Absolute (philosophy)
In philosophy, the concept of The Absolute, also known as The (Unconditioned) Ultimate, The Wholly Other, The Supreme Being, The Absolute/Ultimate Reality, and other names, is the thing, being, entity, power, force, reality, presence, law, principle, etc. that possesses maximal ontological status, existential ranking, existential greatness, or existentiality. In layman's terms, this is the one that is, in one way or another, the greatest, truest, or most real being.
There are many conceptions of The Absolute in various fields and subjects, such as philosophy, religion, spiritual traditions, mathematics, and even natural science. The nature of these conceptions can range from "merely" encompassing all physical existence, nature, or reality, to being completely unconditioned existentially, transcending all concepts, notions, and types, kinds, and categories of being.
The Absolute is often thought of as causing to come into being manifestations that interact with lower or lesser forms of being. This is either done passively, through emanations, or actively, through avatars and incarnations. These existential manifestations, which themselves can possess transcendent attributes, only contain minuscule or infinitesimal portions of the true essence of The Absolute.
The term itself was not in use in ancient or medieval philosophy, but closely related to the description of God as Actus purus (Pure Actuality) in scholasticism. It was introduced in modern philosophy, notably by Hegel, for "the sum of all being, actual and potential".[1]
The term has since also been adopted in perennial philosophy.[2]
Contents
1 Major conceptions of The Absolute
1.1 Cross-cultural conception
1.2 Interpretations
1.2.1 Within religious traditions
2 Relation of humanity to the Absolute
2.1 Experiencing the Absolute
2.2 Representing the Absolute
3 See also
4 Notes
5 References
Major conceptions of The Absolute
There are three general ways of conceiving the Absolute. The Absolute might be (1) the first and greatest being, (2) not a being at all but the "ground" of being, or (3) both the ground of being and a being.[citation needed]
In conception one the Absolute is the most true and intelligible reality. It can be spoken of and known. For example, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's Absolute Spirit is the most true reality. It is thinkable, speakable, and exists in the objective world by comprehending everything, including people, states, and world history.
In conception two the Absolute might be conceived of as utterly outside of all other reality and hence unintelligible. It cannot be known or spoken about. Plato's Socrates says that "The Form of the Good" is "beyond being",[3] implying that it is even beyond thought, language, and normal categories of existence.
St. John of the Cross says:
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He who truly arrives there
cuts free from himself;
all that he knew before
now seems worthless,
and his knowledge so soars
that he is left in unknowing
transcending all knowledge.[4]
In conception three the Absolute is seen as transcending duality and distinction. This concept of a fundamental reality that transcends or includes all other reality is usually (but not always) associated with divinity. While this conception initially seems contradictory, it has been highly influential. One way to understand this third conception is to consider the Tao Te Ching.
The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao.
The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
— Tao Te Ching, 1
These opening lines distinguish between two Taos. One is the "eternal Tao" (which cannot be named or explained) and the other "Tao" seems to exist in space and time (and can be named and explained). The eternal Tao is beyond existence and cannot be named or fully understood, while the other Tao exists and can be known. The eternal Tao is infinite; the other is finite. The eternal Tao is formless; the other is formed. The eternal Tao is transcendent; the other is immanent. The other "Tao" is an attempt to describe the "eternal Tao" in human terms; but such effort can never express the eternal Tao fully. He continues:
The nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth
The named is the mother of myriad things
Thus, constantly without desire, one observes its essence
Constantly with desire, one observes its manifestations
These two emerge together but differ in name
The unity is said to be the mystery.
In these lines, he further discusses the difference between the two Taos. The eternal Tao is "nameless" and is the origin of Heaven and Earth; this origin can be understood as an underlying metaphysics that cannot be described fully. The "named" Tao, on the other hand, is able to describe specific phenomenons that exist in space and time, hence it is the mother of myriad of things; it also can be treated as the humanly conceived concepts in the effort to describe our physical world. Later, he points out that both the "named" and the "nameless" emerge together from the same eternal Tao. This seemingly self-contradictory unity, of course, is said to be the mystery to be understood.
Cross-cultural conception
One or more of these conceptions of the Absolute can be found in various other perspectives. The following is a list of conceptions of the Absolute.
