Pantheism
Pantheism is a metaphysical and religious position. Broadly
defined it is the view that (1) "God is everything and everything is God ... the
world is either identical with God or in some way a self-expression of his
nature" (Owen 1971: 74). Similarly, it is the view that (2) everything that
exists constitutes a "unity" and this all-inclusive unity is in some sense
divine (MacIntyre 1967: 34). A slightly more specific definition is given by
Owen (1971: 65) who says (3) "‘Pantheism’ ... signifies the belief that every
existing entity is, only one Being; and that all other forms of reality are
either modes (or appearances) of it or identical with it." Even with these
definitions there is dispute as to just how pantheism is to be understood and
who is and is not a pantheist. Aside from Spinoza, other possible pantheists
include some of the Presocratics; Plato; Lao Tzu; Plotinus; Schelling; Hegel;
Bruno, Eriugena and Tillich. Possible pantheists among literary figures include
Emerson; Walt Whitman, D.H. Lawrence, and Robinson Jeffers. Beethoven (Crabbe
1982) and Martha Graham (Kisselgoff 1987) have also been thought to be
pantheistic in some of their work-if not pantheists.
The book recognized as containing the most complete attempt at explaining and
defending pantheism from a philosophical perspective is Spinoza's Ethics,
finished in 1675 two years before his death. In 1720 John Toland wrote the
Pantheisticon: or The Form of Celebrating the Socratic-Society in Latin.
He (possibly) coined the term "pantheist" and used it as a synonym for
"Spinozist." However, aside from some interesting pantheistic sounding slogans
(like "Every Thing is to All, as All is to Every Thing"), and despite promising
"A short Dissertation upon a Two-fold philosophy of the Pantheists" Toland's
work has little to do with pantheism.
Where pantheism is considered as an
alternative to theism it involves a denial of at least one, and usually
both, central theistic claims. Theism is the belief in a "personal" God which in
some sense is separate from (transcends) the world. Pantheists usually deny the
existence of a personal God. They deny the existence of a "minded" Being that
possesses the characteristic properties of a "person," such as having
intentional states, and the associated capacities like the ability to make
decisions. Taken as an alternative to, and denial of, theism and atheism,
pantheists deny that what they mean by God (i.e. an all-inclusive divine Unity)
is completely transcendent. They deny that God is "totally other" than the world
or ontologically distinct from it. The dichotomy between transcendence and
immanence has been a principal source of philosophical and religious concern in
Western and non-Western traditions; and all major traditions have at times
turned to pantheism as a way of resolving difficulties associated with the
theistic notion of a transcendent deity or reality.
Not all of the problems generated by the theistic notion of God are also
problems for pantheism. But given a suitable reformulation, some of them will
be. And, as expected, pantheism will also generate some difficulties peculiar to
itself. Thus, although evil and creation do not present identical problems for
pantheism and the theism, and may even be inherent to theism; it may also
be possible to reformulate them in a way that makes them applicable to
pantheism. There may be pantheistic counterparts to the problem of evil and
other classical theistic problems, and perhaps they can be resolved by
pantheism.
There are probably more (grass-root) pantheists than Protestants, or theists
in general, and pantheism continues to be the traditional religious alternative
to theism for those who reject the classical theistic notion of God. Not only is
pantheism not antithetical to religion, but certain religions are better
understood as pantheistic rather than theistic when their doctrines are
examined. Philosophical Taoism is the most pantheistic, but Advaita Vedanta,
certain forms of Buddhism and some mystical strands in monotheistic traditions
are also pantheistic. But even apart from any religious tradition many people
profess pantheistic beliefs-though somewhat obscurely. Pantheism remains a much
neglected topic of inquiry. Given their prevalence, non-theistic notions of
deity have not received the kind of careful philosophical attention they
deserve. Certainly the central claims of pantheism are prima facie no
more "fantastic" than the central claims of theism-and probably a great deal
less so.
Like "atheism" the term
"pantheism" was used in the eighteenth century as a term of "theological abuse,"
and it often still is (Tapper 1987). A.H. Armstrong says the term "pantheistic"
is a "large, vague term of theological abuse," (Armstrong 1976: 187). With some
exceptions, pantheism is non-theistic, but it is not atheistic. It is a form of
non-theistic monotheism, or even non-personal theism. It is the belief in one
God, a God identical to the all-inclusive unity, but pantheists (generally) do
not believe God is a person or anything like a person. The fact that pantheism
clearly is not atheistic, and is an explicit denial of atheism, is
disputed by its critics. The primary reason for equating pantheism with atheism
is the assumption that belief in any kind of "God" must be belief in a
personalistic God, because God must be a person.
In his non-pantheistic phase, Coleridge claimed that "every thing God, and no
God, are identical positions" (McFarland 1969: 228). Owen (1971: 69-70) says,
"if ‘God’ (theos) is identical with the Universe (to pan) it is merely another
name for the Universe. It is therefore bereft of any distinctive meaning; so
that pantheism is equivalent to atheism." Similarly, Schopenhauer (1951: 40)
said that "to call the world ‘God’ is not to explain it; it is only to enrich
our language with a superfluous synonym for the word ‘world’." The charge that
pantheism is atheistic is as old as pantheism itself. Christopher Rowe (1980:
54-5) says, "When Cicero's Velleius describes Speusippus' pantheism as an
attempt to ‘root out the notion of gods from our minds’, he is echoing a charge
which was commonly made against the pantheism of the earlier Greek natural
philosophers ... like Anaximander or Heraclitus. These tended to be identified
as atheists in the popular mind; and indeed Plato himself implies a similar view
... the opponents who classify them as atheists are in reality attacking them
for undermining traditional beliefs about the gods-or, to borrow a phrase from
the indictment against Socrates, ‘for not believing in the gods the city
believes in’."
At most, what Schopenhauer, Coleridge, Owen etc. can show, and probably all
they intend, is that the pantheistic Unity can be explained in terms that would
either eliminate the notion of deity from pantheism altogether, or that it is
incoherent. They want to show that believing in a pantheistic God is a
convoluted and confused way of believing in something that can adequately be
described apart from any notion of deity-and in this they are mistaken.
Different versions of pantheism offer different
accounts of the meaning of "unity," and "divinity." There is no one meaning in
all forms of pantheism, and within some forms several types are found. Often,
the meaning of unity present is vague and indeterminate. Because of this, the
central problem of pantheism, unlike theism, is to determine just what pantheism
means. For example, philosophical Taoism is one of the best articulated and
thoroughly pantheistic positions there is. The Tao is the central
unifying feature. What kind of unity is (or should be) claimed by pantheists and
which, if any, is plausible? After dealing with these fundamental questions, the
philosophical and religious consequences of analyzing unity in some particular
way can be examined. There may be acceptable alternative criteria of Unity. But
even if there are alternatively acceptable criteria, some may be more acceptable
to the pantheist than others-given criteria of adequacy in addition to those
necessary. Among those that are acceptable, they need not be equally acceptable.
However, just as there are alternative theisms, one would expect that there are
alternative pantheisms. Pantheism need not be, any more than theism needs to be,
a univocal view.
Schopenhauer criticized pantheism's
identification of "the world" with "God," on the basis of what he took to be the
meanings of both for the pantheist. He said calling the world "God," or God "the
world," is "superfluous," and redundant. He also ridiculed the idea that the
world could be called God given our general notions of what God and the world
are like. Schopenhauer's criticism fails because he equivocates on the terms
central to his argument. The meanings of both Unity and divinity involved in the
pantheistic claim that there exists an all-inclusive divine Unity are different
than the senses Schopenhauer attributes to the world and God in his criticism.
The pantheist does not mean what Schopenhauer means by God, and the
"all-inclusive unity" in pantheism is not another word for the "world" as he
uses it (i.e. everything). The interpretation of "world" Schopenhauer attributes
to pantheists is not what they mean when they describe it as a Unity.
For the pantheist, however Unity is interpreted, the world is not simply an
all-inclusive Unity in the sense that the world, understood to be everything, is
the "unity" composed of everything. This would be to interpret it as asserting
that everything that exists simply is everything that exists; or to put it
another way, everything is (of course) all-inclusively everything. This is true
but vacuous, and it trivialises pantheism at the outset.
