mikkel_the_dane
My own religion
I am skeptic, so I know the problem of giving a definition of God. The problem is the end as some atheists will point out, is that God is unknown, without reason, logic and evidence. But that is also the solution and the definition of God. And it isn't mine. The credit belongs to Immanuel Kant.
Now remember the problem of describing God involves, that all human description tend to have a subjective element, so if I remove all subjective elements and only do it objective, with reason and logic, the answer is that God is das Ding an sich.
God has been given many individual definitions, but they all share the following: God is objective, i.e. independent of humans in some sense. What which is independent of your mind is in the western myth of what God is; is the objective reality; i.e. das Ding an sich. But nobody knows that with knowledge. That is Agrippa's Trilemma and the limit of knowledge. What reality is independent of your mind, is unknown to you, because you know reality through your mind and your mind is not independent of your mind.
To some atheists God/das Ding an sich is the natural world. Further to some it is even known as philosophical physicalism, materialism or naturalism. These atheists are gnostics, they know what they can't know. They share that in a similar sense with some religious people, the strong Theists and other variants of gnosticism, not Gnosticism.
We if we indeed share parts of reality and you are not a Boltzmann Brain, then all of us, who engage in this forum have an attitude towards this: Ranging from indifference to a strong dogmatic belief.
We can't really know what das Ding an sich is, yet some of us can't stop debating the objective nature of God and what God really is. The joke is that for all us, who do that, we share the same problem. We speak of the Unknown. The only way to objective speak of the Unknown is to explain, how it is Unknown. I.e. the Unknown is that which is independent of your mind and how that is in itself.
In philosophy it is this:
Kant solved the first part: Das Ding an sich. So if you know your philosophy you only do the second part in practice. In science the second part is methodological naturalism. We start with the assumption that God is natural, impersonal and don't care for humans and accepts there are other assumptions possible.
That is the explanation of this:
That won't stop some humans in doing the first part with a claim of knowledge. In practice the falsification of all of these variants regardless of being claimed with science, philosophy and/or religion, is to note the following to that person: We can both get away with subjectively believing differently, so stop claiming a knowledge of what God/das Ding an sich really is. Accept that it is how you make sense of the rest of reality and that I do it differently and then we can start looking at what we apparently share.
Do in practice the fundamental dimensions of human existence and experience and you will notice the following: As humans we share some parts as the same, some are similar and others are different.
If you claim, that you can do the individual difference between how you and I individually cope the same, I just answer: No!
Nobody including you, I or anybody else have in practice authority over other humans in the name of the SAME, because I just answer with the difference: No!
With regards
Now remember the problem of describing God involves, that all human description tend to have a subjective element, so if I remove all subjective elements and only do it objective, with reason and logic, the answer is that God is das Ding an sich.
God has been given many individual definitions, but they all share the following: God is objective, i.e. independent of humans in some sense. What which is independent of your mind is in the western myth of what God is; is the objective reality; i.e. das Ding an sich. But nobody knows that with knowledge. That is Agrippa's Trilemma and the limit of knowledge. What reality is independent of your mind, is unknown to you, because you know reality through your mind and your mind is not independent of your mind.
To some atheists God/das Ding an sich is the natural world. Further to some it is even known as philosophical physicalism, materialism or naturalism. These atheists are gnostics, they know what they can't know. They share that in a similar sense with some religious people, the strong Theists and other variants of gnosticism, not Gnosticism.
We if we indeed share parts of reality and you are not a Boltzmann Brain, then all of us, who engage in this forum have an attitude towards this: Ranging from indifference to a strong dogmatic belief.
We can't really know what das Ding an sich is, yet some of us can't stop debating the objective nature of God and what God really is. The joke is that for all us, who do that, we share the same problem. We speak of the Unknown. The only way to objective speak of the Unknown is to explain, how it is Unknown. I.e. the Unknown is that which is independent of your mind and how that is in itself.
In philosophy it is this:
Philosophy, (from Greek, by way of Latin, philosophia, “love of wisdom”) the rational, abstract, and methodical consideration of reality as a whole or of fundamental dimensions of human existence and experience. Philosophical inquiry is a central element in the intellectual history of many civilizations.
Kant solved the first part: Das Ding an sich. So if you know your philosophy you only do the second part in practice. In science the second part is methodological naturalism. We start with the assumption that God is natural, impersonal and don't care for humans and accepts there are other assumptions possible.
That is the explanation of this:
Science has limits: A few things that science does not doQuestions that deal with supernatural explanations are, by definition, beyond the realm of nature
That won't stop some humans in doing the first part with a claim of knowledge. In practice the falsification of all of these variants regardless of being claimed with science, philosophy and/or religion, is to note the following to that person: We can both get away with subjectively believing differently, so stop claiming a knowledge of what God/das Ding an sich really is. Accept that it is how you make sense of the rest of reality and that I do it differently and then we can start looking at what we apparently share.
Do in practice the fundamental dimensions of human existence and experience and you will notice the following: As humans we share some parts as the same, some are similar and others are different.
If you claim, that you can do the individual difference between how you and I individually cope the same, I just answer: No!
Nobody including you, I or anybody else have in practice authority over other humans in the name of the SAME, because I just answer with the difference: No!
With regards