Quote:
Originally Posted by Vanhaomena
So I've heard this argument that goes something like the following: the universe is infinite, therefore everything possible exists somewhere, at some point in time, at probability = 100%. So there is a god, or was a god, or will be a god almost certainly. In fact, there has to be an infinite number of everything possible, including gods. Is this in line with any major religion?
I believe the Hindu Vedas and Vedanta philosophy speak to an endless cyclic recurrence of the cosmos . I'm not exactly sure of the correct terminology but it seems to me that the use of the word "infinite" is more of a western/scientific term which may not translate to the Hindu exegesis.
As far as "many gods", many spiritual appreciations of the cosmos have and
do take notice of many gods. This can include the ancient Greek. Persians, and even to the present time the Hindus.
To be clear as to the idea of "many gods" consider that the world as perceived by these ancient peoples displayed, as for example, the "god of the hearth" or the "spirit of the Rhine" or even the "spirit of a Nation" as per example St. George and the Dragon or Raphael, associated with healing, or Michael associated with knowledge and even cosmopolitanism.
What is going on here is that through an atavistic consciousness the individual saw the spiritual entities behind our sense bound existence. This states that the sense bound existence is the condensation of the spirit, in a manner of speaking.
Of course there are other beings appreciated as per Raphael as the spirit of medicine or Michael as the entry to knowledge to which neither can be said to have an external perception as of a tree (which has its own spiritual entity).
By and large the Hindus have a plethora of supersensible beings and so did the ancient Romans .Homer's the "Iliad and the Odyssey" , if read in an non prejudicial manner can be enlightening .