B
Bluegoat
Guest
One step at a time! Most modern Westerners do tend to think that the idea of God includes all of those “extra” characteristics, but that has not at all been the case historically. Christians and and the Jews generally say that God has these kinds of characteristics (Although not emotion - no theology I know of says God has emotions in the proper sense.) But the pre-Christian pagans did not say that, and some of the Eastern religions do not say that. Aristotle and Plato, as the most important pagan examples, did not think god was even aware of his creation or had any knowledge of it, and they didn’t think he willed it either. They did say of all things god was most like a mind, but not with the emotions and changes and dependence on things outside of itself that our minds have. The neoplatonists said that you couldn’t really describe god at all, and terms that one might use for it (not he!) like the One or the Good were really just pointers of a sort, and would have been shocked at a theology that said he was a person. Plato thought about God, especially in his later writings, in almost mathematical terms.No, you’ve answered perfectly well, thank you.
I don’t think anybody believes that the universe has always existed - the Big Bang theory contradicts this. The fact is that nobody really knows how the Universe came about. I don’t think anybody really think it just popped into existence without cause either, just that the chain of causality is beyond analysis prior to the Big Bang.
If I understand you correctly, you’re not equating a self-existent god with a self-existent Universe, but with a self-existent law that caused the Universe to start. My problem with this comparison is that God is an awfully complex phenomenen, ascribed as it is with sentience, purpose and emotion. By contrast a physical law (or pre-physical, whatever that might look like) has none of this baggage and therefore is objectively a far more parsimonious hypothesis.
Truth is, we’ll almost certainly never know.
Christians and Jews of course say that God is in fact aware of his creation, and wills creation, and is a person - in fact three persons according to Christians. They also say that this is not properly speaking a philosophical opinion that one could arrive at through natural reason alone, but is rather something they know as a matter of special revelation - that is, God choose to reveal it to them directly. It does, however, solve a number of conundrums and difficulties that the pre-Christian pagans philosophers had with their systems, so we would not say that this idea of a personal God who wills creation is non-rational so much as super-rational.
But it is quite possible to affirm a theistic point of view without going so far as to say that God is like the Christian God.
Also - as far as a universe that has always existed: for a long time that was in fact the dominent opinion - that is what the ancient philosophers thought, and it is also what most scientists of the modern period up until the Big Bang theory became dominent thought. I lot of modern critisism of religion actually comes out of that period, and I suspect that is in fact what they were thinking - that the universe was self-existant in that way. So the idea of the Big Bang, if it did represent a real beginning to the universe, would imply a need to rethink those philosophic assumptions - I don’t think that always happens though.
Also, if it is the case as some seem to think that there have been a series of Big Bangs and Big Crunches, then there is a sense in which there has always been something, although I don’t know what you would call it. A sort of seed perhaps.
But in his recent book, Hawking said that gravity was sufficient alone to bring the universe into being. I must confess that I have some questions about this and haven’t read his book. But if he means that the law of gravity itself brought the material universe into being, that is very much like the idea of a self-existent immaterial reality - what the ancients would call a first cause or god. Or if he means there was something and gravity caused it to form the universe, then there is still a self-existent material reality of some kind. Of course, I may be totally mangling his suggestion here.