Note that generally the list is ordered alphabetically, but some of the sublists are ordered by historical precedence:
- General philosophy — God, Conceptions of God, Deity
Abrahamic religions — God in Abrahamic religions
Alawites — Allah
Bahá'í Faith and Bábism — God in the Bahá'í Faith, Báb, He whom God shall make manifest
Christianity — God in Christianity, Jehovah
Christian theology — Apophatic theology and Cataphatic theology
Catholic theology
Scholasticism and Thomas Aquinas: Thomism and Thought of Thomas Aquinas — Actus purus, Actus primus
Eastern Orthodox theology — Essence–energies distinction
Oriental Orthodoxy — Miaphysitism
Protestant theology — Five solae
Paul Tillich — God Above God
Christian philosophy — God in Christianity
Nicolas Malebranche — God
Christian mysticism — God in Christianity
Kimbanguism — Simon Kimbangu
Druze — God
Islam — God in Islam, Allah
Schools of Islamic theology — God in Islam
Islamic philosophy — God in Islam
Sufism — Haqiqa, Alam-i-HaHoot
Judaism — God in Judaism, Tetragrammaton
- The Kingdoms of Israel and Judah — Yahweh
Jewish philosophy — God in Judaism
Jewish mysticism / Kabbalah — Ein Sof
- The Kingdoms of Israel and Judah — Yahweh
Mormonism — God in Mormonism
Rastafari — Jah
Samaritanism — Yahweh
Shabakism — Divine Reality
Yazdânism — Hâk / Haq
Alevism — Haqq-Muhammad-Ali
Ishikism — Haqq-Muhammad-Ali
Yarsanism — The Divine Essence
Yazidis — Melek Taus
Acosmism — Unmanifest
Adyghe Habze — Theshxwe
Akan religion — Anansi Kokuroku
Albanian mythology — Perendi (deity)
Aldous Huxley's — Ground of Being, see The Perennial Philosophy
Ancient Canaanite religion — El (deity)
Ancient Egyptian religion and Egyptian mythology — Ra and assorted aspects, such as Khepri, Khnum, Ra-Horakhty, Raet-Tawy, and the Eye of Ra, see Ancient Egyptian creation myths and Ancient Egyptian deities
Atenism — Aten
Heliopolis — Atum
Heracleopolis Magna — Heryshaf
Hermopolis — Ogdoad, Thoth
Memphis — Ptah
Sais, Egypt — Neith
Thebes — Amun
Ancient Iranian religion — Ahura Mazda
Ancient Greek philosophy — generally Arche
Pre-Socratic philosophy — generally Arche
Milesian school — Arche and Apeiron
Thales of Miletus — Arche, identified as the classical element water
Anaximander — Apeiron
Anaximenes of Miletus — Air (classical element)
Pythagoreanism — Tetractys
Pythagoras — Monad (philosophy), Dyad (Greek philosophy), Musica universalis
Hippasus — Fire (classical element)
Philolaus — Harmony, Pythagorean astronomical system
Archytas — Cosmos, as an unlimited system
Heraclitus and the Ephesian school — Becoming (philosophy) and Change (philosophy), represented as Fire (classical element), Unity of opposites, Logos
Eleatics — What-Is
Parmenides — What-Is, embodied and unified by The One, with nonbeing encompassed by The Void (philosophy)
Zeno of Elea — What-Is
Melissus of Samos — The One
Pluralist school — Pluralism (philosophy)
Anaxagoras — Nous
Archelaus (philosopher) — Air (classical element) and Infinity (philosophy), with the Nous, formed from the two principles, being the cause of all other things
Empedocles — The Perfect Sphere
Atomism, as conceived by Leucippus and Democritus — Atom and The Void (philosophy)
Sophist — Relativism
Xenophanes — God
Pherecydes of Syros — Zas, Cthonie, and Chronos
Hippo (philosopher) — Water (classical element) and Fire (classical element)
Diogenes of Apollonia — Air (classical element)
Alcmaeon of Croton — possibly Balance (metaphysics)
Socrates — generally Virtue, possibly Eros (concept) or Hyperuranion
Cynicism (philosophy) — Physis
Antisthenes — God
Diogenes — Physis
Dio Chrysostom — Physis
Cyrenaics and Aristippus — Hedone
Eretrian school and Phaedo of Elis — The Good/True
Megarian school and Euclid of Megara — The Good
Platonism, Platonic idealism, Theory of forms, and Plato — Form of the Good, Hyperuranion
Platonic Academy — generally Form of the Good
- Old Platonic Academy
Speusippus — The Ultimate Principle, as the Absolute One
Xenocrates — Unity, in the form(s) of the World Soul and Zeus
- Middle Platonic Academy
Arcesilaus — the unknown and possibly unknowable Aletheia/Truth
- New Platonic Academy
Carneades — the unknown and possibly unknowable Aletheia/Truth
Philo of Larissa — possibly Noumenon
- Old Platonic Academy
Middle Platonism — generally God as a Unity
Antiochus of Ascalon — Logos, which orders the cosmos, and Matter (philosophy), in the form of the four major classical elements, with Fire (classical element) being the greatest, making up stars and planets, as well as minds and even god
