I read all you said. The questions I ask are not meant for you to repeat what you have already said. I separate quotes to make sense of longer post. Reading it in sections helps better.
God is a complex concept that has been defined a number of different ways by a number of different people, and yet we all have the ability to call the concept to mind when someone speaks of it.
It depends. Ive met one person who has never heard of the wors god, concept, literal, nor definition of it. He cant percieve in his mind what concept or object (whichever one, doesnt matter) doesnt exist to him unless he was making up something and just labeled it "god." The word means nothing in and of itself.
I have defined this concept as "that which humans think of when they consider the aspects of experience and reality which they do not understand in a concrete way."
The definition of god? Id have to re-read what thst definition applies to. God is not always a concept. God can be literal just as a chair is, say, blocks of wood that are build in a certain way to sit on it.
You don't seem to be asking how to define the God concept in
Im asking how to define god as a concept without concrete foundation of what this concept is based on?
If god is just a concept, what is it based on thats not concrete?
You don't seem to be asking how to define the God concept in general though. You seem to be asking which of these is correct and worth believing
I never said anything about which concept of god is correct or worth believing. Dont know where you got that.
How do you define god (in general) as a concept without it being based on something concrete?
Can god as a concept stand alone in definition or, like a chair, does it need a foundation to which it is a label or concept of?
I've only really offered up that the concept in and of itself is real, and that choosing to believe in the concept based on any of the previous definitions makes for a useful exercise in developing empathy for other believer
True.
I also have offered up that choosing to doubt the concept based on any of the previous definitions is also a useful exercise in developing empathy with other non-believers.
True
I grasp that it is a challenge for someone who believes in a literal God father to doubt their own conception of God and indulge the possibility that God is an imaginary character from history, but doing so is not impossible and does not require a surrender of faith.
The reason is god is not a concept to them. He is an "object" and fact. I can entertain I have no android in my hand but to honestly ask me to try and imagine that I have no phone in my hand is, well, impossible outside of my imagination.
When some of us ask believers to pretend that god does not exist, we are asking them not to use their imagination but entertain that god does not exist. How can one do that if god is existence? Thats like saying to a blind man whose been blind his whole life he can "literaly" entertain the concept of light even if he hadnt heard of it before.
In other words, believers who cant imagine a place without god are blind people who cant describe life with light. Regardless if light is a concept or literally, without enough information to imagine, he could make up anything and call it light.
Conversely it is a challenge for someone who believes God to be an imaginary character from history to indulge in belief in a literal father God, but doing so is not impossible and does not require a surrender of reason.
This, I agree with. Its like if the blind person had a understansing concept of light, he canbelieve in it. But to believe it literal, he cannot (taking out heresay and other peoples testimony right now). I disagree that it is not impossible. How can a blind person literally imagine light? What is he going by based on personal experiences? What ias his concept of light based on? And how wohld he describe it to mirror what the ligt actually is?
Some people do equate God with life, and I don't think this is an invalid way of describing God, except that when we talk about God we are not referencing the same thing that we are referencing when we talk about life.
Well, if you talk about a hindu god, each like boddhistvas means different aspects of life we experience.
Brahman we can disifer as life given thats what makes up brahma.
Life usually involves a lot of sacrifice and a lot of changing and adapting things for the better. Life also involves love and hate. This is the christian god and jesus represents.
Different mesangers bring morals that people get from environment, culture, and language. These morals are a part of human life and can be translated as part of life itself since we are not separated from it.
I can translate any religion I can think of as being life in its multifacets. Religion is like the different pizzle pieces. The puzzle is life. Some define the picture on the puzzle as a message from god others just go with the flow.
God becomes a handy distinction if one wants to talk about that which one finds sacred or profound in contrast to life which may also be defined as what one finds common place or mundane. But I don't doubt that some people see every aspect of life as sacred, and truly believe that Life is equal to God.
Life is sacred. We chop of life via our religions but regardless of how we define different aspects of life and define it, its the same. Its sacred regardless.