Songs that shaped your worldview.
>xillennial unc is reminiscing the good ole times againLol, how about living in the present, old turd
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoF_a0-7xVQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iE0Td3L68lU
*play it like a church bell Tom*
>>128234589It’s a dumb song. It anthropomorphises God, that means it considers God as if God were a human. Stephen Fry argues the same way and he’s a homosexual
>>128234589At least post u dimwit, eye h8 how /mu/ posts album or song covers but not the linkhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p554R-Jq43A
>>128234589
>>128235332>>128235314>>128234589Why do people think that Atheism is just liberating and not harsh as fuck, arguably even harsher than Theism. Soiboys ruined Atheism, they made it Reddit. Atheism is supposed to be for hurt badass Byronic Heroes.
>>128235173>It anthropomorphises GodSo does the Bible. If you want to use the "God is a transpersonal omniscient universal entity whose motives are beyond human comprehension" argument, then maybe find a religion whose sacred text doesn't literally describe God as walking, talking, being prideful, getting angry, and, at times, appearing genuinely surprised.
>>128235570to be fair a floating de-attached formless consciousness (whatever that is) technically can also get angry, sad, etc. It would be the awareness itself but body less, makes no sense but whatever lets assume its possible.idk how old is the shapeless god meme but i dont think its Christian in origin maybe it goes way back.https://nightbringer.se/the-legend-of-king-arthur/arthurian-characters/m-arthurian-characters/morrigan/>Proto-Monotheism in Ancient Near East (ca. 3rd millennium–1st millennium BCE)>Early Mesopotamian gods were largely anthropomorphic, but there were hints of high, abstract gods:>Anu (Sumerian sky god) and Enlil had a kind of distant, ruling, omniscient quality, especially in later theology.>They were less “personally involved” than other deities but still had forms and domains.>Amun in Egypt (Middle Kingdom, ~2000 BCE) started as a hidden, mysterious “invisible” deity. Later fused with Ra (Amun-Ra), emphasizing transcendence beyond human form.>Upanishadic and Vedic Thought (ca. 800–500 BCE)>The earliest clearly articulated non-anthropomorphic God appears in the Upanishads of India:>Brahman is described as formless, infinite, eternal, beyond thought or description.>Greek Philosophy (6th–4th century BCE)>Anaximander and early Pre-Socratics hinted at an infinite, boundless principle (apeiron) underlying everything.>Plato: In Timaeus and Republic, the Form of the Good is:>Ultimate, perfect, non-material, omniscient, and beyond direct perception.>Not a “god in the sky” but an intelligible principle.