You have come to the belief that there is “something” that you are calling “free-will” that has to ability to guide your decisions and yet is not a part of the physical universe and you relate that to your “soul” even though I’m sure you didn’t that thought from an educated source.
Yeah, I kinda made it up. Well, I kinda gleamed it from Aristotle and Aquinas who said the will is the rational appetite, a power of the soul, and (as it is rational) is an immaterial power, much like the intellect. But perhaps I have reasoned this badly.
Existence
The ONLY way that we know of any existence is by something having effect upon us. This is not an issue of the senses being the ONLY source of knowledge. It is an issue of what we declare exists and how we (all of humanity) ended up declaring it as such.
Well, we’ve talked a little bit about this before, and I was never very confident we agreed on everything. For one thing (which comes to mind now), what do you mean by “effect.” For example, if you hear that “Bob” exists … would you say that Bob is having an effect on you? Even if he’s nowhere around?
If something truly seems to have no effect at all, we say that it does not exist. And if something does have effect, we say that it does exist. That is how we gain our concept of what exists in reality.
Once again, what do you mean by “effect.” Does hearing about something, even if the something isn’t acting on you, technically still an effect on you from that something?
But that understanding does not deny the divine or the supernatural at all. It merely says that if the divine is going to be said to exist, then it must have effect. No one who accepts that God exists argues against God having effect.
I would agree that God definitely has an effect on everything. However, I would not agree that “No one who accepts that God exists argues against God having effect” … because Deists seem to think that God does not have an effect on us, but that He still exists.
Spirit
Realize that “spirit” does not mean “divine”. spirit is the “energy” or the “motion within” and it is also not the same as the “soul”. God exists in both the divine world (as Principle) and also the physical world (as Spirit). The word “spirit” is often in texts, improperly used in place of “divine” and this leads to common confusion and often people say, “divine spirit” just to clarify. Spirit is a physical thing which is governed by a divine thing. Spirit is the action itself.
Interesting words. I have no thought about this. You may be right.
Divine
The entire universe of the “supernatural” and the “divine” are what could also be called the “principles that govern the universe”. We say that they are “above” because they govern and thus they are the “super” of the natural. They are not directly a part of the physical universe and it is a misunderstanding that the divine actually push the universe in any way.
Maybe.
Divine
A principle is what something is governed by, but the principle does not actually push or pull on anything physical at all. This is largely an issue of language and is why we conceive of the universe as being in 2 separate realms of the divine/supernatural and the natural/physical.
The word “principle” is used more broadly than this of course. It means “the beginning of any kind of thing in anyway whatsoever.” What you seem to be referring to here are laws. No?
All principles necessarily must be consistent with all others or be false. But principles can be arranged differently with different names so as to create a completely different understanding. This does not negate the first setting of principles, it merely establishes a different “divine realm” of the same reality. This is how we get Hinduism versus Judaism.
Um … are you saying that Hinduism and Judaism are both true because they have different “divine realms?”
Superstition
What happens in the communication process, especially over thousands of years and little precise education, is that people get these concepts convoluted and especially in the sense that a divine being actually causes “on its own” a physical occurrence that had no other physical instigation. This is a mental temptation to “stitch the divine” into one universal understanding and is called “super-stition”. But the divine is not ever actually causing the physical to alter in any way else it would be a part of the physical universe merely due to the fact that it has effect on it.
Very trippy. I probably don’t understand what you’re saying.
Soul
Your soul is not the same as your spirit. Your spirit is a part of the physical world. It is your “behavior” both inside and out. But your soul is your part of the divine universe. It is the principle that represents exactly what you are in essence.
Very interesting. I have often wondered what the distinction between soul and spirit are. Perhaps you are right here.
Now the result of getting these definitions straight is that there can be no effect on your decisions that is not a part of the physical realm and also that everything in the physical realm follows cause and effect just as everything in the divine realm follows perfect logic.
This may be true if you’re right about everything that exists is in the physical realm. I still take issue with what the means. A lot of equivocation can happen with that phrase, I think. But the main thrust of the issue is that … does the will operate simply like a deterministic law of nature? That is, is causation as seen in physics the only factor that goes into determining human action, or is there something that is immaterial that directs it as well and does not have a deterministic nature (unlike the laws of physics)?
Thus either free-will means “free to exercise your will” or free-will does not exist in either realm.
I honestly haven’t followed you perfectly (and that may be my fault). However, perhaps to better clarify everything, what do you mean by “the will.”
Also, where are you getting this stuff? It might be true. But did you make it up? Is it from Plotinus? Is it Baha’i? Or is it all completely taken from Christian writings that I don’t know about? I want to know.