Philo — God
Plutarch — Monad (philosophy)/The One/God and the Indefinite Dyad (Greek philosophy)
Alcinous (philosopher) — God
Maximus of Tyre — God
Numenius of Apamea — The First God, which is a Nous embodying the Form of the Good
Origen the Pagan — The One
Neoplatonism — The One
Plotinus — The One
Ammonius Saccas — Nous
Porphyry (philosopher) — Porphyrian tree
Iamblichus — Monad (philosophy) and Nous
Julian (emperor) — Henosis
Hypatia — The One
Plutarch of Athens — Logos
Asclepigenia — The One
Syrianus — The One, Monad (philosophy), and Dyad (Greek philosophy)
Proclus — The One
Damascius — God
Simplicius of Cilicia — The One
John Philoponus — God
Aristotle: Peripatetic school and Aristotelian theology — Unmoved mover, Eternity of the world
Theophrastus — Motion (physics)
Strato of Lampsacus — Physis
Critolaus — Physis, Eternity of the world
Diodorus of Tyre — A combination of Virtue with the absence of pain
Alexander of Aphrodisias — God
Themistius — God
Hellenistic philosophy — generally Henology and Henosis
Epicurus: Epicureanism — Atom and Metakosmia, Aponia and Ataraxia
Metrodorus of Lampsacus (the younger) — Aponia
Zeno of Sidon — Aponia
Philodemus — Aponia
Lucretius — Physis
Diogenes of Oenoanda — Hedone and Virtue
Neopythagoreanism — The Good and the Monad (philosophy)
Nigidius Figulus — likely Monad (philosophy)
Numenius of Apamea — The First God
Apollonius of Tyana — Nous
Pyrrhonism — Epoché and Ataraxia
Pyrrho — Acatalepsia and Ataraxia
Timon of Phlius — Acatalepsia and Ataraxia
Aenesidemus — Acatalepsia
Agrippa the Skeptic — Acatalepsia
Sextus Empiricus — Ataraxia
Stoicism — God as the Universe, named Zeus, see Stoic physics
Zeno of Citium — God as the Universe, with Aether (classical element) as the basis of all activity within
Aristo of Chios — God
Herillus — Knowledge
Cleanthes — Zeus
Chrysippus — God
Antipater of Tarsus — God
Panaetius — God
Posidonius — Cosmic "Sympathy"
Seneca the Younger — Nature, see Naturales quaestiones
Lucius Annaeus Cornutus — Zeus
Gaius Musonius Rufus — Jupiter
Epictetus — Reason
Marcus Aurelius — Logos, see Meditations
Eclecticism
Cicero — Summum bonum
Ancient Mesopotamian religion — Tiamat-Nammu and Abzu
- The Andamanese — Pūluga
Ariosophy — A gnostic, pantheist and deist God, named Odin or Walvater
Aristotelianism — Unmoved mover, Eternity of the world
Arthur Schopenhauer — Will to live
Armenian mythology
- Early stages — Ḫaldi
- Persian influence — Aramazd
- Post-Alexandrian influences — Barsamin
- Early stages — Ḫaldi
Ayyavazhi and Ayyavazhi mythology — Ekam
Baltic mythology — Dievas
Latvian mythology — Dievs
Lithuanian mythology — Dievas
Prussian mythology — Deywis
Bantu mythology — God in Bantu mythology, as Ruhanga, Ngai, Mulungu, and/or others
Baruch Spinoza: Philosophy of Baruch Spinoza — God as "the sum of the natural and physical laws of the universe"
- The Bassari people in Togo — Unumbotte
Bon — Ground (Dzogchen) / Tagzig Olmo Lung Ring
Buddhism and Buddhist philosophy — Gautama Buddha, Tathāgata, Nirvana (Buddhism), see Reality in Buddhism and Enlightenment in Buddhism
Early Buddhism: Pre-sectarian Buddhism and Early Buddhist schools — Nirvana
Theravada — Buddhahood, Nirvana
Hinayana / Śrāvakayāna — Buddhahood, Nirvana
Mahayana — Sunyata, Trikaya, Dharmakāya, Two truths doctrine, Dharmadhatu, Bodhicitta, Eternal Buddha, see Lotus Sutra
Zen — see Doctrinal background of Zen
Chan Buddhism — Buddha-nature, Sunyata
Japanese Zen — Buddha-nature, Sunyata
Nichiren Buddhism — Buddha-nature
Pure Land Buddhism — Amitābha
Tendai — Buddhahood
Korean Buddhism — Two truths doctrine
Vajrayana — Adi-Buddha
Tibetan Buddhism — Vajradhara, Five Tathagatas
Shingon Buddhism — Adi-Buddha, Vairocana
Dzogchen — Ground
Navayana / Dalit Buddhist movement / Buddhist modernism — Nirvana
Chinese_Buddhism — Vairocana, Five Tathagatas
Burmese folk religion — Thagyamin
Caodaism — Cao Đài
Celtic mythology and Celtic polytheism, see Celtic deities and List of Celtic deities — Cailleach, God in Christianity
Irish mythology — Cailleach, The Dagda
Scottish mythology — Cailleach, Beira (mythology)
Welsh mythology — God in Christianity (mythology was already Christianized long before it was recorded and/or collected)
Breton mythology — God in Christianity (mythology was already Christianized long before it was recorded and/or collected)
Cornish mythology — God in Christianity (mythology was already Christianized long before it was recorded and/or collected)
