What is Polytheology?
What is Neo-Paganism?
What is Polytheism?
Some Definitions | |
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animism animatism panpsychism pantheism panentheism |
theism and deism polytheism pan-polytheism agnosticism atheism |
other terms
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Polytheology, Part 3: What is Mythology?, including:
• Some Standard Definitions of Myth and Mythology
• What Myths Do
• But What is Mythology, Really?
A Theory of Polytheism, excerpted from Hindu Polytheism by Alain Danielou.
Polytheology, Part 4, The Deities and How We Find Them
For books cited, see my Sources
Giordano Bruno, in the late 16th C., "advanced the first clear theory of panpsychism. For him the basic unit of reality is the monad, animated with its own energy. Souls and gods are likewise monads, and the innumerable worlds of the universe ar interpreted in organic terms, as having lives of their own." "Campanella [in the 16th and 17th C.] presented the notion of a graded reality from matter to God, yet each level has to some extent the qualities of knowledge, power, and love." Numerous theologians and philosophers, such as Leibnitz, Goethe, Schopenhauer, William James, and A. N. Whitehead have followed the discussion with such notions as: "all of nature [is] alive, even if slumbering on its lower levels; but all levels of nature are directed toward consciousness" (Schelling); and "the world is characterized throughout as a throbbing will, more or less informed by awareness, depending on the level of reference" (Schopenhauer). ![]()
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Some Panentheists combine Panpsychism, such that "every entity [is] sentient to some extent, and exist[s] as a component in the life of a more inclusive being. The series ends with the Divine Being whose constituents include all of reality. Just as a cell has a certain freedom within the body, so we hve a certain freedom within the Divine Being." (Fechner) For A.N. Whitehead, in whose metaphysics feeling is spread throughout a reality interpreted in organismic terms, "Deity is dipolar, both absolute and relative, and man's immortality is his continued reality within the consequent nature of God."
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"In beginning to understand what polytheism means to modern Neo-Pagans we must divest ourselves of a number of ideas about it mainly, that it is an inferior way of perceiving that disappeared as religions "evolved" toward the idea of one god."
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"There exists a long tradition of those who have believed that religion rests on superstition." This was true of certain ancient Greek philosophers, 17th century philosophers, as well as 20th century philosophers and scientists, and is not limited to Western thought. Religion can be viewed as a tool to control the masses
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Although our spirituality keeps us in touch with Nature, we are not Luddites, seeking to destroy technology. While some of us live in rural regions or the wilds, many of us live in urban and suburban areas and, as you can see here, use computers. Therefore, another term we use is TechnoPagan, to indicate a Neopagan with an especial interest, personal or professional, in technology, particularly computer technology. |
A Few Additional Remarks on PolytheologyAndraste, a Neopagan and Wiccan friend, pointed out to me two possible forms of Paganism:
A third possibility which comes to my mind is that:
![]() In fact, contemporary American Neo-Paganism can encompass atheists who perceive a universal principle which doesn't have to take a particular deity form, nor include sentience, consciousness, or will; monistic pantheists, who see the divine as permeating everything in the universe; monotheists, such as Gavin and Yvonne Frost of the Church and School of Wicca, or some feminists and others who practice Goddess-monotheism; duotheists, such as many in British Traditional Wicca groups who worship one God and one Goddess who may each have several different aspects; polytheists, who believe in the literal existance of their many deities; henotheists, who, while acknowledging the existence of other deities, chose to focus their devotion on one in particular, such as members of the Ancient Egypt oriented Church of the Eternal Source and some practitioners of Afro-diasporic New World religions such as Loucumi, Santeria, Vodou, Candomble, Macumba, Umbanda, Quimbanda, etc.; those influenced by Jungianism, who see the deities as useful concepts rather than actual realities; and a surprising number of humanists, agnostics, and even atheists. An individual may practice several of these, and there are Neo-Pagans who are concurrently practicing Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, Sufis, or on other spiritual paths. Neo-Pagan polytheism can include them all. ![]() For the books cites, see my Sources ![]() Beyond PolytheismIn the larger contemporary American society which does not acknowledge multiple deities, polytheism has taken on different, although not unrelated, meanings. Chief among those "redefining" the term are Jungian phychologists and writers who espouse various aspects of Jungian thought. To oversimplify, Jungians break down the human psyche into archetypes, larger-than-life roles in which we may be casting ourselves (Mother, Father, Judge, etc.). They have especially taken the names of certain Greek deities to identify these archetypes: Athena, the masculine-identifying Daughter; Hera, the typical Wife; Demeter, the Good Mother; Dionysus, the party animal; Zeus, the stern Father; Apollo, analytical and unemotional; etc. There's no doubt that this is a useful system, and one to which many Neo-Pagans can relate, but do not mistake this application of Greek names for the deities themselves. Jungians are not describing with these terms the deities as conceived by the Greeks, and they are applying the terminology in a context which is not necessarily religious.
"This means that the new polytheism is not simply a matter of pluralism in the social order, anarchy in politics, polyphonic meaning in language. The new sensibility is a manifestation of something far more basic. The Gods are Powers. They are the potency in each of us, in societies, and in nature. Their stories are the stories of the coming and going, the birth and death, of this potency as it is experienced. Our culture is apparently pluralistic; actually it is polytheistic." ![]() Among people active in areas of feminism, the human-potential movement, liberal to radical politics, and other exploring processes, there is a accent on the acknowledgement of the multi-faceted quality to humanity, human culture, and human ideas, and the attitude that there need not be One True Right and Only Way to do or imagine anything. Some of these people, too, and many Neo-Pagans working with these ideas, use the term "polytheism" to express this attitude, even though they, too, are not necessarily applying it in a spiritual context.
For books cited, see my Sources |
End of "Introduction to PolyTheology"
Please continue to the next page for "What is Mythology"
Copyright1990-1997 Lilinah biti-Anat, except where otherwise noted. All rights reserved.
An earlier form of this essay was presented for The Fellowship of the Spiral Path, Old Religion Class, Tuesday, 13 November 1990
For books cited, see my Sources
A Theory of Polytheism
PolyTheology Part 4: The Deities and How We Find Them
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