Atheism & Solipsism 01-25-22
Atheism & Solipsism – Final
My work entails establishing a connection between atheism & solipsism, plus their two modes: monism & idealism.
My core arguments are simple and familiar.
Here’s the connection between atheism & solipsism
Simple counter-argument to knowing, authoritatively, with certain knowledge, God doesn’t exist.
If I say I am a swimmer, then I can prove what I am, by taking a dip in the pool.
Grammatically speaking, I am a swimmer is a verbal equation. I (subject) + (linking verb) am + (subject complement) a swimmer condenses down to I = a swimmer.
God, by definition, comprehends all existence. This is a well-defined property of God.
According to the unrestricted comprehension principle of set theory, for any sufficiently well-defined property, there is a set of all and only the objects that have that property.
If I say, God is not, then I can prove what I know by revealing to you all existence.
This is the unrestricted comprehension principle in application.
Grammatically speaking, God is not is a verbal equation. God (subject) + (linking verb) is + (subject complement) extant not condenses down to God = extant not or
God ≠ extant.
If I know all existence, a power unique to God, then knowing there is no God means I am God.
If two things comprehend all existence, how can they be different?
Atheistic Idealism – Conceptualization of God as a being who can be denied & refuted.
This is a deep dive into Logos, which is ancient Idealism.
It shouldn’t be surprising to discover that attempts to mark boundaries of the absolute land you in paradox.
Denial of God is marking a boundary of the absolute.
{If you deny God, you become God>Monist}
{If you don’t deny God, you coexist with God>Binary}
Either way, comprehensive God exists & subsumes.
This resembles Russell’s Paradox (a cornerstone of set theory).
Let R = {x | X ∉ X }, then R ∈ R <> R ∉ R
{If it doesn’t belong to the set, then it belongs to the set}
{If it does belong to the set, then it doesn’t belong to the set}
Either way, comprehensive Set exists & subsumes
The switch is between monist/binary.
The switch tells us human cannot catch God in the act of being God. Considering this, of the three positions: theism/atheism/agnosticism, agnosticism becomes previleged.
Not simple are some ramifications of the atheism_solipsism connection.
The upshot of my conclusion is a profile of a distinctly human Deity manifesting as the logical, transcendent sentience of a dynamical world of time_motion, which entails an erratic, sometimes paradoxical morality, always subject to debate & revision.
The existence of God as undecidable*, neither provable nor refutable, continues as a long established stalemate accepted by many on both sides.
*Like infinity, undecidablility covers a spectrum of degrees. I believe atheism is more undecidable than theism.
Strict atheism, however, expresses an extreme position within epistemology.
My simple counter-argument against this position raises few hackles.
My argument has no conflict with atheism as an article of faith.
Even strict atheism is not really my target. Instead, I’m focused on how the counter-argument to strict atheism leads to some useful modifications to establishmentarian theism.
Does atheism belong to a set of ideologies that can be labeled monism?
If so, does the monism of atheism presuppose cosmic solitude, as enforced by its exclusion of a transcendent, teleological sentience i.e., deity?
These two questions follow from an assumption that deity is fundamental otherness, and that otherness is essential to a universe of time & motion.
The exclusion of deity as an article of faith may belong to agnosticism.
The exclusion of deity as a logical conclusion assumes perfected knowledge sufficient to pass judgment on transcendent power.
Perfection is static. It leaves no room for evolution because the highest attainment is accomplished. It leaves nor room for decline because that would negate perfection.
The absolute self, all-knowing & perfected in knowledge eternal suggests a universe without time or motion. Any dynamic process would negate the absolutism of perfection because nothing in a state of change is perfected.
Can such a static universe, the universe of atheism, exist?
If so, then perfection, being static and indivisible, rubs shoulders with Neoplatonism.
If atheism dovetails with Neoplatonism, then we see that atheism replaces The One with The Database (of Perfect Knowledge).
This leads us to surmising that the corrupted world of everyday human experience, our universe of degradation, a devolution down from Plato’s realm of Eternal Things, proliferating with imperfect copies of Eternal Things, harbors a villain.
This villain of the everyday world of human experience is time and its concomitant, motion.
Both Neoplatonism and atheism ask us to assume as fact a static and peerless universe of knowledge that causes our everyday world of phenomena while yet standing apart from its vicissitudes.
The big question raised by The One and also by The Database is point of contact. How do these perfected realms, these ultimate causes, reach humanity within the physical universe of the senses?
The answer is that the conduit connecting the two states of being, static and ultimate causality vis-à-vis the physical universe, is time_motion.
Now we come right up to a pair of germinal concepts: a) the physicalization of morality; b) the moral turpitude of God.
Motion is the limit of epistemology. In a physical universe, motion is essential.
Any static universe of incorruptible causation, such as The One and The Database, by excluding time_motion, forestalls germination of the living.
Dynamical physics and its chief epiphenomenon, sentient life, operate within the womb of time_motion.
These assumptions necessitate the characterization of The One and The Database as extreme versions of both Monism and Idealism. They are paradigmatic constructs of causation, always mirrored imperfectly by the dynamical physics of the world of the living. Within the topsy-turvy world of time_motion and the living, the theist is imperfectly divine, and the atheist is imperfectly secular. Wrong is sometimes, conditionally, good.
If incorruptible causation, an idealism, and time_motion, a realism, always stand apart, then the physicalization of morality and the moral turpitude of God are necessary compromises for the living.
These compromises are the two pillars supporting God-Consciousness, as distinguished from Divine God.
The two spiritual pillars of a universe of time_motion, such as our own physical universe, are Otherness and Transcendence, with the latter being the channel through which the self and the other make contact and communicate.
The One and The Database, in their idealism of incorruptible causation, exclude Otherness and Transcendence, and thus, by the transitive property, also exclude time_motion.
Otherness and Transcendence, innate attributes of the design of a time_motion universe, make time_motion possible.
Motion is the physical manifestation of morality. In a time_motion universe, things can move out of place and become wrong. On the other hand, they can move upward, out of an accustomed place to a higher and better place.
To know there is no focused, teleological, transcendent sentience is to evolve The Database to perfection, wherein motion and morality cease, replaced by the stillness of eternal solitude.
The higher attainment, above eternal solitude, is temporal, evolving sentience that, being animate, can become transcendent.
Yes. Perfection can be topped by imperfection since the former is static whereas the latter is animate.
The Deity of a dynamical, time_motion universe is good because it allows time, motion and evolution to flourish, albeit rife with the imperfections to which Otherness is caretaker.
The universe that bears Deity is thus a topsy-turvy realm wherein being wrong is sometimes, conditionally, good.
Being imperfect, and thus sometimes wrong, allows the presence of love, which, in its essence, means not being alone.
Theism has atheism to thank for pointing the way to perfection of knowledge, an absolute solitude that highlights the value of a morally unstable universe wherein the fellowship of self-and-other i.e., love, thrives upon the morass of its gravitational tendency toward moral failure, all the way down to evil.
Now we have an approach to addressing theism’s hard problem of the presence of evil.
Deity allows the presence of evil because the cosmic richness of the dialogue of self-and-other, love, sometimes gives rise to evil and Deity, looking upon the wealth of sentient beings inhabiting a time_motion universe, allows it as an act of divine love.
Monist excludes Love. Binary includes Love.
God presents a binary contract to human, for the sake of Love.
God-As-Human, binary, seeks Love.
God-As-God, monist, distances Love.