Cheondoism — Haneullim
Suunism — Okhwangsangje Hanulim (the "Great Jade Emperor of Heaven")
- The Chinese — Tian, see Chinese creation myths
Chinese folk religion — Shangdi and Tian, see Chinese gods and immortals
Chinese salvationist religions — Maitreya, Wusheng Laomu
- Earliest influences (Yuan dynasty, 1277–1377)
White Lotus — Wusheng Laomu
Maitreya teachings — Maitreya
Ming dynasty (1367–1644) and Qing dynasty (1644–1911)
Baguadao — Wusheng Laomu
Luo teaching — "True Void" (真空 Zhēnkōng), Wuji (philosophy), Zhēn (真 "Truth", "True Reality"), Gǔfú (古佛 "Ancient Awakened"), The Eternal Parents (無生父母 Wúshēng Fùmǔ): Holy Patriarch of the Unlimited (无极圣祖 Wújí Shèngzǔ) and Wusheng Laomu
Chinese religions of fasting — Wusheng Laomu
Yiguandao — Wusheng Laomu or the Splendid Highest Deity (Chinese: 明明上帝; pinyin: Míngmíng Shàngdì)
Church of the Highest Supreme — Wusheng Laomu
Sanyi teaching — Taiji (philosophy)
Republic of China (1912–49)
Zaili teaching — Guanyin the "Only God of the Unlimited" (无极只神 Wújí Zhīshén)
Xiantiandao — Wusheng Laomu
Yaochidao — Queen Mother of the West
Guiyidao — The Holiest Venerable Patriarch of the Primordial Heaven (Zhisheng Xiantian Laozu)
Shanrendao — Dao
Tiandi teachings — The "Heavenly Deity" or "Heavenly Emperor" (Tiāndì 天帝)
De teaching — De (Chinese)
Yellow Sand Society — De (Chinese)
- Late 20th century
Xuanyuan teaching — Yellow Emperor
Way of the Gods according to the Confucian Tradition — Tao
Qigong — Qi, Yin and yang, Wu Xing
Falun Gong — Tao
- 21st century
Weixinism — Kunlun (mythology)
- Earliest influences (Yuan dynasty, 1277–1377)
Mo (religion) — Bu Luotuo
Miao folk religion — Yawm Saub
Yao folk religion — Three Pure Ones
Qiang folk religion — Mubyasei ("God of Heaven"), or Abba Chi
Chinese ritual mastery traditions — Dao
Manchu shamanism — Apka Enduri ("God of Heaven")
Chinese mythology — Jade Emperor, Pangu, Shangdi, Tian, Wufang Shangdi
Chinese philosophy — Taiji, Wuji
Confucianism — Mandate of Heaven, see Confucian theology
School of Naturalists — Yin and Yang, Wu Xing
Taoism — De, Tao, Taiji, Wuji, see Taoist philosophy
Mohism — Tian
Neo-Confucianism — Tiandao (Chinese: 天道; pinyin: Tiāndào; literally: "Way of Heaven"; Vietnamese: Thiên Đạo, Japanese: Tendō), Tianli (天理 "Order/Rule of Heaven"/"Heavenly Principle"/"Natural Law")
Xuanxue — Tao
Legalism (Chinese philosophy) — Wu wei
New Confucianism — Tian
Chinese Marxist philosophy / Maoism — "Contradiction" (Maodun)
Chinese theology — Hundun
- Shang-Zhou theology — Tian, Shangdi
- Qin-Han theology — Wufang Shangdi, Taiyi Shengshui, Yellow Emperor, Jade Emperor, Three Pure Ones, Hongjun Laozu, Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, Shen (Chinese religion), Doumu
- Shang-Zhou theology — Tian, Shangdi
Classical mythology — Chaos, see List of Greek mythological figures and List of Roman deities
Ancient Greek religion and Greek mythology — Thetis
Religion in ancient Rome and Roman mythology — Janus
Đạo Mẫu — Liễu Hạnh
Davi Kopenawa Yanomami — Omai (deity)
Dogon people of Mali — Amma (deity)
Eckankar — ECK- Edo religion — Osanobua
Etruscan religion — Tinia, see List of Etruscan mythological figures
F.H. Bradley's — The Absolute
Finnish paganism: Finnish mythology and Estonian mythology — Jumala, Ukko
Folklore of Romania — Sabaoth
Fon people: Dahomean religion — Nana Buluku, see Fon creation myth
West African Vodun — Bondye
Friedrich Nietzsche — The Übermensch and Eternal return
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling — God
Georg Cantor — Absolute Infinite
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Hegelianism and Absolute idealism — das Absolute, Geist/Begriff
Georgian mythology — Armazi (god)
G.I. Gurdjieff -- The Absolute
Germanic mythology
Norse mythology and Old Norse religion — Ginnungagap
Anglo-Saxon paganism — Wyrd
Continental Germanic mythology — possibly Wodan
Mythology in the Low Countries — possibly Wodan
Greco-Roman mysteries and Hellenistic religion
- Cult of Attis — Attis
- Cult of Cybele — Cybele
Cult of Despoina — Despoina
- Cult of Jupiter Dolichenus — Jupiter Dolichenus
- Cult of Sol Invictus — Sol Invictus, Elagabalus (deity)
Dionysian Mysteries — Dionysus
Eleusinian Mysteries — Demeter and Persephone
Mithraism — Mithras (name), see Mithras in comparison with other belief systems
Mysteries of Isis — Isis
Orphism (religion) — the Unutterable Beginning/Principle, or Arrētos Arche (Ἄρρητος Ἀρχή — transliterated as Árritos Arkhí), which produces Chronos and Ananke
