Sappho wrote:Outlaw Yogi wrote: Sappho wrote:And as I've already said, this has nothing to do with things thus far described in religious texts. .
How do you know such ideas don't appear in texts?
How can you know your ideas are completely original, and not be mentioned in texts you're not yet exposed to?
Because if there was such a religious text, it would be less than a page in length and would simply say that there is a multiverse creator of which we know nothing beyond an appreciation of the mathematical prowess required of such a creation that we, and not necessarily the creator, exist within.
Shaivan hindus would equate this as/to Shiva (or Siva), who supposedly creates (and later destroys) universes [not to be confused with Brahma who creates the world], but never incarnates/lives within his creation .. although he is said to materialise occasionally. Vaisnavan hindus forward Vishnu (or Visnu) as creator, but your explanation precludes him as he is said to incarnate/live (10 times) within his creation.
2nd EDIT ADDITION - Should qualify that if animism validates exclusion, hinduism's out because all the major diety characters have close relationships with various animals ... Shiva's best mate is a white bull named Nandi (Nadi), Vishnu rides a swan, Brahma is bovine, Ganesh/has a baby elephant's head and a rides a rat, Krishna rides a peacock, Durga rides a tiger, Kali rides a lion and so on ect ect.
Sappho wrote:All text based religions have their roots in animism. Even Abraham's God, the most popular of all gods, can be a talking tree on fire without burning. Animism civilized and moralized the believers through stories which became those religious text we know of today. Yet where are those talking trees now? Where are the fantastical gods and demons of Asia now? Where are the goat gods, bull gods, war gods now? Why have they stopped their excessive interventions? God knows we could do with a bit of their intervention. Abraham's God for example did nothing to prepare us the the moral quandaries of the biotech age. Is it adultery to be artifically inseminated with another man's sperm for example? Or, how much medical intervention is too much medical intervention? And again, when does the omission of medical intervention become murder? On this and many other moral questions, Abraham's God is silent.
To me Abraham's God (Yaweh later mistranslated to Jahovah) is the god of psychotic schizophrenics.
This god supposedly told Abraham to kill his own son.
The goat and bull gods are still where they always were, in the sky. They are 2 of the 12 diefied characters/creatures within the Helenistic 'Precession of the equinoxes' which posits religious concepts/belief or spiritual consciousness changes every 2165 years as Earth faces the next Zodiac character in the sky at sunrise.
The Zodiac characters supposedly symbolise the dominant religion within each 2156 year time frame.
For example the current dominant religion (Christianity) is symbolised by a fish because we are in the age of Pisces.
The tribal war god of the Hebrews, Yaweh is still worshiped as Yaweh, Jahovah, and Allah.
IMO Abraham's God only intervenes in matters offensive to self righteous schizophrenics.
Sappho wrote:My creator is not so unreliable. It merely is that it is. It did nothing more than bring into effect the laws of the multiverse that it may exist. I couldn't even tell you if It intended to create conscious beings. All I can say is that it exists definitely outside of the multiverse and is shit hot at maths and physics... compared to humans that is.
Still sounds like/similar to the Vishwa concept, although within it is said to be the cosmic energy 'prana' and spiritual life force 'adi shakti'
The Creator outside of creation aquarium analogy is like a couple of sci-fi shows I've seen. An old Doctor Who episode comes to mind.
Thanx
EDIT ADDITION - Forgot to mention many insights within hindu texts (Vedas), Rig veda in particular came via Soma induced altered states ... soma is a drink made from toxic red mushies known as fli-agara ... untill seeing at my bush hideaway about a month ago I had only ever seen them in cold places.
What I find fascinating about Vedic texts compared to others is some of the authors seemed to be aware of the electrical nature of practically everything we know and experience. One verse from Bhagavad Gita which I like using when debating animal rights veg nazis/vegan fundamentalists and pacifist queirdos banging on about sacredness of life, is ...
"The spark that is eternal in all things is eternal in them all, so thou need not grieve o Ajuna for that which cannot die"
Krishna to Ajuna circa 3,100 BC.