Torco wrote: ↑Sun Jan 16, 2022 1:01 am
zompist wrote: ↑Mon Jan 10, 2022 12:05 am
But then it seems a bit odd to not consider that God might view us the same way. I mean, in a lot of theologies we are just as unreal, in God's view, as characters in a novel are to the novelist. That's what creation means!
I mean, that's one sense of creation, but we also speak of creation when we make things which are exactly as real as we are: for example, the other day I created a chair, which is real in a way my conworlds aren't. that being said, i totally agree that many theologies are, in a way, a narrative about why the real world is not, in fact, real, and what's real is this other thing... which makes this very weird.
You're conflating a few doctrines. The Christian idea, at least, is that God is not the same kind of thing as us, and his creation is not like creating a chair that exists in the same way you do... much more, in fact, like creating a novel.
The idea isn't that the real world isn't real... the usual Christian idea, in fact, is that God will do some reforms, but in this world... that's why the idea is that Christ comes back, rather than that we go to a "more real world" where he is. The idea is not to attain the same sort of hyperreality as God.
(Yeah, lots of people think that
while waiting for that, people can hang out in heaven. But... most people's ideas of heaven are pretty inchoate, and frankly way more pagan than Christian. Being with dead friends and family, mostly.)
in this christianity is not that unique either, look at zoroastrianism (reality is an epic struggle between good and evil, and you must choose your side), buddhism (this is how you escape an infinite succession of horribly suffering-laden lives where none of your desires will really be fulfilled anyway), or mormonism (here's how you become a god). perhaps a fundamental thing about at least some types of religion is one of these narratives about how this or that is literally the most important thing in the universe?
Sure, all these religions have dramatic stories about heaven or the end time, and so what? Singularity fans dream of being uploaded in a computer; Marxists dream of a better earth where the capitalists can all be hung from lampposts. If you prefer, there are belief systems where there is no heaven or hell, or no promise of a future utopia.
Those stories are not unimportant, but if you look a little deeper, they're also kind of insubtantial and unrelated to the actual praxis of the belief system, which is almost always focused on what the believer can and should do in the world today.