Samothrace temple complex — Axiéros the Great Mother- Cult of Serapis — Serapis
Cult of Trophonius — Trophonius
- Cult of Attis — Attis
Gnosticism — Monad (Gnosticism), Pleroma
Syrian-Egyptian Gnosticism
Bardaisan — God
Basilides and Basilideans — God
According to Hippolytus — not-being God
According to Irenaeus and Epiphanius — the Unbegotten and Innominable Father
Sethianism — Unknown God
Ophites — Bythos
Naassenes — The First Man (Protanthropos, Adamas)
Valentinus (Gnostic) and Valentinianism — Bythos
Marcosians and Marcus (Marcosian) — Tetrad
Simon Magus and Simonians — The First Principle, as Fire (classical element)
Menander (gnostic) — The Father On High
Persian Gnosticism
Mandaeism — God
Manichaeism — The Father of Greatness, proper name Zurvan, and The Prince of darkness (Manichaeism), proper name Satanas, Diabolos Protos, Iblis Al-Qadim, or Ahriman
Chinese Manichaeism — Shangdi/Míngzūn/Zhēnshén
Sabians — Allah
- General Gnosticism
Carpocrates — God
Marcion of Sinope and Marcionism — God
Cerinthus — God
Catharism — The evil Old Testament God and good New Testament God
Borborites — Barbelo
Bogomilism — God
Colarbasians — Greek alphabet
Euchites — Ousia
Paulicianism — The Good Spirit and the Evil Spirit
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz — "Monas Monadum"
Guanches — Achamán
Haitian Vodou — Bondye, Gran Maître, Damballa
- The Heikum of South Africa — Xamaba
Helena Blavatsky and Theosophy (Blavatskian) — Causeless cause, see Buddhism and Theosophy, Christianity and Theosophy, Theosophy and science, Theosophy and Western philosophy
- The Himba and Herero people of Namibia — Mukuru
Hinduism — God in Hinduism, see Hindu denominations, Hindu texts, Deva (Hinduism), List of Hindu deities
Historical Vedic religion — Ishvara, Hari, Vishvakarman, Ṛta
Vaishnavism — Vishnu, Krishna, Rama, Narayana, Svayam Bhagavan, Dashavatara, Avatars of Vishnu, Deva
Shaivism — Shiva, Parameshwara (God), Deva
Shaktism — Shakti, Mahavidya, Adi Parashakti, Matrikas, Devi
Smarta tradition — Para Brahman
Balinese Hinduism — Acintya
Hindu philosophy
Samkhya — Purusha, sometimes Ishvara
Yoga (philosophy)/Yoga — Prakṛti, Paramatman
Nyaya — Moksha
Vaisheshika — Parimaṇḍala Parimāṇa
Mīmāṃsā — Dharma
Vedanta — Brahman, Paramatman, sometimes Nondualism
Hungarian mythology — Isten
Hurrian religion and Hittite mythology and religion — Elkunirsa
Hypsistarians — Hypsistos
Immanuel Kant, Transcendental idealism, and Kantianism — Thing-in-itself, Noumenon
Indigenous religious beliefs of the Tagalog people / Philippine mythology — Bathala, see Deities of Philippine mythology
Iranian mythology
Persian mythology — Ahura Mazda, Parvardigar, Khuda
Kurdish mythology — Ahura Mazda
Ossetian mythology — Xucau
Scythian religion — Tabiti
Itelmen religion — Kutka and Chachy, Dusdaechschitsh
Jacques Lacan — The Real
Jainism — Kevala Jnana, Anekantavada, Dravya
Jakob Böhme and Theosophy (Boehmian) — Ungrund, "unground", the ground without a ground
Japanese new religions
Konkokyo — Tenchi Kane No Kami
Oomoto — Kunitokotachi
Church of World Messianity — Johrei
Mahikari — Mioya Motosu Mahikari Omikami
Sukyo Mahikari — Mahikari
Happy Science — El Cantare
New Thought — Infinite Intelligence
Tenrikyo — God in Tenrikyo
Jeungsanism/Jeung San Do — Sangje
Johann Gottlieb Fichte — Das absolute Bewusstseyn (the absolute consciousness)- Kapauku Papuans — Ugatame
Kingdom of Mutapa — Mwari
Komi peoples — En and Omöl
Kongo religion — Nzambi a Mpungu, Kengue
Korean shamanism and Korean mythology — Haneullim
Kuba Kingdom and Bushongo mythology — Mbombo
Kumina — Oto, King Zombi
Lugbara mythology — Adroa
Lusitanian mythology — Endovelicus
Luwian religion — Tarḫunz
- The Makua of Mozambique — Muluku
Mandé creation myth — Mangala
Mari Native Religion — Kugu Jumo
Mbuti mythology/Pygmy peoples — Khonvoum
Martin Heidegger — Dasein
Mordvins — Chipaz and Ange Patiai
- Erzya — Thsipaz/Chipaz, later Nishkepaz
Mokshas — Viarde Skai
- The Mythologies of the indigenous peoples of the Americas and Native American religion — Great Spirit, see Manitou and Orenda
- North America
Abenaki mythology and the Algonquian peoples — Tabaldak
Narragansett people — Cautantowwit
Blackfoot mythology and Blackfoot religion — Apistotoke
Cherokee mythology — Unetlanvhi
Choctaw mythology — Nanapesa/Ishtahullo-chito/Nanishta-hullo-chito/Hushtahli/Uba Pike/Aba/Shilup Chitoh Osh/Chitokaka
Crow religion — Akbaatatdia/Iichíkbaalee/Isáahkawuattee
Lakota mythology — Wakan Tanka
Pawnee mythology — Atius Tirawa
Iroquois mythology — Ha-wen-ni-yu, Taryenyawagon
Creek mythology — E-sau-ge-túh Emis-see
Tsimshian mythology — Raven
Inuit religion — Silap Inua, Anguta
Wabunowin — Gitche Manitou
Purépecha religion — Cuerauáperi
Zuni mythology — Awonawilona
Hopi mythology — Tawa
Miwok mythology — O-let'-te Coyote-man
Kwakwaka'wakw mythology — Raven
Wintun mythology — Olelbis
Powhatan mythology — Ahone
Plains Apache mythology — Kuterastan
Central America/Mesoamerican religion
Aztec mythology and Aztec religion — Ōmeteōtl, Teotl
Maya mythology and Maya religion — Itzamna, Hunab Ku
Olmec religion — possibly Feathered Serpent
Taíno — Atabey (goddess) and Yúcahu
Antioquia Department mythology — Abira
- South America
Mapuche religion — Pu-am, Ngenechen
Huilliche people — Chaotroquin
Chilote mythology — Ten Ten-Vilu and Coi Coi-Vilu
Inca mythology — Viracocha
Ichma culture — Pacha Kamaq
Guarani mythology and Religion in the Inca Empire — Tupã (mythology)
Muisca mythology and Muisca religion — Chiminigagua
- North America
Mythology of Indonesia
Traditional Dayak religion/Kaharingan — Ranying Hatalla Langit
Batak mythology/Traditional Batak religion — Mula Jadi Na Bolon and Naga Padoha
Aluk — Puang Matua
Sunda Wiwitan — Sang Hyang Kersa
Kejawèn/Aliran kepercayaan — Hyang
Marapu — the Great Mother (Ina Kalada) and the Great Father (Ama Kalada)
Subud — God, see Subud and religion
Balinese mythology — Antaboga
- The Nenets people of Siberia — Num (god) and Nga (god)
Ngäbe — Noncomala
Nuristani religion — Imra
- Oceanic mythology and Polynesian narrative
Australian Aboriginal religion and mythology — Rainbow Serpent, Baiame, Bunjil, Dreamtime
Samoan mythology — Tagaloa
Māori mythology — Rangi and Papa
Fijian mythology — Degei
Hawaiian religion — Kāne, see Kumulipo
Tahiti and Society Islands mythology — Ta'aroa
Mangarevan narrative — Tu
Cook Islands mythology — Te-Aka-Ia-Roe
Tongan narrative — Limu (Tongan mythology)
- Solomon Islands mythology — Agunua
Tikopia — Atua Fafine, Atua I Raropuka
Micronesian mythology — Ligobubfanu
Odinani — Chukwu
Perennial philosophy: Unitarian Universalism — a universalist conception of God
Proto-Indo-European mythology — *Dyḗus Pḥatḗr
Raëlism — Everything In Everything, see Raëlian beliefs and practices
Rahmanism — Ar-Rahman
Religion in pre-Islamic Arabia — Allah
René Descartes: Cartesianism — God, possessing necessary existence
Sámi shamanism — Ipmil, Radien-attje, Waralden Olmai
San religion — Cagn
Sanchuniathon — Elyon and Beruth
Serer religion — Roog, see Serer creation myth
Shinto and Japanese Mythology — Japanese creation myth, Kotoamatsukami
Kojiki — Amenominakanushi
Nihon Shoki — Kuninotokotachi
Sikhism — God in Sikhism, Ik Onkar, Waheguru, Nirankar, Akal Purakh, Satnam
Slavic paganism and Slavic Native Faith — Rod/Bog, see Deities of Slavic religion
Tangaloa — Tangaloa 'Eiki
Tengrism and Altaic mythologies — Tengri
Turkic mythology — Tengri
Mongol mythology — Esege Malan
Mongolian shamanism — Qormusta Tengri
Tungusic creation myth — Buga (deity), Eskeri
Thelema — True Will, Nuit, Hadit
Thracian religion — Sabazios
Tikopia — Atua I Kafika
Traditional Berber religion — Amun, Baal, Zeus, equated with each other
Ugric peoples — Num-Torum
Urhobo people — Cghene
Vainakh religion — Deela or Dela
Visayans — Kan-Laon
Western esotericism — generally God as the Great Architect of the Universe
Freemasonry — Great Architect of the Universe and Eye of Providence
Rosicrucianism — Great Architect of the Universe
Hermeticism — The All
Wicca — Dryghten or The Star Goddess, The One or The All
William Blake's mythology — Albion (Blake)
Winti — Anana Kedyaman Kedyanpon
Yoruba religion — Olodumare, Olorun, and Olofi
Zoroastrianism — Ahura Mazda
Zurvanism — Zurvan
Mazdak — Ahura Mazda
Zulu mythology — Unkulunkulu, Umvelinqangi
Interpretations
While these conceptions are superficially similar, they admit of multiple interpretations. Some philosophers, especially perennialists and pantheist philosophers, find great significance in the similarities between these different words and argue that various/all cultures past and present have an identical concept of the 'Absolute'.
Other philosophers, however, argue that these concepts are not the same,[5][6] since the Logos is rational and formal whereas Brahman is formless and irrational; and since Plato's Form of the Good is impersonal where the Christian God is personal; since Bradley's Absolute is a conscious experience whereas Brand Blanshard's Absolute is an unconscious, intelligible system.