Attributing Unity simply on the basis of all-inclusiveness is irrelevant to
pantheism. Formal unity can always be attributed to the world on this basis
alone. To understand the world as "everything" is to attribute a sense of unity
to the world, but there is no reason to suppose this sense of all-inclusiveness
is the pantheistically relevant Unity. Similarly, unity as mere numerical, class
or categorical unity is irrelevant, since just about anything (and everything)
can be "one" or a "unity" in these senses. Suppose "formal unity" to be "the
sense in which things are only in virtue of the fact that they are members of
one and the same class ... the same universal" (Demos 1945-6: 534-545). Then
clearly formal unity is not pantheistic Unity. Furthermore, formal unity neither
entails or is entailed by types of unity (e.g. substantial unity) sometimes
taken to be Unity. Hegel's Geist, Lao Tzu's Tao, Plotinus' "One,"
and arguably Spinoza's "substance," are independent of this kind of formal
unity.
Unity is explained in various ways that are often interrelated. These
connections range from mutual entailment, to different types of causal and
contingent relations. Roughly, Unity is interpreted 1) ontologically; 2)
naturalistically-in terms of ordering principle(s), force(s) or plans; 3)
substantively-where this is distinguished from "ontologically"; and 4)
genealogically-in terms of origin. Christopher Rowe (1980: 57) calls 4 a
"genealogical model of explanation" of unity. "Thales, Anaximander, and
Anaximenes, the Milesian monists appear to have claimed that what unifies the
world is that it sprang from a single undifferentiated substance.
Unity may have to be explained partly in terms of divinity. The all-inclusive
whole may be a Unity because it is divine-either in itself (Spinoza's
substance), or because of a divine power informing the whole-as with the
Presocratics. The Presocratics give an account of why they think the unifying
principle is divine. It is immortal and indestructible. But this does not
satisfactorily explain the relation between Unity and divinity, or why divinity
might be seen as a basis of Unity. Similarly, though less naturally, the
question arises as to whether the all-inclusive whole is divine because it is a
Unity. Can Unity be a basis for attributing divinity to the whole? If divinity
is the basis for Unity, as it may be for the Presocratics; or alternatively if
Unity is the basis for divinity; then there is something of a redundancy in the
definition of pantheism as the belief that everything that exists constitutes a
divine Unity. A simpler non-redundant definition would be that pantheism holds
that "everything is divine".
"Divine" is defined as pertaining to God ("of,
from, or like a god"), but also as "sacred" or "holy." Either definition suits
the present purpose, since determining why pantheists regard the Unity as
divine, or god, is equivalent to determining why they regard the Unity to be
sacred or holy. The idea of "divinity" in pantheism is similar in some respects
to its theistic meaning.
Why do pantheists ascribe divinity to the Unity? The reason is similar to why
theists describe God as holy. They experience it as such. In Otto's (1950)
experiential account, what is divine is what evokes the numinous experience.
This can be a theistic god, but it can also be a pantheistic Unity. And, when
looked at from socio-scientific perspectives in terms of how the concept of
divinity functions intellectually and affectively (e.g., its ethical,
soteriological and explanatory roles), its application in theism and pantheism
is much the same.
There is no reason to suppose the idea of "divinity" relevant to pantheism
should be modelled after a specific tradition's concept of divinity-like
Christianity. At best, this tradition-dependent concept would be relevant to
Christian/pantheist and other theist/pantheist hybrids (e.g. panentheism). It is
too specific for any general analysis of pantheism, and it refers to the
theistic variants of pantheism which are most inconsequential for pantheistic
practice.
Whatever criteria are decided upon as necessary for attributing divinity to
something, one cannot decide a priori that the possession of divinity
requires personhood without ruling out the possibility of the most typical types
of pantheism (i.e. non-personal types). After all, theism is what pantheism is
most of all trying to distance itself from. I am not sure the reverse is
true-but theism does ordinarily strongly oppose itself to pantheism. In any
case, Spinoza's God and Lao Tzu's Tao, for example, are distinctly
non-personal, as are the governing principles of the Presocratics. It seems
unwarranted, therefore, to suppose that a necessary condition of something's
being divine is that it be personal on the grounds that "Of all the modes of
creaturely existence, personality is the highest and so the fittest to serve as
an analogy of divine being" (Macquarrie 1984: 42). At least to do so begs the
question against Spinoza, some of the Presocratics, Lao Tzu, probably Plotinus,
as well as against experiential and socio-scientific accounts of divinity.
Following a long and still current tradition H.P.
Owen (1971: 65) claimed that "Pantheists are ‘monists’...they believe that there
is only one Being, and that all other forms of reality are either modes (or
appearances) of it or identical with it." Although, like Spinoza, some
pantheists may also be monists, and monism may even be essential to some
versions of pantheism (like Spinoza's), pantheist's are not monists. Like most
people they are pluralists. They believe, quite plausibly, that there are many
things and kinds of things and many different kinds of value. Even in Spinoza's
case, explaining his pantheism in terms of his substance monism glosses the far
more significant, pantheistically speaking, evaluative implications he sees as
entailed by that monism for his pantheistic metaphysic and his concept of Unity.
The Ethics is not about monism, but about what it entails. Why Spinoza
sees things as a Unity cannot be explained wholly or even primarily in terms of
his monism.
Whether or not substance monism is ontologically necessary for Unity, an
explanation of its relevance requires something extra-ontological to be cited.
The same is true of any factual ground for Unity. Delineating metaphysical or
modal properties of a substance, or anything else, does not make their relevance
to Unity obvious. So what if everything is made from one self-subsistent
immutable substance? So what if everything is really a single organism when
considered macrocosmically? Why would this be pantheistically, rather than
merely metaphysically significant? What is the evaluative or religious
significance of natural features of the totality that pantheism claims is
central to Unity? Because value must be partly constitutive of Unity, it must be
explained in partly evaluative terms. This is a necessary condition for an
adequate criterion of Unity. Without it one is left only with this or that fact
as a basis for positing Unity, but no adequate account of the relevance of the
basis, and so no account of Unity itself.
There may be ways of conceiving of the monistic "One" such that it is taken
both as a unity and as "divine"-yet still not as a pantheistic Unity. The
monistic unity (the "One") may not be regarded as a "Unity" (i.e. unity in some
relevant pantheistic sense). Not just any monistic unity (e.g. mere substance
monism) suffices for pantheism, whether or not it is also regarded as divine.
Thus, although Hegel conceived of Reality as unified and rational in terms of
the Absolute (Geist), and in a manner that I take it would qualify Geist as
divine, he denies he was a pantheist. Similarly, Sankara's Brahman is
ontologically all-inclusive and is part of a metaphysical account of the nature
of Reality that is religiously significant (i.e. "Reality" is divine in some
sense). However, it may be denied that advaita Vedanta, although monistic, is
pantheistic. "Unity" is seen as absent from, or even antithetical to, essential
aspects of advaita Vedanta such as its monism.
Monists, like pantheists, believe that Reality, or an aspect of it, is "One"
or unified. Of course they also deny it is "One" or a "unity" in most other
senses. Whatever similarities there are in this regard, there is insufficient
reason for attributing pantheism to monists, because the oneness of Reality is
neither a necessary nor sufficient condition of pantheism. It is at most a
necessary condition if monistic "oneness" is construed in a unitive sense that
is constitutive of some particular pantheistic account of the divine Unity. An
alleged entailment between pantheism and monism is even less likely since
pantheists, like everyone else, are generally pluralistic. Any appearance to the
contrary has been fostered by simply conflating Unity with monism, or by
considering the few pantheists who were also monists and taking them as the
norm. The connection between Spinoza's monism and his pantheism, does not rest
on an identification of the two positions, but is instead the result of the
wider metaphysical position constructed in his Ethics.
Substance monism need not have any implications concerning God or an Absolute
in either a theistic or pantheistic sense. Differences among substance monists
may be greater than differences between monists who deny and theists who affirm
that God and creation are substantially distinct. For example, a substance
monist (e.g. &Sankara-interpreted atheistically) need not identify substance
with God, or recognize any God, at all. In this case it is plausible to hold
that the difference between such an atheistic monist and a theistic or
pantheistic monist is far greater than that between the theistic monist who
perhaps holds that creatures and creator are co-substantial (though the theistic
monist need not hold this view), and the theistic non-monist who believes that
all creatures are substantially distinct from the creator. The latter two have
their theism in common, while the former two have their monism in common. The
latter two are "closer" in kind than the former, if (and so far as) one assumes
that theism is a more significant common denominator than monism.
