I'm curious to hear how you might attempt to answer the bolded question in the above quote?
And lastly, it's not just that the unthinkable order of the universe arising by chance is riddled with mathematical improbabilities, no, it's also how quantum physics seems to be suggesting that the universe is "mind-like" in nature, thus loosely implying the plausibility of a Berkeleyan-ish form of panentheism.
Personally, I am definitely of the intuitional school that the entire cosmos emerges from the mind of god. Actually you can pick any number of different metaphors or explanation-routes since they are simply poetic references. The term 'god' is becoming more and more useless though. It confuses the issue.
I tend to see the good sense in the terms used in Vedanta. Simply put, whatever 'god' is (the ultimate Brahman or *highest universal principle*) is beyond comprehension except in some sort of poetical state-of-mind or perhaps visionary state. That is why one needs to understand *personal god* or Ishvara.
My own view is that people do not focus on the right thing which is not a thing at all. It is
existence. That things exist. That being exists and that there is no alternative to it. How can things exist? What is existence? Where is existence occurring? Mediation on those ideas, or is it a perception? leads the mind to unusual realizations.
I also believe that we could focus more on thinking about the nature of our own *world* as one among any number of different *worlds*. I mean discreet worlds with their own rules and conditions. We can only think about our own world comparatively, or if we try to think comparatively (intuitively, speculatively, imaginarily) then we see that the *rules* of our world are peculiar to this world -- but other worlds (planes of existence) could very well have different rules. Christianity is aware of *3 worlds* and this fits into an older and often universal vision: the world we are in, a hell-realm, and a heaven-world.
Our own world is strung between these two poles -- or in any case we tend to see things in this way. It could be infinitely better but it could certainly be infinitely worse. We are stuck into a world of biological flesh and the vehicle of our being and our apperance here is in these strange mortal encasings (σῶμα = sôma = “body”). But other sorts of vehicles and 'bodies' are conceivable. Which is what I think the notion of 'angel' refers to: a being with some other sort of body. A more enduring vehicle. One that is less bound to the rules that determine flesh-bodies -- so fragile and that always come to bad ends (as being food for other creatures unless, as we do, we poison the corpse so to have the illusion that it is not consumed). (Embalming).
It seems possible to me that just as our world (the vast space of the creation, the entire universe) exists (and seems absolute to us) it is not impossible that any number of different manifestation could well exist. If one exists (ours) why not any number? The fact that
one exists is entirely miraculous when it is meditated on. How did it come into being? An impossible or fruitless question: it could never not have existed. Existence exists, and being exists. There is no alternative.
It is quite possible that any of us actually live simultaneously in various *realms*. Certainly we are more locked into this one than to those others. Yet it seems to me that conscious awareness -- when such is stimulated -- tends to *see* other possibilities. We are certainly locked into our sense that we are *individuals* and separate atomized units. But even this can be challenged.
As to the way the world has formed (the entire Cosmos and of course, as in your image of the Earth) most certainly did not arise out of randomness. You demonstrate with the static image that random conditions exist. But the entire manifestation is certainly
directed and not random. The issue seems to be in how that is explained. Was order inherent and latent before things came to be? Or are all things rather being *pulled* toward the forms and order that they take? Does it matter?
I also do not have any particular problem with the idea of reincarnation. But I would tend to see it as a
simultaneity of being. Since *time* is a condition of our limited existence, and we cannot escape it, we are *stuck* imagining a beginning and an ending. But in the ultimate sense time must be a sort of illusion. What is a *soul*? What is the *conscious spark* that the Vedantists refer to? In relation to our experience we exist in a time-frame. But in a far larger scale we could well exist in numerous different ways. And then as the Vedantists and the Rishis say (who seem to have gone far in these speculative moods) we cannot be else but parts and fragments of divine being if *awareness* is seen and grasped.