Perennialist philosophers such as John Hick argue that even if the concepts vary slightly, the reality of the Absolute reality behind the varying concepts is the same.[7]
Within religious traditions
Philosophers such as Adi Shankara denied the Absolute any personal sense, whereas philosophers such as Ramanuja and Madhva, tended to identify the Absolute with a personal God. The Traditionalist School, via Frithjof Schuon, admits:
It is true that God as creator, revealer, and savior is not to be identified with the Absolute as such; it is likewise true that God in Himself, in the full depth of His reality, is not to be reduced to the creative Function.[8]
Early Hinduism identified Brahman with Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. The same immortal spirit was conceived of as functional in the world in three ways: creation, preservation, and destruction.[9] There was therefore no real contradiction between love of a personal God and an impersonal Absolute, although the latter was sometimes conceived of as "purer."[10]
Shaivism, and most monotheistic Indian religions, gave God five functions: creation, preservation, destruction, concealment, and revelation. Shiva, as Brahman, would therefore act in the world as a personal God. Yet this distinction between the Absolute and Infinite, or Transcendent and Immanent is not entirely, in itself, absolute. Philosophers like Shankara believe that upon doing away with maya the entire universe disappears, including the notion of a personal God. Philosophers such as Madhva and Ramanuja, tend to propound an identification of the Absolute with God, whereas later philosophers such as Nimbarka and Caitanya, tended to identify the Absolute with a personal form of God (Krishna). Either way, all these claims, taken in context, tend to prove non-contradictory.
The quote above, via Schuon, is actually fully represented within the Hindu tradition. Brahma, the creator god, is not worshiped within Hinduism. The only deities that are worshiped, are Shiva, and Vishnu. Both Shiva and Vishnu, by their respective devotees, are represented as having power over the following five functions: creation, preservation, destruction, concealment, and revelation. However, a further distinction is made by Shankara: God is not Brahman (the Absolute). Rather the appearance of God is still via the power of Maya. So there are in effect, three levels, which Schuon himself observes: Brahman (the Absolute), God as creator, revealer, and savior (AKA, Shiva or Vishnu), and finally God as creator (AKA, Brahma). Incidental reasons are given for Brahma's lack of worship, a Hindu myth attributes this situation to a curse by Bhrigu. Devdutt Pattanaik, an Indian author, gives some philosophical reasons. Ultimately the reason is actually inherent ("inherent" in the Absolute) and theological.
Relation of humanity to the Absolute
Laozi taught that the Tao was not only the ultimate reality but the ideal of human life. Another conceptual similarity between various conceptions is that the ultimate reality also somehow reveals to humans the way to live. For example, Plato taught that the Good was both the source of reality, the highest object of knowledge, and the ultimate end of desire.
C. S. Lewis explains the connection between the highest reality and human action in this way:[11]
In early Hinduism that conduct in men which can be called good consists in conformity to, or almost participation in, the Rta—that great ritual or pattern of nature and supernature which is revealed alike in the cosmic order, the moral virtues, and the ceremonial of the temple. Righteousness, correctness, order, the Rta, is constantly identified with satya or truth, correspondence to reality. As Plato said that the Good was 'beyond existence' and Wordsworth that through virtue the stars were strong, so the Indian masters say that the gods themselves are born of the Rta and obey it. The Chinese also speak of a great thing (the greatest thing) called the Tao. It is the reality beyond all predicates, the abyss that was before the Creator Himself. It is Nature, it is the Way, the Road. It is the Way in which the universe goes on, the Way in which things everlastingly emerge, stilly and tranquilly, into space and time. It is also the Way which every man should tread in imitation of that cosmic and supercosmic progression, conforming all activities to that great exemplar. 'In ritual', say the Analects, 'it is harmony with Nature that is prized.' The ancient Jews likewise praise the Law as being 'true'. This conception in all its forms, Platonic, Aristotelian, Stoic, Christian, and Oriental alike, I shall henceforth refer to for brevity simply as 'the Tao'.
— C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man
I. K. Taimni says:
Because the Ultimate Reality which is denoted by the word 'Absolute' or 'Parabrahman' (卍) is the very core of our being as well as the cause and basis of the universe of which we are part, we can no more get away from it than our solar system can get away from the sun round which it resolves and from which it receives everything which keeps it alive and moving. Although the Absolute is sometimes referred to by such epithets as the Void, Ever-Darkness etc. and is beyond intellectual comprehension, still, from the intellectual point of view it is the most profound concept in the whole realm of philosophy. The fact that it is called 'Unknowable' does not mean that it is beyond the range of philosophical or religious thought and something on which thinking is impossible or undesirable. The very fact that it is the heart and the basis of the universe should make it the most intriguing object of enquiry within the realms of the intellect.
— I. K. Taimni, Man, God and the Universe, Chapter 1[12]
Aldous Huxley says:[13]
Only the transcendent, the completely other, can be immanent without being modified by the becoming of that in which it dwells. The Perennial Philosophy teaches that it is desirable and indeed necessary to know the spiritual Ground of things, not only within the soul, but also outside in the world and, beyond world and soul, in its transcendent otherness 'in heaven.' ... God within and God without; these are two abstract notions, which can be entertained by the understanding and expressed in words.
— Aldous Huxley, The Perennial Philosophy
Similarly, the Hindu Taimni describes the Parabrahman as unknowable by the human mind and unthinkable but the highest object of realization and the most profound object of philosophical enquiry.[14]
Plotinus likewise taught that the goal of philosophy was to "contemplate the One".[15]
Experiencing the Absolute
Philosophers and religious adherents who aim to pattern their life after the Absolute reality sometimes claim to have experienced the Absolute. They report mystical experiences, feelings of oneness, transcendence of their everyday personality or of personhood altogether.
Representing the Absolute
The Absolute is conceptually defined as something inexpressible and perhaps unthinkable. This concept creates special problems for expression in words, poetry, mythology, and art. Writers, painters, storytellers, filmmakers[16] often use paradox or contradiction because of the "contradictory aspect of the ultimate reality".[17]
According to Mircea Eliade, the Absolute can be mediated or revealed through symbols.[18] For Eliade the "archaic" mind is constantly aware of the presence of the Sacred, and for this mind all symbols are religious (relinking to the Origin). Through symbols human beings can get an immediate "intuition" of certain features of the inexhaustible Sacred. The mind makes use of images to grasp the ultimate reality of things because reality manifests itself in contradictory ways and therefore can't be described in concepts. It is therefore the image as such, as a whole bundle of meaning, that is "true" (faithful, trustworthy).[18] Eliade says :[19]
the sacred is equivalent to a power, and, in the last analysis, to reality. The sacred is saturated with being. Sacred power means reality and at the same time enduringness and efficacy. The polarity sacred-profane is often expressed as opposition between real and unreal or pseudoreal. [...] Thus it is easy to understand that religious man deeply desires to be, to participate in reality, to be saturated with power.
Common symbols of the Absolute include world trees, the tree of life, microcosm, fire, children,[20]circles, mandalas, and the human body.
See also
- Absolute idealism
- Absolute Infinite
- Adi-Buddha
- Atman
- Being
- Buddhahood
- Buddha-nature
- Chaos
Conceptions of God—Existence of God—Names of God
- Dharmakāya
Dialectical monism—Neutral monism
- Eternal Buddha
God—Godhead—God the Father
- Indeterminacy
- Intrinsic value
- Meaning of life
Monad—Monism—Henology
- Mysticism
- Non-absolutism
Logos—Nous—Reason
- Pleroma
- Reality
- Reality in Buddhism
- Sacred
- Śūnyatā
- Supreme Being
- The All
- Universality (philosophy)
Notes
References
^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
^ Huxley, Aldous (2009-01-01). The Perennial Philosophy. New York: Harper Perennial Modern Classics. ISBN 9780061724947.
Tillich, Paul (1951-01-01). Systematic Theology. Vol. I. University of Chicago Press.
^ Plato, Republic, Book VI, 508.
^ Cross, St John of the (2015-01-16). The Complete Works of Saint John of the Cross, Volume 1 of 2. Waxkeep Publishing.
^ Yandell, Keith E. (2002-01-22). Philosophy of Religion: A Contemporary Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 9781134827237.
^ Moser, Paul (2009-01-01). "Exclusivism, Inclusivism, and Kardiatheology". Philosophia Christi. 11 (2): 293–308.
^ "Hick, John | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". www.iep.utm.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
^ Schuon, Frithjof (1974). "Form and Substance in the Religions". Studies in Comparative Religion.
^ Ganguli, Kisari Mohan. "The Mahabharata, Book 3: Vana Parva: Draupadi-harana Parva: Section CCLXX". Sacred Texts.The Supreme Spirit hath three conditions. In the form of Brahma, he is the Creator, and in the form of Vishnu he is the Preserver, and in his form as Rudra, he is the Destroyer of the Universe!
^ Rodrigues, Hillary (2015). "Nirguna and Saguna Brahman". Mahavidya.Until this occurs, "the world...even including Isvara (the Lord), is not ultimately true or real, but that ultimate reality belongs only to the infinite, eternal, unchanging, pure bliss consciousness that is Brahman...all that we see with our senses, even our private thoughts, Advaita claims, are not ultimately real" (Betty 216).
^ Lewis, C.S. (1943). The Abolition of Man. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0-06-065294-4.
^ The phrase "core of our being" is Freudian; see Bettina Bock von Wülfingen (2013). "Freud's 'Core of our Being' Between Cytology and Psychoanalysis". Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte. 36 (3): 226–244. doi:10.1002/bewi.201301604.
^ Huxley, Aldous (1945). The Perennial Philosophy. United States: Harper & Brothers. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-06-172494-7.
^ I. K. Taimni Man, God and the Universe Quest Books, 1974, p. 1-2
^ "Plotinus - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". www.iep.utm.edu. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
^ Cf. Terrence Malick's Tree of Life and Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey are two good examples (one religious, one atheistic) of the use of contradiction to convey the Absolute in the final sequences.
^ Dadosky, 2004. p. 86
^ ab Dadosky, 2004. p. 85
^ Dadosky, 2004. p. 100
^ See George MacDonald's The Golden Key
- John Daniel Dadosky. The Structure of Religious Knowing: Encountering the Sacred in Eliade and Lonergan. State University of New York Press, 2004.
ISBN 0791460614