My first instinct is that this sets up a false dichotomy between Deism and Theistic Personalism, but what do you guys think?
After my friend Google did a quick search of Theistic Personalism, my first thought is that I should not be posting.
However, I have been playing with the Deductive Method of reasoning to see what kind of descriptions of God would be possible. Maybe a deist would be interested in them. This cranky (feminine of snarky) granny cannot guarantee that my ideas are in the neighborhood of reality. But then, in my humble opinion, not every philosopher lives in that neighborhood.
The bump in the road is the last part of this sentence.
But I insist that that commits you to deism, and that if you want to talk about a God who cares about what we do and/or interferes with our affairs,
then you must be talking about something that is a part of the physical universe, and can be observed.
If it is possible that something can exist in the physical universe without the necessity of being observed by humans, could that lead to the possibility of a spiritual being existing independently, that is, without human observation?
In the physical world, there are a lot of interactions due to laws of nature. An interesting interaction is that of a tree hit by lightning and falling to the ground and there is no one there to hear the crash. Would there be a sound if there were no human ears to hear it?
But, sound is not the first interaction; lightning hitting the tree is the first interaction. What if there were no human eyes to see the interaction of lightning and tree, which resulted in the tree falling to the ground? What is happening here is that we can see effects but not necessarily the cause. Those who believe that God is greater than the space and time limits of His created universe will spot the possibility that God’s presence is not governed by the laws of the physical universe and the observation of human eyes.
The ideal conclusion to the above is the realization that there are instances in the physical universe where the cause of interaction (tree falling to the ground) is independent of observation. In fact, once the effects or results from the initial interaction take place, we will never be able to observe the original cause in the original action.
Keeping the above in mind, a possible suggestion would be to agree that 1. God as Creator exists. Deists should be able to accept that.
Next would be 2. God as Creator interacts with humans by bringing them into existence and maintaining their existence.
This follows 1. because God is Creator and we are creatures; therefore, it follows that God as Creator interacts with humans. Naturally, this 2nd statement implies as truth that “creating” anything is an interaction. Maybe a long drawn out interaction or a brief bang. Deists should be able to accept 2. because the “how” of creation is not specified. We can even posit that creating something from nothing is an interaction because there has to be some kind of interaction to sustain the “something”. We do exist!
At this point, we need to clarify that God’s power to create is infinite; otherwise He would not be God. Also, God, being a transcendent spirit, is not restricted or limited by His material/physical creation. Not being restricted or limited includes the concept that His existence is independent of human observation. We do not wake God up in the morning and put Him to bed in the evening. A deist should be able to agree that God is not dependent on His creation.
Starting with the first true statements
- God as Creator exists.
- God as Creator interacts with humans by bringing them into existence and maintaining their existence.
and adding true statements about God’s omnipotence and the fact that in nature not every cause for an effect or result is dependent on human observation for its existence. (lighting, tree falling, on ground result) we can arrive at a third true statement.
3. God as Creator interacts personally with each individual human.
Note: this true statement 3. deliberately omits how and why God interacts with humans. By sticking to the interaction per se, it is demonstrated that Deism is not the only banana in the bunch. Because I am not familiar with the nitty-gritty of Theistic Personalism, I cannot say if statement 3. justifies that philosophy.