RE: The Million Dollar Question
May 8, 2014 at 11:48 am
(This post was last modified: May 8, 2014 at 11:58 am by Confused Ape.)
(May 8, 2014 at 10:10 am)lordofgemini Wrote: @confusedape
Intresting viewsbut we aren't talking about religion here. We are talking about God.
The question in the opening post is "What is a God?". Maybe a better way of putting it would be "What is a deity?" because that covers everything - the God of Judaism/Christianity/Islam is a deity along with all the gods and goddesses humans have ever believed in.
(May 8, 2014 at 10:10 am)lordofgemini Wrote: Use you logic and understanding, it takes alots of intellect to grasp the concept of God and even higher to understand God.
It really depends on whose concept of God you're talking about - Brahman - The Universal Self - The Highest God Of Hindusim
Quote:Brahman is the indescribable, inexhaustible, omniscient, omnipresent, original, first, eternal and absolute principle who is without a beginning, without an end , who is hidden in all and who is the cause, source, material and effect of all creation known, unknown and yet to happen in the entire universe.
He is the incomprehensible, unapproachable radiant being whom the ordinary senses and ordinary intellect cannot fathom grasp or able to describe even with partial success. He is the mysterious Being totally out of the reach of all sensory activity, rationale effort and mere intellectual, decorative and pompous endeavor.
According to that humans aren't going to understand Brahman through using logic and intellect.
(May 8, 2014 at 10:10 am)lordofgemini Wrote: Those religions just follow blindly what ever God they are told of be it fire/idol/or some old ancient man/cow/elephant/sun.
Gods and Goddesses of Hinduism
Quote:All the numerous gods and goddesses are the eyes, ears, hands and feet of Brahman only. In their individual aspects they represent diversity and His numerous duties (dharmas); but in their unified and highest aspect they represent Brahman, the Supreme Self.
So, it seems that they can be regarded as aspects of the Universal Self by people who want to interpret them like that.
(May 8, 2014 at 10:10 am)lordofgemini Wrote: This doesn't mean all of them are god. Religion has nothing to do with the concept of God. Be it any religion.
There wouldn't have been any religions if people hadn't come up with some concept of deity in the first place. Nobody knows how and why religion got started or what the earliest modern humans believed in.
There's a mysterious cave painting known as the Sorcerer of Trois-Frères and it's been dated to approximately 13,000 BC.
Is this the root of the figure depicted on a seal which was found at Mohenjo-daro, a settlement which was built around 2,600 BC?
Did this image of whatever it was supposed to be bear any relation to the figure on the Gundestrup Cauldron which has been dated between 200 BC and 300 AD?
Humans have always wandered around and borrowed ideas from other groups of humans. There is evidence that people can have a subjective experience of God/Supreme Reality or whatever you want to call it. It's likely that some early modern humans had the same experience but there's no way of knowing how they interpreted it.
These days there's a New Age tendency to think of God as having something to do with quantum physics. I think we can safely say that early modern humans didn't come up with this concept.
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