C2V wrote:
The knee jerk I struggle to get my head around (hell if there weren't body metaphors crossing confusingly all over that) is that god is not necessarily religion. Wiser people than me have been trying to get this thorough to me as this subject has been everywhere recently. Religion and god could very plausibly be completely disconnected. It's also entirely plausible that god, if one exists, has never been described or known by any religion in all of human history, and may never be known, nor described.
Tapping into and exploring what you're talking about - ie. finding the god of the real (if there is one) or at least exploring the principles that would perhaps lead to their source, is really what active mysticism is all about. The esoteric systems around the world attempt to take the contemplative and philosophic direction toward finding these truths albeit they use different symbol sets based on their culture (ie. Hindu and Buddhist language in the east, Greek, Egyptian, and Judao-Christian in the west) and also have particular areas of disagreement such as the role of the mind as well as differences of opinion on what an individual's optimal orientation toward mind and matter should be.
Overall though they seem to come to very similar conclusions - ie. to say something as if there's both a supreme deity and no deity at the same time, that the best description of such a being is No Thing, ie. something very similar to the inscrutable Father that Jesus spoke about happens albeit it's panentheistic figure with a deistic relationship to us rather than being a Jupiter/Zeus figure like so many of the western religions seem to have corrupted it into.
C2V wrote:
If you disbelieve the representation of god as described in any one religion, then that is in effect all you are disagreeing with - their theory. In the original post the author seems to be describing god as he is described in Christian and Islamic religions - a loving, intelligent, just, perfect external entity. Nowhere is it guaranteed that god, if one exists, represents nor comprehends these qualities at all.
The more I get into the issue, the more I favour the abstract of what a god may be, rather than believing any religious descriptions. And trying to stop interpreting any talk of "god" through a religiously-influenced bias.
I'd agree that part of the problem is people like the OP can't decouple the two - ie. religious politics vs. the question of actuality. I suppose if one comes to the question already quite certain that all of it, 100%, is man-made authoritative then one will assume that there are no other questions to be asked - that the concept in its entirety is whole-cloth fabrication.
The problem I find with this approach is that it's also needy enough to deny people's internal experiences, deny that visions and revelations do happen (regardless of whether one prefers to see them as belching neurology or legitimate contacts with higher planes). There are enough legitimate miracles, ie. just within our 'I' experiences as they are, just within our ability to decouple ourselves from our environments and have internal realms to balance out external hardships (ie. the world of imagination) or even to go a step farther and discuss the issue of invention and human innovation.
When people talk about us being massive colonies of cells and say "Aha! Consciousness is an illusion!" - maybe the concept of it being a unitary thing is an illusion, a bit like the concept of a solitary camp fire is an illusion when you could cut the logs and embers into quite a few piles and have separate fires going, but that still doesn't make fire itself an illusion nor does the divisibility of consciousness make it an illusion either. To take that line of reasoning would suggest that our entire world is an illusion if there's nothing in my house, on my desk, etc. that can't be split apart into it's basic chemical building blocks, then to it's atoms, those atoms themselves aren't real because you can split them into quarks and leptons, and you can follow that all the way down until about all you have left is energy.
The above is exactly why I think it's dogmatic and really quite religious for people to say that philosophy doesn't matter. It's about the only quality-check on thought that we have if we can apply it with integrity and as far as I can tell atheism can become just as superstitious as any other religion without philosophy as a guiding light.
_________________
The loneliest part of life: it's not just that no one is on your cloud, few can even see your cloud.