Like the notions of "Unity" and
"Divinity," understanding transcendence and immanence is essential to any
account of pantheism. A defining feature of pantheism is allegedly that God is
wholly immanent. However, what is actually (or mostly) involved in this claim is
that pantheism denies the theistic view that God transcends the world. Pantheism
clearly does not claim that God in the theistic sense is immanent in the world
since it denies such a God -- transcendent or immanent-exists. According to
pantheism it is (of course) the pantheistic "God" (i.e. the all-inclusive divine
Unity) that is immanent, not the theistic one. Theists and pantheists do not
differ as to whether the theistic God is immanent or transcendent, but whether
the theistic God exists. So to differentiate between them on the basis of one's
affirming and the other denying immanence is utterly confused.
Many of the difficulties associated with theistic transcendence are not
dissipated for the pantheist when relevantly adjusted. For example, theistic
transcendence presents prima facie difficulties concerning knowledge of
and relations with God. The pantheist is part of the Unity, but both the nature
of Unity, and its practical implications must be determined. In the
Meditations of Marcus Aurelius this appears as much a problem for
pantheists, if Aurelius is one, as knowing and relating to God is for theists.
In a sense, the Unity in pantheism is wholly immanent, but this is bare
ontological immanence that follows from the Unity's all-inclusiveness (i.e.
there is nothing else). Yet even this overstates the pantheistic commitment to
immanence. Aspects of the Unity or the unifying principle often have a
transcendent aspect to them. Unity is "all-inclusive" but with the possible
exception of Spinoza, pantheists generally deny complete immanence. Thus, the
metaphysical Tao informs everything and is part of the all-inclusive
Unity, but it does have a transcendent aspect to it. It does transcend the
phenomenal world of "myriad things." The same is true of Hegel's Geist,
the Plotinian "One," and Presocratic unifying principles as well. So the claim
that pantheists deny "God's" transcendence is altogether misleading on several
counts unless taken to mean what it usually does mean when asserted by
theists-which is that pantheists deny the transcendence of a theistic God.
If pantheism is seen as the quintessential expression of divine immanence,
then it is not difficult to see why it might be combined with panpsychism or
animism. Like pantheism, both of these express a kind of pervasive
immanence-"mind" in the former case and "living soul," "spirit," or "animal
life" in the latter. But however consonant or combined with pantheism these may
be, they should be distinguished from both from each other and from pantheism.
None of these three views entail one another, and the suggestion that pantheism
and panpsychism naturally go together is vague apart from specific accounts of
the two positions.
What immediately sets panpsychism apart from pantheism is its belief that
mental activity, usually of a kind we can only at times be mildly aware of, is
all-pervasive. Although such a supposition is not necessarily inconsistent with
pantheism, it is not part of pantheism. Pantheism does not imply that the
material/immaterial, or organic/inorganic dichotomies must be rejected. It does
not reject these distinctions, but implies that Unity ranges over such
divisions. There are other major differences between the two positions as well.
Pantheism is a much broader theory. It has implications beyond the scope of
panpsychism where the latter is seen as an account of the origin of mind and the
relation between mind and matter.
Animism, panpsychism, and especially the doctrine of a world-soul as embodied
in the macrocosm/microcosm distinction, have at times been equated with
pantheism. These positions may be intrinsic to particular versions of pantheism,
but pantheism as such is broader than these and distinct from them.
"Why is there something rather than nothing?"
Pantheism rejects the theistic response that God exists necessarily and freely
creates the universe from nothing. But does pantheism require an alternative
doctrine of creation? What might such a doctrine be? For pantheism, creation
remains problematic and even mysterious. However, difficulties associated with
the theistic doctrine of creation ex nihilo (i.e. God creating the world
out of nothing) vanish. If pantheism requires a creation doctrine, some type of
emanationism seems most plausible. This is the type usually associated with, and
probably most congenial to pantheism (e.g. Taoism, the Stoics, Plotinus) --
although pantheists can also eschew such doctrines.
Assuming pantheism does require a doctrine or view about creation, what can
be said positively about it? Pantheism has a range of options unavailable to
theism since the theistic doctrine is extrapolated from scripture. A pantheist
might be a kind of existentialist with regard to questions like "Why is there
anything at all?" They could believe existence is a brute fact, with no
explanation possible. This might be seen as a refusal to deal with the issue of
creation-as rejecting the idea that pantheism requires a theory of creation
suited to the notion of a divine Unity. But this is not necessarily so. For all
its seeming negativity, this is a positive position and not one that simply
denies other views. It is a theory of origin or creation that could be
acceptable to some pantheists.
One reason any account of origin, including the view of existence as a brute
fact, might be rejected as being especially relevant to pantheism, is that the
account is not thought to be intrinsically connected to the notion of Unity.
Indeed, pantheists might reject the idea that they require an account of
creation intrinsic to their idea of Unity. Instead, any account that does
not conflict with the way in which Unity is conceived of might be accepted.
In distinguishing between creation ex nihilo and emanationism as he
does, Macquarrie (1984: 34-5) makes it easy to see why emanationism is often
closely associated with pantheism. Emanationism is the view that "creation" is
not a "making," but in some sense a "flowing forth" from God or its origin, as
Macquarrie puts it. And, what "flows forth" "maintains a closer relation to
[its] origin. It participates in the origin, and the origin participates in it."
He says, "...emanationism does not necessarily lead to pantheism, but it does
imply that in some sense God is in the world and the world is in God."
Even though doctrines of creation ex nihilo do not necessarily
conflict with that central pantheistic claim, they are usually seen as doing
do-partly because they are associated with other incompatible theistic elements
(e.g. the creator is a person). On the other hand, emanationism appears to
provide a doctrine which-if not an explicit ground on which to base pantheism-is
at least one that is seen as congenial. As a doctrine of creation, it may even
provide a partial basis for pantheism-as it has (arguably) for Plotinus,
Eriugena, and even for Spinoza where "God" is the immanent cause of all things.
The view that God is the "immanent cause" of things is a kind of creation
doctrine for Spinoza and a basis for Unity. So far as Lao Tzu has a doctrine of
creation it too is emanationist. "The Tao engenders one, One engenders two, Two
engenders three, And three engenders the myriad things" (Tao Te Ching,
XLII) (Ku-ying 1981: 49). The Tao is "the primordial natural force,
possessing an infinite supply of power and creativity" (Ku-ying 1981: 6). Not
only does the Tao create things-it is responsible for, or makes possible,
their growth. "It nourishes them and develops them ... provides for them and
shelters them"(Tao Te Ching, LI).
Emanationism tends to affirm rather than deny a common ontological,
substantial, and evaluative base among everything that exists (e.g., whatever it
is which creatively emanates, it is "Good"). It is therefore seen as in keeping
with the central tenets of pantheism, and where pantheists adhere to a doctrine
of creation it tends to be emanationist. Since Unity must partly be explained
evaluatively, the fact that emanationism is often linked to the "Good" provides
further reason for supposing it consonant with pantheism. Thus, although
Macquarrie is right in claiming that the emanationist view of creation "does not
necessarily lead to pantheism," the implication is that it often does.
The problem of evil is basically a theistic one
that is not directly pertinent to pantheism. It is not, as Owen (1971: 72)
claims, "an embarrassment" intellectually speaking, to pantheists, nor can it
be. The "problem of evil," as it appears in classical theism, cannot be relevant
to pantheism since pantheism rejects all of the aspects of theism that are
essential to generating the problem. The "problem of evil" is peculiar to
theism. This conflicts with the common view among Spinoza's earliest critics
that pantheism, unlike theism, can neither account for evil nor offer any
resolution to the problem of evil. The reason for claiming pantheism cannot
account for evil usually rests on an unwarranted conflation of pantheism with
monism, and on the even more untoward supposition that the pantheist's "God" is
"theistic" in important respects.
