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Is this just another way of saying atheism (as opposed to classical pantheism)? Are there any religions, cults, sects, traditions, movements, etc that are based on naturalistic pantheism? Most pagan traditions seem to be largely polytheisti, which turns me off about as much as monotheism. Naturalistic pantheism, however, I can dig.

2006-08-29 09:45:27 · 6 answers · asked by ethical_atheist 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

I was actually hoping for more feedback on naturalistic pantheism specifically, not pantheism in general.

2006-08-30 21:50:43 · update #1

6 answers

The term pantheism is built upon the Greek roots pan, which means all, and theos, which mens god; thus, pantheism is either the belief that the universe is God and worthy of worship, or that God is the sum total of all there is and that the combined substances, forces, and natural laws which we see around us are but manifestations of God.

What is the difference between standard pantheism and panentheism?

It is true that both panentheists and pantheists share the view that the universe and every natural thing in it is pervaded by divinity. However, since panentheism postulates that the universe is contained within God and not God in the universe, panentheists believe in a God who is present in everything but also extends beyond the universe.

In other words, God is greater than the universe. Often they also believe that this God has a mind, created the universe, and cares about each of us personally. Pantheists on the other hand believe that the universe itself is divine. They do not believe in personal or creator gods.

Panentheism differs from Deism, which only postulates a god separate from nature. It differs from pantheism in that the latter identifies God with nature, although it agrees with pantheism that the god includes nature as a part of its being. Leading panentheists in more recent times have included Albert Schweitzer and Alfred North Whitehead.

2006-08-29 12:34:05 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

This idea, yes, I am Pagan and I follow this concept. God is in everything. The Gods are conscious representations of everything. If Material can be conscous, why not Energy? That is what the Divine is, conscous energy, the energy that exists in the All. Mind you, material is made of energy too. It's really an astounding mystery if you get into it. If you study Quantum Physics you'll be even more breathless.

2006-08-30 06:12:43 · answer #2 · answered by kaplah 5 · 0 0

to me, pantheism ha consistently meant that each speck of the universe(s) is sacred. it additionally, to me for my section, potential that one and all gods that are enjoyed, respected, quite BELIEVED IN, are actual. it truly is no longer the final pantheist sentiment yet i got here to pantheism on long island very own after looking out pan meant all and theism meant a perception in god. to me, theoretical physics and particularly stephen hawkings artwork on black holes and singularities has shown me some issues. a million - the universe is amazing and so extensive in scope that our little blue green planet isn't even a speck on the map. 2 - singularities, being places or maybe if in time or area or something, alongside with previous the form horizon of the black hollow and on the right 2nd of the great bang, are unique because of the fact all commonly used "regulations" of the universe,physics,thermodynamics,and so on. thoroughly ruin down. the universe does not might desire to obey our "regulations"! that to me is excellent and gorgeous. 3 - no count how plenty we study there is plenty extra to verify approximately so why no longer save an open recommendations - something is possible. technology and pantheism go mutually superbly.

2016-11-06 01:20:30 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Atheism means no belief in God- pantheism means belief that God is everything or everything is God, so they are two different things. Naturalistc panteheism means the universe is God or vice versa.

2006-08-29 09:53:03 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hi Gorilla,

Can't you go back to asking nice easy questions like the one you asked yesterday?

"Can you be a godless pagan?"

Yeh, that one.

2006-08-29 09:51:43 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

That's all I needed to know.

2006-08-29 09:49:19 · answer #6 · answered by Grist 6 · 0 0

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