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Pantheism is the philosophy that everything is God (pan="everything"
theos="God") or that the universe and nature are divine
Pantheism is distinguished from panentheism, which holds that
God is in everything, but also transcends the Universe. Strict
pantheism is not a theism. It does not believe in a transcendent
or personal God who is the creator of the universe and the judge
of humans. Many pantheists feel the word "God" is too
loaded with these connotations and never use the word in their
own practice - though they may use it to simplify, or to explain
things to theists. Pantheism has often been accused of atheism,
and not just because it rejects the idea of a personal creator
God.
Strict []or naturalistic pantheism believes that the Universe
either originated itself out of nothing, or has existed forever.
Modern scientific pantheism is materialistic. It believes that
design in the universe can be fully accounted for by principles
of evolution and self-organization. It does not believe in separate
spirits or survival of the soul after death. Pantheists concerned
about personal immortality seek it in realistic ways - through
children, deeds, works, and the memories of the living. Because
it shares these naturalistic beliefs with atheism, the arguments
for pantheism are the same as the arguments for atheism. Pantheism
puts forward exactly the same critiques of transcendental religions
and supernatural beliefs as does atheism. It is a secular religion,
firmly rooted in the real world of the senses and of science.
This form of pantheism is identical with movements variously
called religious atheism, affirmative atheism, Monism, or Cosmism.
It is also very close to Taoism, some forms of Chinese and Japanese
Buddhism, and neo- Confucianism. Strict pantheism differs from
conventional atheism only in its emotional and ethical response
to the material universe. It focusses not simply on criticizing
transcendental beliefs and religions, but stresses the positive
aspects of life and nature - the profound aesthetic and emotional
responses that most people feel towards nature and the night
sky.
Naturalistic pantheism draws ethical conclusions from these
feelings. Humans should seek a closer harmony with nature. We
should preserve biodiversity and the delicate ecological balances
of the planet, not just as a matter of survival, but as a matter
of personal fulfilment. Pantheism offers ways of expressing these
feelings in ceremonies, celebrating significant times and places
which underline our links with nature, the solar system and the
universe. All this is possible without retreating one millimeter
from the rigorously empirical attitude to reality found in modern
science. There are other forms of pantheism. Modern pagans frequently
claim to be pantheists.
Those who are concerned with logical consistency regard their
various deities as symbolic rather than real. Those who are not
so concerned combine pantheism with literal polytheism and belief
in magic, reincarnation and other supernatural phenomena. An
alternative, quite common among New Agers, is pan-psychic pantheism
- the belief that the universe/God has a collective soul, mind
or will. This version was most clearly expressed by Hegel, and
in more modern times by A. N. Whitehead and Teilhard de Chardin
(see also: process metaphysics). Another variant is the idea
that humans are in some way the mind of the universe (see also:
the global brain). Our evolution - indeed our active help - is
seen as helping the universe to attain its full potential (cf.
Creative Immortality). [Source: Copyright© 1997 Principia
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