It is not the case that pantheism need not address the existence of evil and
associated moral issues. It offers both its own formulation(s) of a "problem of
evil" and its own responses. However, the very idea of evil may be something the
pantheist wishes to eschew. "Evil" is essentially a metaphysical rather than a
moral concept; or it is moral concept with a particular theistic metaphysical
commitment. The pantheist may prefer, as most contemporary ethical theorists do,
to talk of what is morally or ethically right and wrong. The term "evil" could
be retained and applied to particular (usually extreme) instances of moral
wrongness, but it would be understood in a sense that divorces it from its
original theological and metaphysical context.
Given the classical argument from evil in either its logical or empirical
versions it is surprising that anyone should think evil presents any problem
whatsoever for the pantheist; for example, that evil counts against the
existence of the pantheistic Unity in a way similar to the way in which it
counts against the existence of the theistic God. Evil might be taken to be
indicative of a lack of pantheistic Unity, as evidence of some kind of chaos
instead. But it cannot count against the existence of a pantheistic Unity in the
way it can count against the existence of a theistic God. The argument from evil
states that given the following propositions it is either impossible that God
exists, or it improbable that God exists. 1) God is omnipotent, omniscient, and
perfectly good. 2) God would prevent all preventable evil. 3) The world contains
preventable evil. The pantheist rejects the proposition needed to generate the
problem to begin with. The pantheist accepts (3) "The world contains preventable
evil." The pantheist also accepts that if there was a theistic God, which for
the pantheist ex hypothesi there is not, then (2) "God would prevent
preventable evil." But the pantheist rejects (1) "God is omnipotent, omniscient,
and perfectly good." Undeniably there is evil in the world that could be
prevented, and supposing there was a theistic God one would assume that he would
prevent it. But since there is no such God why suppose that proposition (3)
requires some kind of special explanation or is cause for any "unease" on the
part of the pantheist? The existence of preventable evil, for all that has been,
does not even constitute a prima facie reason for rejecting the coherence
of a pantheistic notion of Unity, or the probability of the existence of Unity.
(3) is not incompatible with anything the pantheist believes to be true.
Certainly it is not incompatible with (1) since the pantheist denies the truth
of (1), and it is not incompatible with (2) which is only hypothetically true
for the pantheist. The pantheist has no need to explain evil, or to explain evil
away-at least not in any way resembling theism's need to do so.
Evil may be a problem for the pantheist, but it is not the kind of problem
that it is for the theist. It does not even conflict, prima facie with
the existence of a divine Unity. Pantheism does not claim that its divine Unity
is a "perfect being" or being at all (generally), or that it is omniscient etc.
Surely it is mistaken to interpret Spinoza's "God" as "perfect" and "omniscient"
etc. in anything like the way these predicates are interpreted theistically as
applying to God. It might be supposed that the existence of evil is inconsistent
or incongruous with the "divinity" of the Unity. But this would have to argued.
In theism it is assumed that what is divine cannot also be (in part) evil. But
why assume this is the case with pantheism? Even in Otto's account of the "holy"
the holy has a demonic aspect. There seems little reason to suppose that what is
divine cannot also, in part, be evil. At any rate, there is little reason for
the pantheist to argue that what is divine can also be evil, since they can deny
that evil falls within the purview of the divine Unity. To say that everything
that exists constitutes a divine Unity (i.e. pantheism's essential claim) need
not be interpreted in such a way so that it entails that all parts and every
aspect of the Unity is divine or good. There can be a Unity and it can be divine
without everything about it always, or even sometimes, being divine.
Pantheists, like theists, tend to be "moral
realists." They believe it is an objective fact that some kinds of actions are
ethically right and others wrong, and what is right and wrong is independent of
what any person thinks is right and wrong. With the exception of religious
ethics, moral realism has not been a widely accepted philosophical position in
recent times. However, the pantheist, like the theist, is not troubled by the
fact that her moral realism is based on metaphysical assumptions that some
regard as otiose. Furthermore, pantheists, like theists, generally think that
moral judgements, and value judgments generally, are not empirically
verifiable-at least not in the way one verifies matters of fact generally.
"Natural properties" are properties such as being a certain colour, shape,
temperature or height, causing pain, "producing the greatest good for the
greatest number" etc. They are properties that one can, in principle, verify
that an object or action has or lacks. Some ethical "naturalists" (e.g., some
Utilitarians) claim that moral properties are identical with natural properties.
For example, a morally right action is sometimes equated with the action which
"produces the greatest good for the greatest number." Others claim that moral
properties are entailed by natural properties. Pantheists, however, generally
believe that moral properties are both distinct from natural properties and are
not entailed by them. Thus, they are usually "nonnaturalists.
Despite their nonnaturalism, pantheists, like theists, reject G.E. Moore's
contention that these properties (i.e. goodness and badness) are ultimate and
irreducible. For the theist the fact that "X is wrong" will be explained, and
partially analysed, in terms of (even if not reducible to) nonnatural facts
about God's will and nature. And, for the pantheist the fact that "X is wrong"
will be explained, and partially analysed, in terms of (even if not reducible
to) nonnatural facts about the divine Unity. Nonnaturalism is the position most
congenial to pantheism, but a pantheist could make a case for being an ethical
naturalist just as one could argue for a naturalistic theistic ethics.
Pantheism leaves the option between ethical naturalism and ethical
nonnaturalism open. For the pantheist, though perhaps not for the theist,
value-properties and predicates may be empirical or natural, or supervene upon
natural properties, even if they are not entailed by such properties. So
pantheists may be ethical naturalists. This may be the case even if assertions
containing value predicates are not taken to be empirically verifiable in any
straightforward way as they often are for naturalism. Such value-predicates are
not "empirical" in a narrow sense in which facts in the physical or even
psychological sciences are empirical; but neither are they facts about some
transcendent reality. Pantheism may, in a sense, deny the existence of any
properties that are not "natural." It depends on how much one is willing to
broaden one's notion of "natural." Of course, classifications such as
"objectivist" and "nonnaturalist," are only a partial explanation of pantheists'
ethical views.
It is not accidental that pantheism is often
taken to be a view inherently sympathetic to ecological concerns. This makes a
decision to deal with ecology alongside pantheistic ethics less artificial than
it might be if I were discussing, for example, theism and ethics-or a particular
normative theory of ethics. There is a tendency to picture pantheists (i.e.
pantheists other than Spinoza), outdoors and in pastoral settings. This has
roots in the Stoics' veneration of nature, and in the much later nature
mysticism, and perhaps pantheism, of some of the nineteenth century poets such
as Wordsworth and Whitman. It has been fostered in the twentieth century by
pantheists such as John Muir, Robinson Jeffers, D.H. Lawrence and Gary Snyder
who explicitly "identify" with and extol nature, and claim people's close
association and identification with "nature" and the "natural" is necessary to
well-being. The belief in a divine Unity, and some kind of identification with
that Unity, is seen as the basis for an ethical framework (and "way of life")
that extends beyond the human to non-human and non-living things. The divine
Unity is, after all, "all-inclusive."
A pantheistic ecological ethic will not be anthropocentric. This rules out
the notion of man as a "steward of nature," whether his own or God's, who is
responsible for nature. It also rules out utilitarian, contractarian, and
Kantian approaches as providing an ultimate basis since they are
anthropocentric. It does not, however, rule out contractarian etc. principles as
useful guides to making and justifying environmental decisions. Applying
anthropocentrically conceived principles to environmental issues would suffice
in many cases, but not all, to sound reasoning about the environment. (The
practical problem environmentally speaking has been that almost no principles
have been applied until recently. Selfish economic "forces," i.e. people, have
ruled without restraint.) The situation here is no different than with respect
to theism. For the theist, ultimate justification of ethics resides in a view
about the nature of God. But the theist is not prevented, qua theist,
from invoking less ultimate ethical principles.
The pantheist's ethic, her environmental ethic and her ethics more generally,
will be metaphysically based in terms of the divine Unity. It will be based on
the Unifying principle which accounts for an important commonality, and it will
be the grounds for extending one's notion of the moral community to other living
and non-living things. Everything that is part of the divine Unity (as
everything is) is also part of the moral community. Aldo Leopold (1949: 219,
240) says, "The land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the community to
include soils, waters, plants, and animals, or collectively, the land ... A
thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of
the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise." Looking towards
pantheism as a metaphysical justification of, for example, Leopold's "land
ethic" is not unreasonable-or no more unreasonable than pantheism itself is.
