Impersonal gods are not worth talking to or (therefore) talking about. Stick to physics, no impersonal god will care. — unenlightened
Person Gods appear to be products of imagination. Impersonal Gods seem to converge to a single God — Art48
Impersonal gods are not worth talking to or (therefore) talking about. Stick to physics, no impersonal god will care. — unenlightened
The recognition that it is worthwhile to see the universe, reality, as something living is an important one. It changes how you see everything. It gives something to be grateful to for all we have been given — T Clark
Something living but impersonal? — unenlightened
Yeah, I struggled with the right way to say it. Conscious but impersonal? Not even that really. It's that reality can't be separated from human involvement, so the universe is half-human. — T Clark
You see, either you bite the bullet of a 'transcendent' person who give s a fuck, or you have a half assed personification of the generality of 'life' which obviously doesn't give a fuck. And why should we give a fuck for that which doesn't give one? — unenlightened
Convince me that it is worth even speculating about this. — unenlightened
What if we haven't been GIVEN anything?It gives something to be grateful to for all we have been given — T Clark
What if we haven't been GIVEN anything? — universeness
There is no evidence — universeness
I agree with your first sentence.Then we have made it all ourselves.
Or else it has all just fallen to us. — unenlightened
Yes and yes.Do you require evidence to be resentful? Do you require evidence to be grateful? Should I ask for your evidence that there is no evidence? You seem to be selling some snake oil here, and even giving commandments. — unenlightened
There is no evidence It exists or has done anything to deserve your thanks. — universeness
No, divine hiddenness as described by such as the Stanford encyclopedia of Philosophy. — universeness
It seems to me that Earth’s person Gods are childish creations of human imagination. On the other hand, the absolute, ultimate ground of existence God seems credible to me. — Art48
Non-personified Gods, on the other hand, are more "realistic" and are usually depicted as energy, esp. light: — Alkis Piskas
I know almost nothing about Shinto religion, but from what you say I understand that these gods are physical in nature rather than spirits, which are not. Is that right?Kami, the deities, divinities, spirits, phenomena or "holy powers" that are venerated in the Shinto religion. In Shinto, kami are not separate from nature, but are of nature, possessing positive and negative, and good and evil characteristics. — javi2541997
I believe you mean more sensitive than in other cultures, right?Japanese culture tend to be sensitive with seasons and nature — javi2541997
Something like angels and demons, God and Satan or Devil, right?The zenko (善狐, lit. 'good foxes') are benevolent, on the other hand, the yako (野狐, lit. 'field foxes', also called nogitsune) tend to be mischievous or even malicious. — javi2541997
Beautiful indeed.Japanese painting representing a kitsune under the moonlight — javi2541997
Someone, something, somewhere deserves thanks for this wonderful world. — T Clark
It seems to me that Earth’s person Gods are childish creations of human imagination. On the other hand, the absolute, ultimate ground of existence God seems credible to me. — Art48
To me the world seems an amoral and dangerous place (at best). — Tom Storm
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