Liu
Well-Known Member
There are so many different myths, you simply cannot consider them all literally true. I wouldn't say all are "just stories" but rather use the term metaphors, some good and some less so at describing reality.Sure.
To do such - all gods are the reflection or shadow of one god - quite literally ignores everything that is known and believed of the gods. Significant elements are ignored; if Thor and Odin are the same deity, just different shadows, how is Thor the son of Odin? How could Thor be birthed by Jord, if they are the same? The inevitable answer of "Those are just stories" could be given, but at that point you might as well not be recognizing Thor, Odin and Jord. In fact, you wouldn't be; because to recognize those Gods is to recognize them as they are. Parentage and all.
That's essentially what pantheism is; the Universe is a manifestation of God, and all gods are permissible as "aspects" of that god. But the gods are not permitted in full, they're included in name only.
Also, I think at least some of human's encounters with deities might be encounters with spirits. I don't actively believe in them, but I'm read/heard enough of other people's experiences with them to not completely exclude the possibility. So, I guess we might be thinking in different concepts meaning the same - what you call deities I might call either spirits or simply parts of existence.
Yes, that's what I was saying - I think it's not complex enough to accurately describe reality, but rather oversimplifies things by putting them into categories, something that pantheism avoids.I don't think polytheism is that complex at all.