An anthropocentric view of morality can at best make the non-human and
non-living world an object of moral consideration. But it cannot, according to
some, provide a basis for regarding those things as having a "good" of their own
or as being non-human members of a moral community. Pantheists (and theists)
will generally reject any environmental ethic as unsound if it fails to regard
the non-human world as a full-fledged member of the moral community. In their
view, to do otherwise is ultimately to rest the prospects of environmental
well-being on the good will of the only members of the moral community there
are-humans. This is seen like resting the welfare of colonies on the goodwill of
the colonisers. In order to enlarge our understanding of the moral community in
the appropriate ways a metaphysical basis for an environmental ethic is needed
which limits the significance of the anthropocentric view.
Furthermore, it is clear that those, like deep ecologists, who argue that our
notion of the moral community must be enlarged to include the "good" of the
non-human and non-living, and that it is metaphysically correct to do so, also
claim that practical consequences are involved. The issue is not merely
one of providing a rational basis for an environmental ethic.
It may seem that pantheists can claim that ethics and an approach to ecology
should be kept separate from, or that they are separate from, the more general
pantheistic view that asserts the existence of a divine Unity. A kind of
"separation between church and environment" might be proposed. But I doubt that
such a separation is possible. The pantheist, like the theist or atheist takes
the nature of reality as determinative of ethical requirements. Since Unity is
predicated upon some evaluative consideration (e.g. the divine Unity being
constituted on the basis of "goodness"), value is a focal point for the
pantheist and a principle concern. This situation in regard to pantheism is not
too different than the one for theism. For the theist, ethical requirements and
evaluative concerns of all sorts are connected to God's alleged goodness, and
overall nature.
Like the term "evil,"
"salvation" may be rejected pantheists as being too integral to the theistic
world view they reject. It is a term borrowed from theism and one not consonant
with pantheism. I use the term "salvation" with this in mind.
Pantheistic ethics are, in some ways, Aristotelian. For pantheism the notion
of "the good life" as a regulative ideal-a telos or end to be strived
for-is an aspect of salvation. This can be explained by examining some
similarities between pantheistic ethics and Aristotelianism. The pantheist has
what Paul Taylor (1975: 132) calls "an essentialist conception of happiness."
Like the Aristotelian; Platonist; and theist-the pantheist's conception of
happiness "presupposes that there is such a thing as an essential human nature."
They all disagree as to what that essential nature is. The pantheist's
conception of human nature, her philosophical anthropology, is generally broader
and less specific than the others. When goals are stipulated that man qua
man should achieve this indicates an essentialist conception of human nature.
Furthermore, in an essentialist conception of happiness (one which
presupposes that there is such a thing as an essential human nature),
"happiness" is largely a function of how well one fulfils one's essential
nature. Pantheism's wide conception of human nature allows for a broad range of
ways for people to achieve happiness. There are fewer ways for the Aristotelian
or theist to achieve happiness than there are for the pantheist. To the extent
that a human being is able to achieve "happiness" by actualising the properties
that "define the good of man as such"--they will be leading an intrinsically
good life. "Happiness" is then the standard by which to judge the non-derivative
(intrinsic) value of a person's life.
Pantheism has a nonanthropocentric conception of human well-being. The human
good is characterised partly in terms of relational properties. One must have a
certain kind of relation to the Unity in order to live "properly." The set of
properties common and unique to humans, which also define the good for humans as
such, include relational properties. When a person exemplifies their essential
human nature in this way-and it can only be exemplified in this relational
way-they are living the "Good" life and can thereby achieve well-being and
happiness. This nonanthropocentric conception of human well-being constitutes
pantheism's standard of human perfection and virtue. It is a standard of
intrinsic value.
As in the case of Aristotle's essentialist conception of the nature of
things, the Human Good (defined as it is in terms of human nature) will be
different than an animal's good or a plant's good. For the pantheist, the Good
of these other things must also be understood partly in terms of their relation
to the Unity. Furthermore, the Good associated with various things (humans,
plants, etc.) is incommensurable. There is no standard external to each kind of
thing by which all things can be measured in terms of perfection, or virtue, or
intrinsic value. There is no such thing as intrinsic value per se given
an essentialist account of the nature's of things which includes essentialist
standards of perfection. It is not just wrong to say that a human being is
intrinsically more valuable than a tree. It is also nonsense. Of course this
does not mean trees should not be used by people.
Taylor (1975) claims that according to the essentialist conception of human
nature, the value achieved in human life by fulfilling the standard of intrinsic
value is independent its consequences in the lives of others. If this is right
then the pantheist will reject any unqualified account of the essentialist's
standard of human perfection and virtue. (Indeed, an Aristotelian need not hold
such an absolute non-consequentialist account either.) Intrinsic value is, of
course, value that is non-derivative. But, what determines the intrinsic
goodness in a person's life will, for the pantheist, rely on that person's
relationship to the Unity. A person's "good" is partially constituted by the
divine Unity of which everything is a part. In pantheistic terms it makes little
sense to speak of the intrinsic value of a human life as measured against a
standard independent of how that life affects others, since for the pantheist
all such value, even so-called "intrinsic value," is partly derivative. The
standard of intrinsic value and perfection cannot be determined without
reference to the divine Unity. The essential nature and well-being of a person,
or anything else, cannot be analysed apart from its context in relation to the
Unity and everything it includes.
Although both theism and pantheism have essentialist conceptions of human
nature, well-being on either of those accounts cannot be achieved apart from
one's relation to others, or the consequences of one's actions for others. And,
the pantheist and theist are not the only kind of essentialists for whom
consequences and relations matter. For the Aristotelian, in order to achieve
well-being it is necessary to develop a certain kind of character. This
requires, in part, certain virtues (e.g. courage, temperance etc.). Since the
development and display of character and virtue is connected in significant ways
with the consequences of an individual's actions in relation to other people-the
concept of one life having "intrinsic value" apart from how it affects any other
life is vacuous. Aristotle's account of the virtues makes a practical
impossibility of living a "good life" that is fundamentally bad for others.
Plato too claims that the virtuous life has its rewards for all. Thus,
essentialist conceptions of human nature and the Good need not preclude, and may
even entail, an account of persons in relation to other things. For the
pantheist, "realising the good for man as man" must be interpreted in terms of
the Unity. For pantheism, an essentialist account of human nature does not
suggest that there is necessarily only one kind of ideal person or way to
achieve happiness.
An essentialist conception of human nature may recognise a range of human
natures compatible with "Human Nature" as such. Just as various plants are
constituted in such a way that their different requirements must be met if they
are to thrive and flourish (i.e. what constitutes their well-being varies), so
too will conditions for a person's "well-being" vary from person to person. The
pantheist maintains that there is no such thing as an (i.e. one) essential human
nature-although some properties are shared. Yet given various human natures,
well-being can only be achieved to the extent that the individual satisfies
their own nature--achieve their own potential--in their particular circumstances
in relation to the Unity. Pantheists eschew hierarchies that have as a criterion
for the "good life" any particular intrinsic feature that certain human beings
may have which others lack. A good mind used in a good way may help one lead a
better life, but so will good looks and a good job.
Pantheists deny personal immortality. There is no life after death in the
sense that it is "they" who survive. Historically, the denial of personal
immortality is one of pantheism's most distinctive features. This is partly
because it is in clear opposition to the theistic view. But, it is primarily
significant because it is constitutive of the pantheist's world-view and ethos,
and so has implications for pantheistic practice. Believing that one is not
going to live again after one dies, just as believing one will live again, has
implications for one's choices in this life. There, is of course, nothing like a
direct correlation in terms of what one believes concerning immortality and how
they choose to live. But for some people, seeing death as the permanent end of
one's existence, or alternatively as a prolegomenon to another life, will be a
constitutive factor of the ultimate context in which to live. The goals they
choose to pursue, the relationships they have, their vocations, may to varying
degrees be affected by their belief that death is or is not the permanent end of
the individual. The pantheist need not believe that it would be tedious to live
forever. They just claim that no one does. This fact is not so much something to
be lived with-as to be lived in terms of. The denial of personal immortality is
as determinative of how the pantheist lives as the belief in an afterlife is for
the theist.
