Originally posted by Digi
Among other flaws, you're mistaking size with coherence. Was the universe conscious simply because more particles were present? So does the sun have consciousness? A building? Interstellar gas clouds? They all have an incalculable number of particles touching in a complex fashion.... It becomes a worthless term. It doesn't make you a theist if you believe the universe exists. It just means you've watered down the concept of God so much that it has no practical meaning.
This definition of God is also incongruent with 99% of the definitions of God used by, well, anyone. If God is the universe, and nothing else, then yes, we're all theists. But so what? That's not what anyone's religion actually is. That's not what anyone's God is. ...
I don't know how consciousness works, I only know that you can't get something from nothing.
I'd say everything has aspects of consciousness at the very least, just not as finely tuned as us and in many ways they are seemingly more disorganised (even though they are actually more predictable than us).
The reason I said this is that we do all believe in miracles, the unexplainable. But some of us just find some miracles easier to believe than others.
Many monotheists would say they believe that God is all powerful, omnipresent, eternal and the source of all consciousness, and reality does have these qualities. According to the people I've asked the only reason they don't is because they are afraid it would make God look "impersonal".
However, they would be wrong, if God is reality he constitutes 100% of our personal lives, and it explains a lot of morality if he is everything and everyone.
Originally posted by Mindship
Put another way: would you consider yourself a pantheist or a panentheist? (Kindly google for definition of terms).
To be honest, I'm often asking myself the same question.
I think I'm somewhere between the two. Ultimately I don't know how it emerges, how can we? I just know that you can't get something from nothing, and if you can, it is arguably not nothing any more.