I want to understand Jake, and I am sure it due to my ignorance, but to me at least you are just constantly describing a state of affairs, but never put forth a complete and coherent idea of how we are to proceed if we accept your state of affairs. Can you be clearer on what you would have us all actually do. — Rank Amateur
I understand what you're saying. What I'm very imperfectly attempting to do is encourage readers to follow the logic trail on their own, thus I'm deliberately not filling in all the blanks. I'm not doing that great of a job of this, and honestly, once one leaves the comfortable familiarity of the God debate one's audience tends to tune out or go bye-bye.
Anyway, on to your request. What I'm suggesting is...
The God debate generates various answers which are then debated. I'm attempting to escape that failed pattern by pointing out that
ANY answer that can be offered will just be a symbol, and a mere symbol is not really what we are seeking. The proof of this is that we keep looking, searching, reaching for something, we're still hungry, no matter how many religions and philosophies we invent.
Religion was invented as thought became more dominant in the human experience and thus the intimate primal bond animals and primitive humans had with reality was diluted to the point of being lost. The concept of "getting back to God" was born. This is the Adam and Eve story, we ate the apple of knowledge (ie. thought) thus expelling ourselves from the Garden of Eden. And now we're looking for a way back in. The first book in the Bible, brilliant, just outdated.
Thought operates by a process of division. Understanding this is key.
Thus, to the degree we are thinking, the unity with reality (and each other) that we seek remains out of reach. This is the steep price tag for the awesome powers that thought delivers. We are brilliant, and yet insane.
The great mistake of most religions is in attempting to cure the disease of disunity with thought, that which is the source of the disease. And so for example, we see Christianity make the earnest very well intentioned attempt to create unity through beliefs, while dissolving in to endless internal division within itself.
The mistake is in not realizing that the fundamental human problem does not arise from thought content, and thus can not be solved at that level.
The problem arises from the medium itself, as proven by the fact that no thought content ever invented has brought us to the experience of unity which we seek. As evidence we can observe how every ideology ever invented has inevitably fallen victim to internal division and conflict.
From this perspective the God debate is essentially pointless, not only because nothing can be proven, but more so because whatever answer is chosen will still be a product of thought, and thus will still generate the experience of division and not the experience of unity.
So, this is of course way too wordy, evidence of my own poor writing skills. A better suggestion could be for readers to simply ignore all the theory above, get out in to nature somewhere, and learn how to lower the volume of thought. And then you will see for yourselves. Once that which is obscuring the experience of unity is removed, the Garden of Eden which has always been there reappears in our human experience.
I think that this place can be reached via either reason or faith, which is another reason why the God debate is pointless, and why I encourage readers to stay on whatever path they can best relate to.
As example, Catholic doctrine teaches that God is ever present in all times and places. Ok, that's great. Thus, I don't have to struggle to reach God because He's already there, everywhere. All I need to do is turn down the volume of that which is obscuring God from me, the apple of knowledge I ate in the Garden of Eden. But of course at the moment I label that experience "God" I'm back in land of thought and the experience is again reduced to being merely an idea.
We don't really want ideas about unity. We want the experience of unity. We think ideas are the path to the experience, but really they are the obstacle in the path. Thus, ignorance is good.
Whaddya know, the God debate has delivered useful information after all. But of course we're going to ignore it.
:smile: And thus the human drama continues.
Hope something in there is useful. Gonna shut up now before I crash the server.
:smile: