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         Pantheism:     more books (100)
  1. Elements of Pantheism by Paul Harrison, 2004-06-24
  2. Pantheism by J. Allanson Picton, 2007-03-15
  3. Pantheism: A Non-Theistic Concept of Deity by Michael Levine, 1994-08-19
  4. The Active Universe: Pantheism and the Concept of Imagination in the English Romantic Poets by H. W Piper, 1962
  5. The Elements of Pantheism: Understanding the Divinity in Nature and the Universe (Elements of) by Paul A. Harrison, 1999-08
  6. Apologetics in the New Age: A Christian Critique of Pantheism by David K. Clark, Norman L. Geisler, 2004-06
  7. Pantheism and Christianity by John Hunt, 1997-03
  8. Catholicity And Pantheism: All Truth Or No Truth: An Essay (1874) by J. De Concilio, 2007-11-03
  9. Modern Pantheism by Constance E. Plumtre, 2005-12-08
  10. Pantheism Its Story And Significance by Allanson J. Picton, 2004-06-30
  11. Modern atheism under its forms of pantheism, materialism, secularism, development, and natural laws. By James Buchanan ... by Michigan Historical Reprint Series, 2005-12-21
  12. Pantheism And Nature by John Hunt, 2005-12-08
  13. The pantheism of Alan Watts by David K Clark, 1978
  14. A Manual Of Hindu Pantheism: The Vedantasara

1. Pantheism
Definition of pantheism from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pantheism/
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Pantheism
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.

2. PANTHEISM: The World Pantheist Movement
The WPM is a membership organization dedicated to the promotion of natural/scientific pantheism, revering the Universe, caring for Nature, and celebrating
http://www.pantheism.net/

Save habitat with us

Buy WPM stickers, mugs, posters, T-shirts

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Free Pantheism Intro List
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BELIEFS WPM belief statement
Sci-pan site

Pantheist theory, practice

and history
FAQS WPM in a Nutshell
Why organize?
Your concerns answered What does the WPM ... Pantheism FAQS CHECK US OUT Read our magazine Members' voices Visit our free Web forum Our galleries: ... art, photography, PARTICIPATE Join the WPM Free lists Where members are Get regular WPM updates HELP OUT Tell a friend Get a banner link Help promote the WPM Help in other ways ... Free ways to raise funds ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION Practical links for radical changes Receive our Environmental Action Alerts Join our Save Rainforest group Sign UNESCO's Manifesto for Peace and ... Stop Global Warming ORGANIZATION Directors Incorporation, Tax status PRACTICE Calendar Almanac Ethics Seasonal Celebration ... Death and Funerals NEWS
environment News about the WPM
Bookshop Links Contact us: info@pantheism.net Albert Einstein A knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, of the manifestations of the profoundest reason and the most radiant beauty - it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute the truly religious attitude; in this sense, and this alone, I am a deeply religious man The World as I See It Pantheism in the News World Pantheism News WPM Member Resources Members' Center ... Resources
Is Nature your spiritual home?

3. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pantheism
Explanation of Catholic opposition to pantheism.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11447b.htm
Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... P > Pantheism A B C D ... CICDC - Home of the Catholic Lifetime Reading Plan
Pantheism
(From Greek pan , all; theos , god). The view according to which God and the world are one. The name pantheist was introduced by John Toland (1670-1722) in his "Socinianism truly Stated" (1705), while pantheism was first used by his opponent Fay in "Defensio Religionis" (1709). Toland published his "Pantheisticon" in 1732. The doctrine itself goes back to the early Indian philosophy ; it appears during the course of history in a great variety of forms, and it enters into or draws support from so many other systems that, as Professor Flint says ("Antitheistic Theories", 334), "there is probably no pure pantheism". Taken in the strictest sense, i.e. as identifying God and the world, Pantheism is simply Atheism . In any of its forms it involves Monism , but the latter is not necessarily pantheistic. Emanationism may easily take on a pantheistic meaning and as pointed out in the Encyclical "Pascendi dominici gregis", the same is true of the modern doctrine of immanence
VARIETIES
These agree in the fundamental doctrine that beneath the apparent diversity and multiplicity of things in the universe there is one only being absolutely necessary eternal , and infinite . Two questions then arise: What is the nature of this being? How are the manifold appearances to be explained? The principal answers are incorporated in such different earlier systems as

4. Pantheism A Religion For All
pantheism writings, definitions, FAQs and quotes.
http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/6072/pantheism.html
What I cannot understand is how there could possibly be a God who would reward or punish his subjects or who could induce us to develop our will in our daily life. I cannot then believe in this concept of an anthropomorphic God who has the powers of interfering with these natural laws. [The Private Albert Einstein] Last updated on 8/16/97 many more links email Mike Trobee
Pantheism A religion for all
Writings of Pantheism Einstein's Pantheism Questions You May Have Pantheism Defined ... View Our Guestbook Are you a Pantheist? 1. Are you Inspired by the beauty of the universe? 2. Do you believe in a God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fates and actions of human beings. 3. Do you believe in logic? 4. Do you believe in nature rather than faith and hope? 5. Do you believe that all ( literally everything) is a part of God. 6. Do you have strong morals and seek to do good. 7. Do you believe that humans are part of Nature, rather than set above it? 8. When you are in the midst of nature, in a forest, by the sea, on a mountain peak do you ever feel a sense of the sacred, like the feeling of being in a vast cathedral?

5. Pantheist.Net - Universal Pantheist Society
Pantheist.Net an online home for Pantheists, Panentheists and Cosmotheists. Pantheist.Net was founded to provide a coalition, bringing groups dedicated to Pantheist lifeways and philosophy together with individuals practicing or exploring pantheism.
http://www.pantheist.net/

" We seek renewed reverence for the Earth and a vision of Nature as the ultimate context for human existence.
Pantheist Society

Key Ideas

Publications

Pantheist Vision
...
Join

New!
The Practice of Pantheist Mindfulness

When it comes to religion and the question of "belief," you are probably asking yourself the wrong question!
Welcome to Pantheist.Net!
The Internet home of the Universal Pantheist Society
Pantheist.Net is is the online home of the Universal Pantheist Society , an organization which since 1975 has provided a network for Pantheists. In Universal Pantheism, there is no creed or requirements to follow any particular belief or practices; rather we seek to provide ways for individuals to promote their own spiritual growth and understanding. Our goal is to provide Pantheism with a unified worldwide presence bringing Pantheists of all varieties together to share in our commonality while providing a continually growing source of information. What is Pantheism? Pantheism holds that the cosmos, taken or conceived of as a whole, is synonymous with God. The Cosmos is divine, and the earth sacred.

6. Pantheism: FAQs On Pantheism, Panentheism, Paganism Etc.
pantheism FAQs on paganism, animism, panentheism, atheism, free will etc etc.
http://members.aol.com/Heraklit1/faqs.htm
Frequently Asked Questions about Pantheism
by Paul Harrison
This page deals with some FAQs and misapprehensions about pantheism
and answers some of the most common criticisms.
You can print out this page from your browser [File/Print] or save it [File/Save As/(name).txt]
CONTENTS.
What is the central belief of pantheism?
Why do pantheists believe in pantheism?
What's the evidence for pantheism? How do you know the universe is worthy of reverence?
If I accept pantheism, what difference would it make?
Is pantheism just theism in disguise?
Is Pantheism just atheism or humanism in disguise?
What is the difference between pantheism and panentheism?
Does pantheism have anything to do with pantheon or polytheism?
What is the relationship between paganism and pantheism?
Has pantheism got anything to do with animism? Does pantheism believe that all things are one? Does pantheism believe that humans are one with nature and the cosmos? If you revere everything, then surely all actions are good, and there is no distinction between good and evil? Does pantheism believe that everything is predetermined and there is no free will?

7. PANTHEISM: Basic Principles Of Scientific Pantheism.
An outline of an empirical religion for the Third Millennium.
http://members.aol.com/Heraklit1/basicpri.htm
Scientific pantheism: basic principles
by Paul Harrison.
When our era was young, we believed as children believe. Now we are adults, it is time to put away childish things. It is time to adopt a religion that embraces the space age, and that supports our love of nature and our efforts to preserve the earth.
That religion is pantheism.
Conchoidal fractures of pseudomalachite You can print out this page from your browser [File/Print] or save it [File/Save As/(name).txt] Divine cosmos, sacred earth.
Pantheist religious practice: ritual, meditation and mysticism.

Ethical foundations.

Pantheism and environmental ethics.
...
How you can help spread pantheism.
Divine cosmos, sacred earth.
Pantheism has two central tenets:
The cosmos is divine.
The earth is sacred
When we say the cosmos is divine, we mean it with just as much conviction, emotion and commitment as believers when they say that their god is God.
But we are not making a vague statement about an invisible being who is beyond proof or disproof. We are talking about our own emotional responses to the real universe and the natural earth. When we say "That tree is beautiful," we are not saying anything about the tree in itself, but about the way we feel we must respond to the tree. We are talking about the

8. Pantheism By Pantheists For Pantheism By Pantheists For Pantheism By Pantheists
Presenting pantheism to a needful world, restoring hope in the natural order of things.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Thebes/5310/
Pantheism ... a way of viewing ourselves, our world, and our universe.
"Is not the sky a father and the earth a mother, and are not all living things with feet or wings or roots their children? And this hide upon the mouthpiece here, which should be bison hide, is for the earth, from whence we came and at whose breast we suck as babies all our lives, along with all the animals and birds and trees and grasses. And because it means all this, and more than any man can understand, the pipe is holy."
Black Elk Speaks
- John G. Neihardt

Pantheism is an ancient religion that holds everything in the universe sacred. All of nature's creations are divine, interconnected and each is a god. The whole is also what we call a god, not a supernatural entity but a living, throbbing mass of gods. The whole cannot be divine if each of its counterparts are not also sacred.
Most Pantheists believe in the duality of nature: positive/negative, good/bad, yin/yang ... and aim for balance in their lives. Because there are many paths to enlightenment and unity with the divine universe, there are also many companion beliefs and practices associated with Pantheism via its followers. As in many other religions, all things are permissable but not all things are beneficial. Again, balance is the key concept by which we guide our lives.
Equally important is the need for each of us to accept total responsability for our actions and the condition of our universe. Doing the right thing when it needs to be done, defending those who cannot defend themselves, and caring for our earth as if she were sacred ... being responsible and aware, balanced and in harmony with nature, reverent of all the other gods who share our universe.

9. -- Beliefnet.com
Seeing the universe as a profound unity, pantheists turn to nature for spiritual inspiration.
http://www.beliefnet.com/story/135/story_13536_1.html
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Today's Top Picks Pantheism: It's Everywhere
Seeing the universe as a profound unity, pantheists turn to nature for spiritual inspiration.

10. PANENTHEISM VS. PANTHEISM
Why and how Panentheism avoids the pitfalls of pantheism.
http://www.websyte.com/alan/pan.htm
PANENTHEISM VS. PANTHEISM
The following is an excerpt from New Thought: A Practical American Spirituality , pp. 89-92. Pantheism and Panentheism This universal arrangement is not pantheism (all is God), but panentheism , a term devised by Karl C. F. Krause (1781-1832) to describe his thought. It is best known for its use by Charles Hartshorne and recently by Matthew Fox. Panentheism says that all is in God, somewhat as if God were the ocean and we were fish. If one considers what is in God's body to be part of God, then we can say that God is all there is and then some. The universe is God's body, but God's awareness or personality is greater than the sum of all the parts of the universe. All the parts have some degree of freedom in co-creating with God. At the start of its momentary career as a subject, an experience is Godas the divine initial aim. As the experience carries on its choosing process, it is a freely aiming reality that is not strictly God, since it departs from God's purpose to some degree. Yet everything is within God. The most practical value of pantheism is that it recognizes the presence of God everywhere, but it does this at an enormous cost. It provides for the presence of God as the only actor; God's presence is an overriding presence that cancels the possibility of the existence of anything else, of any genuine beloved, of any loving or unloving response to God. In pantheism, human existence or any other finite existence is at best a mystery. Explanation in any satisfying sense is impossible. There can be affirmation that there is nothing but God, but where that leaves the affirmer is unclear; his or her existence is no more than appearance, and enlightenment brings recognition of one's illusory status as a unique, permanent perspective in reality.

