Less sure about Spinoza, but I believe for Hegel (or Schelling) it depends on what the panpsychism entails. If it entails that anything has consciousness, then we'd missing the point of Schelling and Hegel when they say there just are certain things that are inorganic and mechanical, and have no consciousness. If we mean the Absolute has consciousness (which we all participate in), as a irreducible and organic whole, then sure, it can be a form of panpsychism. However, the world of Hegel and Schelling is notably a type of organicism more than panpsychism. Generally consciousness is viewed for them as the highest potency of matter.How would you distinguish Pantheism, e.g. Spinoza or Hegel, from Panpsychism?
It presupposes, in short, the ancient Platonic theme that all knowledge participates in divine self-knowledge, or that when I know something God knows it through me. Schelling did not shirk from putting forward just this doctrine: “Not I know, but the all knows in me, if the knowledge that I call mine is an actual and true knowledge” (§1; VI, 140). The ‘I am’ and the ‘I think’ have been the basic mistake of all philosophy, he wrote, because thought is not my thought and being is not my being but they are the thought and being of the absolute or the universe itself. — Frederick Beiser
The allegorical form of this explanation is that “God creates the world in order to portray himself” (39). This means that the infinite is a kind of divine artist, creating the entire world for its self-knowledge. The infinite is therefore to be conceived as a kind of intelligence, what Schlegel, anticipating Hegel, calls “spirit” (Geist) (39). — Frederick Beiser
So, whether you believe in a deity or don't, share your reasoning. — JustSomeGuy
↪Mitchell
How would you distinguish Pantheism, e.g. Spinoza or Hegel, from Panpsychism?
Less sure about Spinoza — Marty
"God" for Spinoza was synonymous with Nature — JustSomeGuy
If someone experiences God and you say that could be an instance of "higher knowledge" which proves that God is real, that begs the question as to how you could distinguish a genuine instance of such knowledge from a bogus one. this would seem to apply even to one's own experiences. So it would seem that there is no possibility that faith could ever be superseded in any instance. — Janus
So how is his philosophy not just natural philosophy, or science, for that matter? — Wayfarer
But this is where the role of the spiritual preceptor or advisor comes into play. — Wayfarer
I tend to think he has much in common with Jewish mysticism — Wayfarer
I guess I have decided that he just not part of my core curriculum, as not everything can be. — Wayfarer
I'd put the first appearnce of an eternal realm separate from the physical world in Plato. Although he called the Forms "divine", they weren't in any sense "gods".
The appearance of (a) God separate from the world seems to me to be, in the West, to occur in Genesis 1. God existed separate from the world and created the world. To say that God is separate from the world does not rule out his interacting with the world. What it does rule out is both Pantheism and totally immanent deities. — Mitchell
Hey McD - did you notice the writings of Karen Armstrong on these issues, about 6-7 years ago now? A couple of short reviews that go to the point you're making:
Metaphysical Mistake
Review of her A Case for God, Alain du Botton.
(Both from The Guardian.) — Wayfarer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.