I don't, actually. For me, gods are like
pornography.
If so, then if you've never seen it, then why claim you'll know it when you see it? Those who have experience of what they call God say the same thing that, "You know it when you see it". The difference is they are speaking from a place of experience. They call it God because the experience is transcendent in nature (as opposed to mundane like Orange Marmalade). The difference is, to say you'll know it when you see it, until you have seen it, you can't say you
know it to say it doesn't exist, since you've yet to see something you have no experience with to know that you'll know it when you see it!
It's a self-annihilating loop. The best you can do is try to argue that those who claim to have experienced that, in fact must not have really experience that, or are mistaken in calling it God, because you've never experienced what they have and therefore it cannot be real. But that's not a very solid argument with handles on it, to say the least.
I can list you off things I consider to be gods and things I consider not to be gods, but neither list is exhaustive. I also realize that it isn't based on anything coherent other than social convention; for instance, I recognize divine messenger Mercury as a god, but not divine messenger Gabriel. Why? No idea - by any rational criteria, I'd include or exclude both of them as a package, but I don't.
Actually you are touching on some deep truths in this. Yes, your cultural programming is what is telling you God should look like, and it is those filters, those colored glasses that you are looking through in how you evaluate what you hear when others talk about God. You hear them speak of God, and you hear it as "a god", a deity, an entity, a being, and so forth. That's the mental image of God you have been programmed to imagine God is. That's been my entire point from the very outset in all our exchanges on this topic we've ever had.
Edit: I notice that you left off something important from my post: "I think". My notions of what is and isn't a god are relevant for figuring out whether I'm a theist or atheist.
And that too has been my point all along.
Yes, in the sense you "don't believe in God", in the way you speak of God, I too am an atheist like you. I do not believe in that God either.
For some other person, it's their notions of what is and isn't a god that are relevant for figuring out whether they're a theist or atheist.
Sure. There is this great saying I heard someone say once I think captures this perfectly. "
The God you don't believe in doesn't exist." There's some legs to that statement. And in the case of the God you don't believe in, there is truth and value in that for you. It has no meaning to you. It doesn't to me either.
What language is that? I don't recall ever defining "god" in this thread.
You have said repeatedly "a god". That in and of itself is defining God as some external
object, some entity, a being, etc. To say "a god". is like saying a dog, or a cat, or a car, or a person, or a frog, etc. It exists outset yourself as an "other". But what if instead someone does not view God as an
object but instead understands God as the
Subject of all that is? How does that fit the definition of God as "a god", as if it were some sort of supernatural being "out there" somewhere? It doesn't fit at all, actually.
I'm not sure if you've ever noticed in my signature line this great line I read from the journal of the American philosopher Ken Wilber writing about the world's great mystical traditions, both East and West, "
A mystic is not one who sees God as an object, but is immersed in God as an atmosphere." That's quite a different point of view than calling God "a god". Isn't it?
In other threads, I've talked about how it's impossible to give a single definition for "god" that covers all the god-concepts out there. The only common element I've been able to find between all the more popular god-concepts is that a god is an object of worship.
Well, now you've found something that contradicts that.
It certainly is not isolated either.
... but even that much isn't needed for an individual's god-concept. If someone defines - for themselves - god as "a substance that is good on toast", then to them, marmalade would be a god (as would peanut butter, grape jelly, etc.).
If someone defined marmalade as God, I'd say they were like
the man who mistook his wife for a hat!
Again, the word God is a metaphor that points to something beyond the word. The word God inherently has been used to point to the transcendent, the ineffable, etc. One could argue one could "find God" through the taste of marmalade (and I might actually argue that point!), but to say marmalade is God makes the choice of using that metaphor to describe something mundane, I don't know, I'd say that's pretty silly. It would be like exclaiming to the world you have found your
true love when you open a box of cereal in the morning, if you aren't making a joke about it.
When trying to decide if someone is a theist (which I mean in the broadest sense, not just the limited "monotheistic supernatural creator-god" that you guys keep trying to limit the term to),
And rightly so they don't want you to limit it to that. There is no way to distinguish between them. It's like calling all Asians Chinese, that they all come from China. Theism is not the umbrella term. It's a very specific form of view regarding Ultimate Reality.
What I actually wonder is if what some call atheism is really a rejection of any sort of Ultimate Reality, and they symbolize that by calling that "theism"? I actually think there is some truth to this, hence why in the next breath they claim Naturalism as what they believe in. But that too, interestingly enough, is a view on Ultimate Reality. What would distinguish it would be to say it's not "transcendent", but wholly immanent, what can be known, touched, tasted, smelled, felt, etc. In that sense, they are far more closely akin to Pantheism, though a cousin to it of sorts. It's not really about "God", but about transcendent reality versus immanent reality, otherworldly versus this-worldly, right hand versus left hand paths, paths of ascension versus paths of descension, etc.
I'll process this some more, but I believe I'm tracking this correctly at this point, as I was in saying it's not about theism versus atheism, but literalism versus non-literalism, which applies to all paths of knowing reality, both ascending and descending. which was my whole point of speaking of reality as metaphor. There's quite a lot there to attempt to penetrate further.
I consider two things:
- what the person consider a god or gods
- what the person believes to exist
If there's any overlap between the two categories, the person is a theist. If there's no overlap, the person is an atheist. It's really that simple.
Reality is never actually quite as simple as we want to try to make it! I include myself and my views in that statement.
I actually tend to see that theism and atheism are not opposites but two sides of the same coin.
(Simple to say, that is. I know that in practice, figuring out what a person truly believes can be tricky).
Yes indeed! And hence why I think it behooves all of us to drop these ultimately meaningless labels! Calling ourselves this or that, actually has the effect of limiting your own possibilities. We want to "fit in" somewhere, as this or that, and when we do, we actually disallow in our own thoughts things which appear to not fit that definition of ourselves. We shouldn't define God, nor should we define ourselves for that very reason.
You notice how you never see me restricting myself to this or that? It's not that I'm confused or unclear. I have a very clear mind. It's that I'm open to taking multiple points of view all at the same time, ultimately privileging none over the other. I can very much see and think as an atheist, as a theist, as a Christian, as a Buddhist, etc, as best as my knowledge and experience currently allows. I do not seek to define truth as a single thing, but as
possibility. Truth is exposed through a variety of perspectives. I don't want to cut myself off from Truth by boxing myself into a bounded point of view. Am I a Panentheist? Yes. Am I an Atheist? Yes. It depends how I want to look at the Mystery in that moment in order to know more. I think this is the first time here I've actually exposed how I "believe". These labels are ultimately meaningless to me.
I have my own ideas about what I would and wouldn't consider a god for me, but none of that matters when trying to decide whether someone else is a theist - all that matters is their own beliefs. I personally wouldn't call, say, the Sun, the universe, or love "God", but if someone sincerely holds one of these things to be God, then that person is a theist.
Or you could call them poets.