Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 4:12 pm
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.
I agree that because the term "God" carries with it such an enormous load of ancient baggage that it definitely confuses the issue.
However, what other "handy" term can we use that denotes a living Being (a conscious "I Am-ness") that represents the central and creative locus of this universe?
In other words, if you can provide us with a new and better term for us to use in everyday conversation that is, in essence, shorthand for
"...the ultimate Brahman or *highest universal principle*...," then let's hear it.
(For one thing, I'm thinking that responding with "...the *highest universal principle* blesses you..." every time someone sneezes, would be a bit awkward
)
Also, you stated that you are of the intuitional school that the entire cosmos emerges from the
"mind" of God. Yet, in the next paragraph, you seem to be equating the
"mind" of God with some sort of abstract
"universal principle." And that, to me, seems incongruent.
Do you view your own mind as being some sort of abstract "principle"?
If not, then why view the mind of God in such terms?
What does the word
"mind" mean to you?
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 4:12 pm
My own view is that people do not focus on the right thing which is not a thing at all. It is existence.
What aspect of
"existence" grabbed hold of the fabric of reality and shaped it into this...
Furthermore, how in the world did "existence"
know that the above setting would be the perfect configuration of material substances from which multifarious forms of life and consciousness could emerge and flourish for billions of years?
The point is that you seem to be imbuing an abstract term called
"existence" with teleological impetus and intention. To which I must ask from whence did "existence" acquire intention?
And more importantly, what connected that spirit of intention to the fabric from which the billions of galaxies of the universe were created?
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 4:12 pm
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.
If we can logically assume that the main purpose for the existence of a "world" (i.e., a "universe") is to provide a stable setting in order to facilitate the efflorescence of life and consciousness from the very fabric of the setting itself,...
...then I challenge you to imagine a better world (a better universe) than one that uses suns and planets to get the job done.
Go ahead, give it a shot.
I mean, sure, we can imagine the existence of other discrete universes with their own rules and conditions, but if they do not contain life and consciousness, then as far as I am concerned, if there is nothing capable of seeing, feeling, hearing, smelling, and tasting the features of said universes, then they would be utterly dark and have absolutely no purpose or reason for existing.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 4:12 pm
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.
You are alluding to
"old paradigm" nonsense. Which I guess is unavoidable, seeing how this thread has us on the inside of the bubble of Christian mythology, discussing the doctrines and features that hold the bubble together.
However, as I tried to make clear in my Venn diagram post - (
viewtopic.php?p=600240#p600240), it's time to move onward (and upward) to a new vision of reality. So, we need to stop speaking of concepts such as
"hell-realms" as if they actually exist (which they don't).
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 4:12 pm
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...
Right!
Now just carry that line of reasoning to the logical conclusion that it also applies to the Creator of this universe, and that as we stand on the earth and look out into the universe, we are viewing God's body (her "more enduring vehicle") from the
inside of her being.
And that would be in precisely the same way we would have been viewing the inside of our mother's body had we awakened within her womb a few weeks before being born out of her.
In other words, if you reach out and feel the air rushing through your fingers as you vigorously wave your hand in front of you, it is the metaphorical equivalent of what you would have felt had you been awake enough to notice the amniotic water rushing through your fingers as you moved your hand within your mother's womb.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 4:12 pm
I also do not have any particular problem with the idea of reincarnation...
I'm afraid I've made this post way too long (something we are both guilty of doing), so perhaps we can discuss the concept of reincarnation later?
But my quick response would be that, again, you are alluding to "old paradigm" nonsense, and that reincarnation is a problematic (if not downright false) concept.
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