Wednesday, February 21, 2018
More polytheism than theism?
Speculating here that it is true that
when a sun or star dies the surrounding solar system dies, but there
are many stars and suns in the universe and no one star upon which all depend.
And I don't see Godhood as a human
heart upon which all the cells and organs of the body depend, I see
many hearts, various levels of Godhood, evolved to in the material
and supermaterial world.
There is interaction between the forces
in the universe but no one God upon which all the others depend.
There are many central centers of powers within the centers of many
galaxies, and the galaxies may even be somehow connected
electromagnetically, but no one center upon which all the others
depend.
This suggests a great variety of forces
interacting and evolving in the cosmos, with Gods always, but not
often, evolving at different levels of material and supermaterial
evolution. But it is an endless evolving, with many starts and stops
along the way. There seems to be no one cosmic beginning or ending,
only endless evolution and devolution.
Is that more polytheism than theism? In
any case, it is not spiritualism---which can be more easily abstractly fantasized. More realistically we have "only"
material and supermaterial evolution. Many centers are better than one center for vital evolutionary variety. Why isn't that enough?
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