Banno, what do you think? — Wallows
Nice analysis. Yet, most religions, perhaps excluding Judaism, talk about God as a person or as if "It" was a subject residing in the world instead of treating "It" as everything that is the case. Why is that? — Wallows
It's an irrational emotional attachment. They want something which they can relate to. — S
It's worth remembering that this topic is not about God, but whether a particular word - "subjecthood" - might apply to God. We might as usefully ask whether a dog or a martian is adequately described by "subjecthood".... :chin: — Pattern-chaser
No. — Pattern-chaser
It's about a word, and whether that word applies to God. So does it? :chin: — Pattern-chaser
If we assume that God is not a person and is everything that can be said about the world, then does God posses 'subjecthood'? — Wallows
Is your question different from that dispute? — Valentinus
Yeah, I interpret this as babble. It would be more coherent to ask if God is an object. If God is the world then God is an object.If we assume that God is not a person and is everything that can be said about the world, then does God posses 'subjecthood'? — Wallows
we can dispense with these terms, "subject" and "subjective" and get by just fine. It seems to me that it is the use of those terms that cause the confusion. — Harry Hindu
As I mentioned in the other thread we can dispense with these terms, "subject" and "subjective" and get by just fine. It seems to me that it is the use of those terms that causes the confusion. — Harry Hindu
I think it's a handy term for referring to mind-dependent or mind-oriented rather than mind-independent or extramental etc. — Terrapin Station
If your saying that subjectivity is a feature of minds, then how is that any different than talking about the features of some other process or thing in reality? Everything has distinctive features that make them different from other things. Subjectivity would be no more special than some other feature of reality, and would be a subset of reality (the objective). — Harry Hindu
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