The fact that pantheists (e.g. Spinoza) deny personal immortality is at times
given as reason why pantheism is atheistic. The doctrine of immortality is so
central to classical Christian theism, that rejecting the former is taken as
entailing the denial of the latter. Yet, denying personal immortality can hardly
be regarded as grounds for atheism unless theism, with its insistence on
personal immortality, is taken to be the only position asserting the existence
of a "God" that is not atheistic. The doctrine of personal immortality is not
even essential to all forms of theism. Since many theists, e.g. many Jewish
theists, deny immortality, it would seem this denial is neither a necessary nor
sufficient condition of atheism.
People who are interested in personal immortality, like people who are not
interested (perhaps because they do not believe people survive death) may
nevertheless be concerned with their continued existence in an impersonal sense.
Impersonal forms of "immortality," or surviving death, can include "surviving"
in people's memories, being remembered for one's work, a bone in a reliquary, or
becoming another part of the matter/energy cycle once again. One may want to
remembered for what one has accomplished, or for the person one was. Impersonal
"immortality" may seem to pale next to the theists' insistence on personal
immortality and the meeting again of people known in this life. Nevertheless,
people's notions of impersonal immortality may be important in various ways.
Whether or not they believe in personal immortality, it matters to some people
how they will be thought of. No doubt, people who believe in personal
immortality are also generally concerned with the impersonal forms. Some may
even value being remembered for something they produced as more important than
personal survival after death. But typically, the person who believes in
personal immortality regards it with a concern that they do not have for various
impersonal types of survival.
Some pantheists believe in various types of non-personal immortality (e.g.
Spinoza and Robinson Jeffers), and they regard this as significant for reasons
other than, or in addition to, the reasons non-pantheists give. They reject the
view that personal immortality is more valuable than impersonal immortality.
This is not to say that if pantheists believed there was personal immortality
they could not regard it as desirable. Perhaps the could even though the idea is
anthropocentric and uncongenial to pantheism. But pantheists do not believe in
personal immortality, and they regard some types of impersonal immortality as
important on distinctively pantheistic grounds.
Robinson Jeffers suggests that what may be important to the pantheist, and
regarded as "a kind of salvation," is neither the realisation of the theist's
hope for personal immortality, nor the atheists' (or theists') desire to be
remembered in certain ways-although the pantheist can desire this as well.
Instead, what is distinctively significant is the recognition of the individual
as a part of the Unity-what Jeffers calls the "one organic whole ... this one
God." The "parts change and pass, or die, people and races and rocks and stars,"
but the whole remains. He says, "... all its parts are different expressions of
the same energy, and they are all in communication with each other, influencing
each other, [and are] therefore parts of one organic whole." (See, George
Sessions 1977: 481-528). Part of what Jeffers is suggesting is that "salvation"
(or immortality) it is not so much a matter of the fact of one's survival in
some form; rather, "salvation" consists in the recognition of the "oneness" or
Unity of everything. "[T]his whole alone is worthy of the deeper sort of love;
and that there is peace, freedom, I might say a kind of salvation, in turning
one's affections outward toward this one God, rather than inwards on one's self,
or on humanity." This is impersonal rather than personal immortality or
salvation, but it is different from the kinds of impersonal survival discussed
above. It may even be regarded as a kind of personal salvation, since Jeffers
suggests that salvation can be experienced for oneself while alive-and only when
alive. Such salvation resembles neither impersonal forms of immortality, nor
theists' personal life after death.
Can pantheists employ traditional
modes of theistic and non-theistic practice such as worship, prayer, and
meditation? What form might a distinctively pantheistic type of practice take?
Pantheists believe in a divine Unity. Yet, in pantheism there is no apparent
community of believers organised around their common (though not identical)
beliefs by an established body of religious teaching and scripture. Without
these traditional constituents of religion pantheists may find themselves
wanting to practice their faith-seeking to relate their actions to their
beliefs-and yet wondering how to go about it. Pantheists have to ask themselves
what they should do given what they believe.
Even if we are not at all clear about what pantheists should do, it may seem
we are relatively clear about what they believe. However, if theorists who claim
that action sometimes explains belief, or that action and belief must be
understood together are right, then it follows that we do not yet know what
pantheists believe. Insofar as pantheists lack a distinctive practice, they may
be taken not to believe anything (pantheistically) at all. Such theorists claim
that systems of belief and practice, if not individual beliefs and practices,
are intrinsically related so as to define one another-and they develop together.
Therefore, it may not be possible to keep the question of what pantheists
believe distinct from the question of what they do. One need not accept such
theories to believe, as a matter of commonsense, that belief and practice are
connected in such a way that they cannot be adequately understood apart from one
another.
In attempting to construct an account of what the contemporary pantheist
should do, it would be useful to examine practices that pantheists have
traditionally undertaken. But it makes no sense to suppose contemporary
pantheists could replicate the representation of social relations that
pantheistic rituals might be analysed as having by a symbolist account. If a
pantheistic ritual symbolically represents social relations, it represents those
of its own society. At any rate, the point is largely moot since the practice of
pantheism has never been associated with ritual practice but with a way of life.
Thus, Lao Tzu, explicitly eschewed ritual, and Spinoza thought that while
ordinary religious practice, ritual etc., was a good idea for the common people
since it inculcated valuable ideals, it was beside the point for him. The fact
that pantheistic practice has never been associated with ritual may partly
explain why pantheism has not been practiced communally in a church.
In literalist or Geertzian terms it makes sense to ask what to do, given
certain beliefs, in a way it does not for a symbolist. The kinds of practice
suitable to pantheism are explicable in terms of beliefs literally and
symbolically understood; and especially (in Geertz's account) in terms of a
world view (e.g. belief in a divine Unity) and corresponding ethos. Thus, Lao
Tzu describes the Tao as a metaphysical reality; as natural law or system
of self-regulated principles; and also as a principle, pattern and standard for
human conduct. One emulates the Tao after discerning its manifest
characteristics in the phenomenal world, and to emulate the Tao is to
practice Taoism. In "Song of Myself" Whitman articulates a world view,
and evokes the connected ethos he envisages. For Spinoza, examining the nature
and implications of Unity (substance) in the Ethics, and trying to live
in accord with that account, was itself a form of pantheistic practice.
Similarly, in writing and living as depicted in "Song of Myself," Whitman
practiced the pantheism he preached. The relationship between the thought and
practice of Hegel, Plotinus, Bruno etc. is less apparent, but should be of
interest to pantheists. If pantheists find any of the various world views and
‘ethos’ described as consonant with their own, they may pattern their practices
after those associated with such views. In having a particular pantheistic view
of the nature of things, certain practices and a way of life must, to an extent,
follow.
The idea of looking to religions with pantheistic practices for examples of
what to do may seem promising in a literalist or Geertzian approach. Similar
kinds of practice should follow similar beliefs. The difficulty is that there
seem to be no pantheistic traditions to examine-not even Taoism, since as
practiced, it is not pantheistic. In traditional religions, practices that might
be identifiable as pantheistic are always seen in the context of wider religious
(e.g. theistic) practice. In traditions that are partly pantheistic like some
native American Indian religions, it is difficult to discern how practices
relating to pantheistic beliefs can be distinguished from various kinds of god
and spirit worship. Since pantheism has largely been non-communal, individual
pantheists, not traditions, must examined.
Religious practice is usually prescribed by teachings and doctrine, and
informed by other beliefs widely held among the community of believers. Since
there is no widely recognised body of scriptural or other religious teaching in
pantheism and never has been (there is little doctrine and no church), there
should be little in the way of prescribed practice. As already noted, the
philosophical Taoism of the Tao Te Ching is pantheistic, but it
has never been widely practiced and there is no body of ritual associated with
it.
The kind of activity undertaken by a believer ideally reflects (i.e. is
explainable in terms of) the way in which the religious object, and one's
relation to it, is conceived. Differences in practice are the products of
varying views on the nature of God and the world-set in the context of a more
comprehensive world view. Since pantheistic and theistic accounts of God and the
world are best regarded as mutually exclusive, it is likely that the practices
of each would be dissimilar. Theistic practice, the intent and so forth, is
inappropriate for the pantheist, and vice versa. Pantheists will not want
to practice in a way that reflects beliefs they do not hold.