11. Definition Of Pantheism
A critique of pantheism from a Christian perspective
http://www.ourladyswarriors.org/dissent/defpanth.htm
Definition of Pantheism
Pantheism
[This concept has been resurrected in New Age thought (From Greek pan , all; theos , god). The view according to which God and the world are one. The name pantheist was introduced by John Toland (1670-1722) in his "Socinianism truly Stated" (1705), while pantheism was first used by his opponent Fay in "Defensio Religionis" (1709). Toland published his "Pantheisticon" in 1732. The doctrine itself goes back to the early Indian philosophy; it appears during the course of history in a great variety of forms, and it enters into or draws support from so many other systems that, as Professor Flint says ("Antitheistic Theories", 334), "there is probably no pure pantheism". Taken in the strictest sense, i.e. as identifying God and the world, Pantheism is simply Atheism. In any of its forms it involves Monism (q.v.), but the latter is not necessarily pantheistic. Emanationism (q.v.) may easily take on a pantheistic meaning and as pointed out in the Encyclical, "Pascendi dominici gregis" the same is true of the modern doctrine of immanence (q.v.).
VARIETIES
These agree in the fundamental doctrine that beneath the apparent diversity and multiplicity of things in the universe there is one only being absolutely necessary, eternal, and infinite. Two questions then arise: What is the nature of this being? How are the manifold appearances to be explained? The principal answers are incorporated in such different earlier systems as Brahminism, Stoicism, Neo-Platonism, and Gnosticism, and in the later systems of Scotus Eriugena and Giordano Bruno (qq.v.).

12. Pantheism
A brief explination of a personal view of pantheism.
http://www3.sympatico.ca/harrytm/pantheism.html
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"I wish there was one person in my life I could show. One instinctive, absolutely unbrisk person I could take to Greece, and stand in front of certain shrines and sacred streams and say, 'Look! Life is only comprehensive through a thousand local gods. And not just the old dead ones with names like Zeus - no, but living Geniuses of Place and Person! And not just Greece but modern England! Spirits of certain trees, certain curves of brick wall, certain chip shops, if you like, and slate roofs - just as of certain frowns in people and slouches' ...I'd say to them - 'Worship as many gods as you can see - and more will appear!' ...If I had a son, I bet you he'd come out exactly like his mother. Utterly worshipless." - from Equus by Peter Shaffer, 1973 (Act 1:18)
For all that lives is holy. - William Blake Pantheism is the belief that everything is god, and that god is everything. I have trouble explaining this clearly to people, especially in writing. One friend thinks I worship stones - and I do, but not in the sense that implies. Another friend described me as worshipping Pan, and that isn't the point either. It's a misleading pun. Let me try to explain.... The true essence of divinity is ineffable - which means it can't be explained in words. All religions have this situation, and they overcome it by using words and ideas to get as close as they can to the meanings they intend. No one can describe the indescribable, not even mystics and seers. But they try.

13. Christian Science Versus Pantheism
Pastor Mary Baker Eddy s message in opposition to pantheism.
http://www.mbeinstitute.org/Prose_Works/CSvsPantheism.html
Christian Science versus Pantheism
by Mary Baker Eddy
Pastor Emeritus of The First Church of Christ, Scientist Boston, and Author of Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures
Published by the Trustees under the Will of Mary Baker G. Eddy Boston, U.S.A.
By Mary Baker G. Eddy
Printed in the United States of America Christian Science versus Pantheism
PASTOR'S MESSAGE TO THE MOTHER
CHURCH, ON THE OCCASION OF THE JUNE COMMUNION, 1898
SUBJECT: Not Pantheism, but Christian Science
BELOVED brethren, since last you gathered at the feast of our Passover, the winter winds have come
and gone; the rushing winds of March have shrieked and hummed their hymns; the frown and smile of April, the laugh of May, have fled; and the roseate blush of joyous June is here and ours. In unctuous unison with nature, mortals are hoping and working, putting off outgrown, wornout, or soiled gar- ments - the pleasures and pains of sensation and the sackcloth of waiting - for the springtide of Soul. For what a man seeth he hopeth not for, but hopeth for what

