In a physicalist, deterministic universe governed by strict cosmological laws, subjective theism is not a biological error; it is a rational, functional necessity. When reality is dictated by two foundational drivers of phenomena, the Principle of Least Action (which optimizes paths of movement) and the Second Law of Thermodynamics (which dictates the continuous increase of entropy), the human experience of "God" emerges as a highly sophisticated psychological and physical adaptation.Because God is classically defined as the uncaused prime mover, impassionate and completely immaterial, humans can never approach his essence. Instead, we interact exclusively with His energies, which manifest physically as the immutable, elegant laws of physics.Therefore that people perceive there is a divinity which has a clear will is necessarily prove that functionally "God" exists, even if as merely an idea which then shapes how humans perceives natural phenomena. It also demonstrates that some kind of objective morality, in the sense of being a common set of laws for humans in a society to follow, is real. And alignment with this natural, objective law in the form of revelation is vindicated through miracles (statistically improbable natural events) and theophanies (the experience of God)
>>18481794That doesn't make sense but okay
The physicalism general really buckbroke the entirety of /his/, holy kek