If specific pantheistic practices could be identified, these might be adapted
to modern pantheism. Yet, to talk of adapting practices in this way is
artificial. As a whole, practice neither precedes nor follows the body of
beliefs formulated and codified by a religious community. It develops along with
them. Even where religious beliefs are taken (e.g. Durkheim) to be
rationalisations of practices that precede them, practice occurs in a context of
shared conceptions, beliefs and concerns, and are-whether literally or
symbolically-expressions of these. Ritual, and religious practice generally, is
a product of conscious and unconscious, literal and symbolic, communal religious
reflection. Given (and one wonders why) that there has been little structured
pantheistic communal reflection, despite the fact that there are many
pantheists, there is no identifiable pantheistic practice. There are only
identifiable pantheistic world views and beliefs. This does not explain why
individual pantheists have not developed recognisable rituals, unless a
community of believers (i.e. a church) is necessary for such practices. The
practice of pantheism seems confined to individuals acting in ways they see as
according with the nature of things.
If contemporary pantheistic ritual exists, it is scarce. (Is the solstice
gathering at Stonehenge pantheistic?) The extent to which one can
self-consciously set out to construct a ritual is, for reasons already given,
suspect. But, given that one can consciously construct symbols that address a
community's concerns, there seems no reason why pantheistic rituals cannot be
formulated. Indeed, various theistic rituals are self-consciously created.
Furthermore, ritual is only one aspect of religious practice, and pantheists may
develop other ways to express their beliefs in action. Since belief and practice
are interdependent and evolve together, if some future pantheistic communal
reflection results in doctrines, then it is likely to result in practices of
various sorts as well. Other than the fact they have lacked what seems to be
requisite in terms of a community of pantheists, there may be additional or
alternative explanations of why pantheists have not developed rituals. Maybe the
lack of community can just as easily be explained by the lack of a developed
mode of practice as vice versa.
Pantheists basically lack scripture and an established body of doctrine and
discourse that could help establish the nature of pantheistic practice. However,
it this is not entirely true. The pantheist can, to some extent, rely on
traditional religious scripture that is recognisably pantheistic; for example,
some taoist texts, and some Western and non-Western theistic scripture.
Pantheists also have recourse to numerous philosophical sources-Spinoza etc.
But, the pantheist is not without alternatives to the scripture and discourse
theists have at their disposal. To some extent, the pantheist too will know what
to do to practice pantheism. Art, music, literature and poetry, fulfil the same
kinds of roles in pantheism as they do in theism. As representations of cultural
patterns they reflect and sustain a world view and ethos. In Geertz's (1973: 93)
terms they symbolically function as both a model of reality and a model
for reality. "Culture patterns are ‘models’ ... they are sets of symbols
whose relations to one another ‘model’ relations among entities, processes or
what-have-you ... they give meaning, that is objective conceptual form, to
social and psychological reality both by shaping themselves to it and by shaping
it to themselves." Pantheists recognise cultural patterns and symbolic
representations that "model" their beliefs. Given such beliefs, and the efficacy
of symbolic representations of those beliefs; certain other beliefs, actions,
and attitudes will be regarded, cognitively and affectively, as appropriate and
correct.
In theistic traditions, prayer-which is a type of worship-and sometimes
meditation, are the principle forms of religious practice. They are often set in
the context of ritual. Theism gives a variety of reasons why prayer and worship
are appropriate and necessary forms of theistic practice. But, what about for
the pantheist? In principle, pantheists will not do things that literally
conflict with the beliefs they express. They will not worship if worship implies
the recognition of an independent and superior god, since this theistic belief
is antithetical to a central tenet of pantheism. Are prayer and worship
appropriate kinds of practice for the pantheist? Given that the pantheist should
not pray to or worship a theistic God, can she worship the pantheistic Unity?
Worship and prayer are not suitable
to pantheism. It has often been claimed by theists and atheists that pantheistic
worship (e.g. worshipping the Unity) is idolatrous. It is worshipping a false
god. Unlike the theist or atheist, however, the pantheist believes a divine
Unity exists-a kind of god. So pantheists, if they do worship the Unity, reject
the idea that they are worshipping a false god. What is wrong with pantheistic
worship is not that it is idolatrous, but something more basic having to do with
both the nature of worship and Unity. Even if the Unity exists, worshipping it
would not be proper pantheistic practice.
Pantheistic worship might naively be thought to be a kind of self-worship;
worshipping something of which one is a part or identified with. This too is a
mistake. As we have seen, pantheism is not the view that "everything that
exists," including oneself, is god; and it is not the view that every particular
thing or person is equally god. If worship is not acceptable religious practice
for pantheists, it is for reasons other than that such practice involves adoring
and venerating (i.e. worshipping) oneself. Worship and prayer are not consonant
with pantheism. Like "evil" and "salvation," they are connected to the theistic
world-view that pantheists reject. Therefore, except in a highly derivative
sense (i.e., derivative from theism) worship and prayer are types of practice
that are not acceptable to pantheists. Devotion to the universe, artistic
expression, nature observation, etc., are not types of worship as theistically
understood-though they may be ways of respecting, honouring, and revering.
What makes worship and prayer inappropriate for the pantheist is not the lack
of ontological separation from the Unity that theism claims God has from the
world. If there is a sense in which pantheists are ontologically, or in other
ways, distinct from the divine Unity, worship and prayer are still
inappropriate. If a necessary condition of worship is that it has to be in some
significant sense "other regarding," then worship would not on that account be
inappropriate to pantheism. What makes it unsuitable is that worship, and
especially prayer, are basically directed at "persons"-or at a being with
personal characteristics separate and superior to oneself. Whether one's reasons
for worship are petitionary or devotional is irrelevant; and so is one's
motivation-whether a Freudian way of coping with guilt, or a rationally-based
sense of duty. Objects of worship are not oneself, and perhaps not even
ontologically distinct from oneself as theism claims, but they are generally
taken to be conscious, personal and superior.
Given the nature and goal of worship objects of worship must have a personal
character. It might be thought that showing the pantheistic Unity should not, on
conceptual grounds, be worshipped is rather uninteresting. That may be right.
The implications of this result, however, are anything but insignificant. For
the pantheist, the practical consequences of worship and prayer being
unavailable as forms of religious practice are enormous.
In the theistic view, worship and prayer are practically synonymous with
religious practice. And, even in (theoretically) non-theistic religious
traditions such as Buddhism and Taoism, worship and prayer are frequent if not
prevalent. Yet, the pantheist is faced with the problem of finding a way to
practice pantheism that is consistent with the finding that worship and prayer
make sense only in a theistic context. As a result, one of the defining and most
noticeable characteristics of pantheism will be the type of practice it takes
up. The practices involved, whatever they are, will be different not only from
those in theistic traditions, but also from those in non-theistic ones in which
theistic practice is so much a part.
Do pantheists seek a
relationship with the impersonal Unity rather than a "state"? The choices of the
religious objective for the pantheist are either a relationship with the Unity
or a state of some kind. The kind of religious practice pantheism (like theism)
engenders is a function of the kind of goal sought. What then is the religious
objective of pantheism? If there were no such objective to pursue through
practice, the question of how to practice pantheism becomes superfluous. That
there is a goal to pursue is intrinsic to the nature of religion.
In pantheistic systems such as Spinoza's or philosophical Taoism, the
objective is best described as a state rather than a relation. However, just as
theism correctly claims that although the principle goal of theistic practice is
a relation to God, this also involves a "state of the individual"; so the
pantheist claims that although pantheistic practice is principally concerned
with a "state of an individual," a crucial and intrinsic aspect of this state is
one's relation to the divine Unity. However, granted that a dichotomy between
the objective as "relationship" or "state" is not firm; the principal form of
practice-contemplative and meditative on the one hand, or worship on the
other-follows from the objective emphasised. In theism it is on a personal
relationship to God. In pantheism, the emphasis is on an individual state
resulting from an understanding of, and a right relation to, the Unity. Practice
will be contemplative and meditative rather than devotional. As in the case of
theism, pantheistic practices-like the beliefs they are related to-are meant to
have practical consequences both in terms of what one does, and more generally,
the way one lives.
