Paganism\Wiccanism (as a best-fit among the options Presented)
I'm actually a Hermetic Nietzsche follower.
My Worldview is All about making fantasy truth, or pure ideals being where Everything can spring into the growing pool of promise (beauty trumps what the Devil Wishes for You).
Bunny says: Never let Satan tell You that RaptorWizard is a Ti-dominant type or an NiFe type period! This is because Nietzsche was Never called an ISTP like Zarathustra is ISFP.
christianity. but i try to keep it as spiritual and un-religious as i can.
I don't believe in any gods. I don't believe in an after life. I don't believe in souls or spiritual forces. I don't believe in the efficacy of any mystical practices. I don't think the concept of the "supernatural" really makes any sense. I find don't much, if any, utility in religion.
EDIT: Oh, and I try to avoid faith as much as I can. Its use is only an unfortunate but sometimes inevitable expedience.
For yourself or in general?I find don't much, if any, utility in religion.
What DO you believe in?
Do you believe there is any purpose in the universe, or do you believe that we just arbitrarily create our own meaning, and try to make the best of this alienating situation?
I always thought the idea of an afterlife is rooted in our self-preservation instinct. It seems the thought of total annihilation is the scariest thing of all.The only universal contemplation older than the concept of "god" is around death and dying. Understanding the inevitable finality of death, of our existence, but not believing it, refusing to believe it. We sought immortality. Thus, god was born.
We create our own meaning, not arbitrarily, but through looking at the world around us, being curious about it, examining it, our role within it, as we've done since the dawn of our species.
To lead an examined life.
The only universal contemplation older than the concept of "god" is around death and dying. Understanding the inevitable finality of death, of our existence, but not believing it, refusing to believe it. We sought immortality. Thus, god was born.
I always thought the idea of an afterlife is rooted in our self-preservation instinct. It seems the thought of total annihilation is the scariest thing of all.
Sure, this is a reasonable point of view, I was actually just curious about what MP thinks, specifically.
Not that I disagree with you, I'm just curious why you think it's important, why does it matter?
Maybe, sounds reasonableWhat about conceptions of God that don't really dance around the fact that you die?
I know, I was just using your question as a jump-off point for my thoughts on the topic. Hope you don't mind?
Because, when the end is nigh, regrets will weigh down the peace you want to find. And by then, it will be too late. I want to die with a sigh upon my lips, not a gasp. Afterall, that will be the last moment of my existence.
Can you clarify? I'm not understanding your question.
Sounds good to me. I hope that it matters in the end, I sometimes wonder if people who did many shitty things, but never fully grasped how shitty they were, die in peace due to their own moral ignorance.
Sorry, I should have worked harder on that question. I just mean, if the creation of God is just man grasping after immortality (which sounds reasonable), how does that account for conceptions of God that don't promise immortality?
What DO you believe in?
Do you believe there is any purpose in the universe, or do you believe that we just arbitrarily create our own meaning, and try to make the best of this alienating situation?
For yourself or in general?
Well, when you think about everything in the universe that wasn't on my list, that leaves quite a lot.
I don't believe the universe, or existence in what every manner you put it, has a purpose. Purpose, meaning, and value concepts like good and bad, exist as the experience of sentient beings. The closest thing you can get to an objective form of these things is the collective aggregation of beliefs, and the actual physical structures that make the mind operate in the individual.
For myself it obviously has no utility at all. For others, I only see religion as having a utility that could presumably be achieved by alternatives to religion, so it is not a necessary means to anything for anyone.
Knowing who I am, how I am, I know that this is how I will find peace. Through an examined life. It gives me a sense of purpose. I, myself, often falter, sometimes greatly, in leading an examined life. Aiming to lead an examined life, is not everyone's aim. Their purpose differs. I find the thought of dying to be of a far greater contemplation, for me, than death. And, although we all will reach the inevitable conclusion, death, our dying, and thus, our living, will be what sets us apart, from one another. And that is okay. My dying will be the last experience I will have with myself. The only constant companion I had in this life. It's my final goodbye with the most intimate relation I will have had on this planet. That, with myself. For this, I aim to lead an examined life.
Even the promise of enlightenment, liberation, is a promise of immortality.