Then I don't know what you're trying to argue. That polytheism is easier to understand than monotheism? — Michael
So, God's just a concept! — TheMadFool
In polytheism the gods engage and interact. They are alive and never completely right or wrong. They are relatable to human life. In monotheism we are expected to believe something beyond comprehension (which is contrary) whereas in polytheism we can view the theatre of the gods as reflecting human culture and express each human item more readily and carefully. The overarching problem of the monotheistic cultures is that they are considered ‘beyond’ human experience yet we’re meant to live by the rules and doctrines of that which is literally ‘above us’. — I like sushi
Still the question remains as a plurality of gods allows for more specific investigation though. — I like sushi
Whenever I post something and there is only ONE person who understands what I'm getting at, asking or playing with it's always YOU! — I like sushi
What you've done is to say you have no particular evidence of various competing gods existing in the world, but it would helpful in your understanding of the world to think that such gods do exist, so you therefore do. Such is pragmatism. The problem is that if you posit these actual physical gods engaging in battle with one another and existing in human form, you need to show them to me, tell me where they live, explain their reproductive systems, and all sorts of other matters. Because you can't do that, your positing their existence violates the epistemological system you use for knowing other similar matters. — Hanover
And this is actually one very good reason for monotheism and a highly abstracted god. By not demanding any physical property or anything that would otherwise be provable in the mundane universe, a belief in such a god avoids violating the epistemological system you use to know other things in the universe. God, under this definition, would be unlike all else in the universe and could therefore be accepted as existing for pragmatic reasons without violating my epistemological system and so could be believed just because his existence makes your life more understandable. — Hanover
I don't understand the relevance of your question. I'm addressing your claim that one deity cannot be the source of both good and evil. "Good" and "Evil" aren't things. Rather there are certain behaviours that we describe (rightly or wrong) as being good or evil. Killing someone for fun might be an example of something that is evil and saving a drowning a child might be an example of something that is good. So your argument is that if only a single deity exists then it shouldn't be possible for there to be both people who kill for fun and people who save drowning children. That seems like a non sequitur. — Michael
The concept of god is just a concept. However, the nature of god well and properly understood is that he/she/it/them cannot be other than a concept. Except that for a lot of people the concept of a concept, as a concept, is not enough. So they make it right by conceiving the concept as real - and then insisting on the reality. Which when you think about it is a form of insanity — tim wood
I don't quite understand your point. — TheMadFool
That it doesn’t require two deities for it to be possible that there are both people who kill for fun and people who save drowning children. — Michael
I was simply thinking about how relatable such 'ideas' are to a developing human society. A plural of perspectives from which to approach human life just seems more tangible to me. — I like sushi
we are analysing the possible psychological benefits of, mistakenly or otherwise, following a monotheistic line or a polytheistic line given the variety of human social activity. — I like sushi
There is always sufficient data for an answer — tim wood
All answers are meaningful. — tim wood
And in case you haven't noticed - and it would seem you haven't - that's pretty much how life works. — tim wood
As to your wanting your beliefs to to have a corresponding reality, you do know what reality is, yes? No? — tim wood
That's because we're geniuses. Or not. — frank
The protocol broadcast by monotheism includes projection and shadow, all that stuff Jung was all over. — frank
The monotheistic God can't accept part of his own creation, as if he doesn't realize he made that. — frank
It leaves the journey toward individuation, which I'm not sure I totally understand. — frank
I think I finally got what you mean, correct me if wrong.
You position is hat polytheism is sort of more "democratic" compared to monotheism which seem to be more "autocratic"?
And, how these 2 affects development of social life and psychology at large? — SpaceDweller
I think polytheism as "multiple perspectives" toward anything are source of division among society.
You answer to that will surely be that deities don't influence or interact with each other and as such can't be source of division?
If so, however while that may be true for deities it's far from true for society, because not everybody in society is reasonable enough to overcome influence or opinions.
Society was, is and always will be divisible. — SpaceDweller
I'm more than happy to admit there are potential advantages in one that don't exist in the other. That is precisely why I posted this. — I like sushi
In this sense polytheism allows for meaningful conflict and division whereas mono is mono. There is a lack of growth involved. — I like sushi
It would seem you don't realize you're already committed. Open your eyes and take a look around.I might but I wouldn't want to commit...not for now at least. — TheMadFool
The monotheistic God can't accept part of his own creation, as if he doesn't realize he made that.
— frank
You mean this (from the psychological perspective) as a kind of willed belief in a paradox so as to disown it and revere it? I'm going WAY out on a limb there :D — I like sushi
It would seem you don't realize you're already committed. Open your eyes and take a look around. — tim wood
Yahweh is given human characteristics in the Bible and it can be argued he was far from perfect. — Hanover
Why do you favor a polytheistic framework? — frank
Realism. A bunch of interacting entities (that are neither good or bad) is more comparable to humans than some ideal. — I like sushi
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