14. Mereological Ontological Arguments And Pantheism
Philosophical disagreement with pantheism. Based on the Pantheist definition of God.
http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/graham_oppy/panth.html
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Modern Documents Graham Oppy : Mereological Ontological Arguments and Pantheism
Mereological Ontological Arguments and Pantheism (19)
Graham Oppy
Mereological ontological arguments areas the name suggestsontological arguments which draw on the resources of mereology, i.e. the theory of the part-whole relation. An instance of arguments of this kind is the following: 1. I exist. (Premise, contingent a priori
2. (Hence) Somei.e. least onething exists. (From 1)
3. Whenever some things exist, there is some thing of which they are all parts. (Premise, from mereology)
4. (Hence) There is exactly one thing of which every thing is a part. (From 2, 3)
5. The unique thing of which every thing is a part is God. (Definition, pantheism)
6. (Hence) God exists. (From 4, 5) The status of premise 1 is controversial: friends of two-dimensional modal logic (and others) will be reluctant to grant that the proposition that I exist is both contingent and knowable a priori (even by me). Instead, they will insist that all that I know a priori is that the sentence "I exist" expresses some true proposition or other when I token it. But, of course, even that will suffice for the purposes of the argument. Provided that I know

15. PANTHEISM The World Pantheist Movement
The WPM is a membership organization dedicated to the promotion of natural/scientific pantheism, revering the Universe, caring for Nature, and
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

16. Natuur & Pantheism
Uitleg over het panthe¯stische levensgevoel.
http://members1.chello.nl/~a.garcia/pantheismef.html

Bent u een Pantheïst?

Wat is Pantheïsme?

Gevoel van eenvoudig bestaan.

Bent u een Pantheïst?
Jij bent een Pantheïst wanneer,,,
Jij naar de sterren kijkt en je bewust bent van de immensiteit,
perfectie en schoonheid van het heelal.
Jij je midden in de natuur begeeft, hetzij in het bos, hetzij in de oceaan,
hetzij op de top van een berg en je bewust bent dat de aarde heilig is.
Jij eens bent met de gedachte dat mensen een deel van de natuur zijn en niet natuur beheerders zijn Jij sceptisch bent aangaande religie in het algemeen. Jij de denkwijze deelt, dat het universum zichzelf heeft gecreëerd en zichzelf beheert zonder tussenkomst van goddelijkheden, aangezien het universum zelf een goddelijkheid is. Top of page Wat is Pantheïsme? Je kunt Pantheïsme zien als een verdiepte inzicht in de theologie van de oude voorchristelijke religies waarbij de natuur en het universum door onze voorouders werd vereerd. Onze basis gedachte is,,, Het universum is in zijn omnipotentie zeer goed in staat om zichzelf te regelen en voor zichzelf te zorgen.

17. PANTHEISM: Nature, Universe, Science And Religion
pantheism. Sacred Nature. The Web s biggest resource on pantheist history, theory and practice.
http://www.pantheism.net/paul/
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Images" Hubble Deep Field, Galaxy, Sun, Earth, Trichostemma Lanatum, Tiger, Sam Harrison. Please download Java(tm)
Images background: Hubble deep field
Galaxy NGC 3370; Sun (SOHO);
Earth and moon montage
Woolly Blue Curls, tiger, boy
PANTHEISM
Scientific Pantheism:
Reverence of Nature and Cosmos
by Paul Harrison.
A religion old or new, that stressed the magnificence of the universe as revealed
by modern science, might be able to draw forth reserves of reverence and awe
hardly tapped by the conventional faiths. Sooner or later, such a religion will emerge.
Carl Sagan, Pale Blue Dot
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Pantheist Beliefs The major ideas and debates Pantheist Practice Living and celebrating History of Pantheism F rom Lao Tzu to Einstein World Pantheism Sharing of experience, ideas and action Elements of Pantheism Join the March to Stop Global Warming Meet other Pantheists Save Rainforest Pantheist Bulletin Board
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18. The Pantheist Credo
also reproduce it and copy it in any form you like, provided the source is acknowledged World Pantheist Movement http//www.pantheism.net
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

19. Pantheism
Definition of pantheism by Michael P. Levine of the University of Western Australia.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

20. Archival Information For "Pantheism"
pantheismA description of pantheism, and some common forms.
http://plato.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/encyclopedia/archinfo.cgi?entry=pantheism

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