Friday, November 11, 2011

Becoming Godhood: How "something" can be "not-something" at the same time


If “something” is the object and “not-something” is the definition of the object, then something can be not-something at the same time, contrary to some logicians.

Theology, philosophy, science, and even the humanities, have been dominated by an intellectual leadership which features the “not-something” of definition and denotation. This has separated man from life and nature, this has also made of God merely of definition or denotation or intellectual intuition. Aquinas even thought that the highest mode of knowledge as well as the highest mode of Being was intellectual intuition, and Heidegger more or less agreed.

Godhood is not an intuitional movement in metaphysics to “union.” Godhood is attained through the evolution of the material to supermaterial objects. To “see” God we need to step back from metaphysics and intellectual intuition and “become” Godhood in nature through evolution. We evolve in the real material world to real supermaterial Godhood, not a definition or denotation of God, not a number or principle of God, not a non-material, spiritual, non-object God, but a real supermaterial Supreme Object.

Contrary to many intellectuals, the world is not a dream, the exterior world is real, the world has meaning. This is not an anti-intellectual stance—equations and definitions have helped to create life-saving technology and great books---this is the crowning of intellectual intuition with reality, with nature, with life, and an understanding of the evolution to Godhood.

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