by jimwalton » Tue Oct 01, 2019 11:54 am
Thanks. I find Hinduism very complex and difficult to understand as an outsider.
> There is only one infinite universal consciousness and we are the the different manifestations of that consciousness.
Yeah, I get this, though it seems illogical to me. As I mentioned to the OP, if the universe is not the creation of a personal God, but is rather a sort of unconscious emanation from the divine, then we have no legitimate subject-object relationships, no particularity, but only a blank unity. In such a view there can be no foundation for knowledge, love, morality, or ethics. Without an absolute personality, there is no diversity or distinction basic to reality at all. Ultimate reality is a bare unity about which nothing may be said.
Hinduism, it seems, incorporates atheism, polytheism, theism, and much else all under the same umbrella of consciousness.
> That universal consciousness is what monotheists call as God while Hindus sees the different manifestation of that universal consciousness as god themselves.
But the defeater for the universal consciousness being what monotheists call God is that monism (all is god) denies any subject/object relationship, which in reality denies the existence of matter and a rejection of individual identity. There is ultimately no difference between good and evil, man and nature, or person to person. The logic and philosophy don't hold together for me.
In addition, it doesn't seem true at all that the Trinity is an explanation of this concept. The Trinity is a very different idea in Christianity than different manifestations of the universal consciousness. One early Christian heresy (Modalism; Sabellianism) was the idea that Jesus Christ was just a different manifestation of the one God. So if Hindus perceive it as the same thing, they are misunderstanding Christian theology (no surprise; I find it difficult to understand Hindu theology).
Thanks. I find Hinduism very complex and difficult to understand as an outsider.
> There is only one infinite universal consciousness and we are the the different manifestations of that consciousness.
Yeah, I get this, though it seems illogical to me. As I mentioned to the OP, if the universe is not the creation of a personal God, but is rather a sort of unconscious emanation from the divine, then we have no legitimate subject-object relationships, no particularity, but only a blank unity. In such a view there can be no foundation for knowledge, love, morality, or ethics. Without an absolute personality, there is no diversity or distinction basic to reality at all. Ultimate reality is a bare unity about which nothing may be said.
Hinduism, it seems, incorporates atheism, polytheism, theism, and much else all under the same umbrella of consciousness.
> That universal consciousness is what monotheists call as God while Hindus sees the different manifestation of that universal consciousness as god themselves.
But the defeater for the universal consciousness being what monotheists call God is that monism (all is god) denies any subject/object relationship, which in reality denies the existence of matter and a rejection of individual identity. There is ultimately no difference between good and evil, man and nature, or person to person. The logic and philosophy don't hold together for me.
In addition, it doesn't seem true at all that the Trinity is an explanation of this concept. The Trinity is a very different idea in Christianity than different manifestations of the universal consciousness. One early Christian heresy (Modalism; Sabellianism) was the idea that Jesus Christ was just a different manifestation of the one God. So if Hindus perceive it as the same thing, they are misunderstanding Christian theology (no surprise; I find it difficult to understand Hindu theology).