This poem simply expresses Spinoza's pantheism - very little to do with monotheism or revealed dogma. (As Spinoza put it: God = Nature, and Nature = God.)
This is the only definition of 'God' that makes any sense to me. It is in this sense, apart from the butterflies and sunsets, that I see my MS, and our finite fossil fuels etc, as part of God.
Hardly a God with a 'plan' (unless physics and biology count as a plan).
This poem simply expresses Spinoza's pantheism - very little to do with monotheism or revealed dogma. (As Spinoza put it: God = Nature, and Nature = God.)
This is the only definition of 'God' that makes any sense to me. It is in this sense, apart from the butterflies and sunsets, that I see my MS, and our finite fossil fuels etc, as part of God.
Hardly a God with a 'plan' (unless physics and biology count as a plan).
Sorry. I don't mean to sound harsh, ok?
Whatever gets you through the night x
lovingfatalist 1 year ago