The question, of course, is how the pantheist is to arrive at "the right
relation" to the Unity thereby achieving their objective. Answering this is the
principal focus of both Spinoza's Ethics, the Tao Te Ching and
most other pantheistic literature (e.g. Whitman's "Song of Myself"). What one
actually does depends partly on the individual (i.e. Spinoza is no Whitman), and
also on the particulars of the state sought. Since the pantheistic conception(s)
of reality is ultimately very different from, for example, that of the Theravada
Buddhist, there is no reason to suppose the pantheistic objective to be like
nirvana. The pantheist's relation to the divine Unity does not entail the
obliteration of self or liberation that a Buddhist's identification with Brahman
does; nor is it like the theistic mystic's union with God. There may be aspects
of the state pantheists seek that are similar to Buddhist goals, and even to
theistic ones-though to a far lesser extent. But, even if the pantheist's
objective is as different from what the Buddhist seeks as it is from what the
theist seeks, the means for achieving it remain contemplative or meditative,
rather than devotional.
For Spinoza, acquiring the happiness described in the Ethicsis largely
an intellectual achievement. It is difficult to see how one can attain the
understanding and identification with "God" that Spinoza claims leads to peace
of mind and "blessedness" (i.e., the highest achievement of the individual)
without addressing the problem discursively rather than affectively by intuition
and meditation-although discursive thinking and these other methods are by no
means inconsistent. But even though Spinoza's approach involves little that is
not discursive; it is contemplative, and the objective remains primarily a state
rather than relation. Worship is not a mode of practice conducive to achieving
the state Spinoza seeks. Granted that Spinoza's method is intellectualistic;
other approaches are possible-especially where the objective itself is conceived
of differently (i.e. less intellectualistic). Spinoza of course recognises that
his own method is not suited to most people and acknowledges that ordinary
practice such as worship and prayer may at times engender ends he describes.
Just as theists use various methods to pursue their objective-some more
intellectualistic than others-so in pantheism certain kinds of practices are
suited to certain kinds of people. As in other religions, the means by which
pantheists pursue their objectives are generally not overtly or overly
intellectualised. To do so can undermine practice by upsetting the balance
between the affective and intellectual aspects of their belief system.
The pantheist is likely to view the kinds of goals that most religious
traditions envision as excessive and grandiose-as neither believable nor
desirable. What is more, although they are not humanists, like humanists
pantheists are likely to view those objectives and related beliefs much as
theistic traditions viewed those of "primitive religions" and of each other: as
superstitiously anthropocentric and so capable of being naturalistically
explained. The state sought by the pantheist supervenes (as in Taoism) on
establishing the right relation with the Unity by means of cultivating a life
suited to the nature of the Unity and of oneself. But for the pantheist this is
a goal in itself, a this-worldly happiness. The pantheist eschews a notion of
their being further goals; for example, the theist's beatific vision; personal
immortality; nirvana; and even Spinoza's "blessedness," interpreted as
something other-worldly.
The pantheist's happiness is nevertheless a special "state" that is difficult
to achieve. Being a kind of utopian ideal it too is perhaps grandiose. Ordinary
happiness is part of it but should not be conflated with the kind of
thoroughgoing happiness the pantheist thinks it is possible to attain now and
again. Much as Kierkegaard denied that "truth," "subjectivity" and even
"immortality" are attainable once and for all, the pantheists denies their
objective is a once and for all achievement. It is a state of well-being that
involves a sustained peace of mind and the kind of happiness that comes from, or
is identical with, such a state of mind. Since one's own state of mind and
relation to the all-inclusive Unity are partly dependent upon other people and
things, the state the pantheist seeks is not something achievable in isolation.
Pantheism involves a this-worldly utopian vision based on individual's relations
to, and identification with, the Unity.
"Nature"-which appears to be equated with the "Great Outdoors"-has pride of
place in a pantheistic world view and ethos. It is assumed that pantheists are
nature lovers, if not nature mystics. This view of pantheists as naturalists and
rural outdoor people as opposed to city dwellers, is common. A reason for the
pantheist's stress on Nature is that anthropocentricism is seen as incompatible
with a proper recognition of Unity. It is seen as undermining the cosmocentric
perspective required by pantheistic ethics, and a pantheistic way of life; as
antithetical to the pantheist world view and ethos. Involvement in nature
de-emphasises the anthropocentrism pantheism believes endemic to theism and
detrimental to well-being and Unity.
This characterisation of pantheists as loving nature and as having to
establish a relationship to things natural is what principally informs vague
views as to how pantheism is to be practiced-especially among contemporary
pantheists. Practice becomes an expression of a love of nature-usually by
"communing" with it. It is no wonder pantheism is often regarded as little more
than a type of nature mysticism. But for the pantheist, "love" of nature is
expressed primarily in ethical rather than in mystical or quasi-mystical terms.
Pantheistic ethics focuses on how to live and on the individual's relation to
the natural order-an order of which others are a part. One's own well-being and
that of others depends on it. Since nature is taken as intrinsically valuable,
and because relating appropriately to nature presupposes its preservation and
protection; nature in general and environmental issues in particular, are
important to the pantheist. Like many others, pantheists see their well-being as
intrinsically connected to the wider environment as well as to things more
immediate (e.g. employment).
Is the urban person at a religious disadvantage from a pantheistic
perspective? Without denying the significance Nature has for the pantheist
(e.g., as a standard of behaviour, and as an object of meditation conducive to a
"right" state of mind), is there reason to believe a pantheist who prefers an
urban to a pastoral setting, and who likes technology, is risking spiritual
depravity? Does the pantheist have a duty to spend time in natural settings if
they prefer the city? Technology is associated with the Urban, and the pantheist
may see much of it, or too much of it, as inimical to Unity and well-being.
Technology is devalued when it is taken as undermining the kinds of value
pantheism seeks to promote. Technology (people using it) despoils the
environment. At any rate, since the world is increasingly urban, for pantheism
to be viable it will have to be possible to practice it in cities.
A person who prefers city street life may claim there is a bias towards the
non-human in a pantheist's exclusive insistence on Nature. Why cannot
cities-themselves "natural" in a way-also be conducive to the practice of
pantheism? Perhaps cities could be if they and many of their people were not as
neglected and abused as much as some wilderness areas (if the comparison makes
any sense). "God's country" for the pantheist denotes urban as well as pastoral
settings-indeed it extends to the suburbs. Given the existence of a divine Unity
one should not regard all personal preferences (e.g., for a garden), as
cosmically endorsed. If the goal of pantheism is a way of life and a kind of
"state," then any locale that is generally conducive to promoting those goals is
acceptable. This may have more to do with the kind of urban or rural setting one
lives in rather than just whether the setting is urban or rural.
In terms of its practice, one of the striking things about pantheism is that
it has not produced a church or any kind of organisation engaged in overseeing
its practice. Apparently a community of pantheists is not necessary for the
practice of pantheism. Either this is an historical accident, or it has to do
with structural features of pantheism. Pantheists, like many theists, tend to
regard Churches and religious leaders with suspicion. The kind of orientation
that the pantheist seeks vis a vis the Unity is not taken to be something a
church can facilitate. The mediation churches provide is seen as superfluous or
harmful-just as it has been by many mystics. Organised religions are seen as
divisive and exclusivist, and churches perhaps are seen as essentially
anthropocentric. It is for these kinds of reasons that there never has been a
pantheistic church and probably never will be.
Pantheism remains a fertile subject for natural theology. Natural theologians
have hardly approached it. Pantheism should be of interest to those in the
philosophy of religion who seek a way out of the constrictions (often
institutional ones) put upon them by working within the confines of classical
theism; especially as the issues relating to classical theism have been taken up
by the contemporary christian conservative analytic philosophers of religion.
Perhaps pantheism will be of most interest to those who do not believe in a
theistic God, yet are concerned with many of the traditional questions that
natural theologians have always asked, and that religious traditions necessarily
address.
Pantheism's lack of "success" in worldly terms on the religion market may
have to do with the fact that it is antithetical to any power structure; the
kind, for example, found in the Catholic church. If so, then even though
pantheism may be more profoundly religious than institutionalised religions, it
may be doomed to ineffectiveness because it cannot manipulate power-it cannot
"play the game." Wielding various kinds of power has been a feature of religion
from its most "primitive" to its most sophisticated levels-a feature churches
can generally not control. Pantheism negates the power struggle through its
emphasis on Unity. It refuses to see religion in political and hierarchical
terms. Pantheism is the religion that tries most completely to escape the
limitations created by anthropocentric models of religion that create god in
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