Sunday, 7 June 2020

Weird Cosmologies

Operation Luna, 39.

Dig it:

Yggdrasil and its nine worlds really exist in another universe;

long ago, "...the sympathetics of human belief kept the connection close and the passage fairly easy between the Nordic region and that universe." (p. 345);

however, the conversion of Northern Europe to Christianity meant that that connection was no longer close;

some dwarves were stranded on Earth;

the passage has become not impossible but difficult.

Thus, a modern multiversal cosmology incorporates aspects of diverse earlier beliefs. It is an interesting intellectual exercise when one system incorporates another. One of my favorite examples is as follows:

in Indian philosophy, the Samkhya system is atheist, acknowledging only beginningless, uncreated matter and reincarnating souls;

Patanjali's Yoga Sutras are based on Samkhya;

however, Patanjali wanted to incorporate theistic practices as bhakti (devotional) yoga;

therefore, he defined "God" as a special kind of soul, never incarnated and the teacher of the earliest human teachers;

this "God" created neither matter nor other souls;

nevertheless, He is an appropriate object of devotion and such devotion is one way to liberation from reincarnation;

thus, Samkhya theory allows theistic practice.

The multiverse incorporates every pantheon and religious practice.

1 comment:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

The Great Trees we see on Unan Besar in THE PLAGUE OF MASTERS comes to mind. And one of the HARVEST OF STARS books has an O'Neill habitat with a giant tree which I think was described in terms much like that of Yggdrasil.

Ad astra! Sean