– by B. T. Newberg Last time, I ended with a controversial claim: For naturalists, myths are meaningless outside Big History. Let that sink in – myths, including the deities of which they tell, are not real in and of…
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Category: B. T. Newberg, Big History
Tags: atheist pagan, earth religion, Isis, naturalistic paganism, nature religion, pantheism, religious naturalism, science and god, science and myth, science and religion, Spiritual Naturalism
– by B. T. Newberg Last time, our poll uncovered the three most popular root metaphors of our readers: nature-as-Creativity nature-as-kin nature-as-Big Self This time, I propose Big History as the narrative core of all forms of Religious Naturalism, including…
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Category: B. T. Newberg, Big History
Tags: atheist pagan, earth religion, naturalistic paganism, nature religion, pantheism, religious naturalism, science and god, science and myth, science and religion, Spiritual Naturalism
– by B. T. Newberg I need your help folks. At the core of every religious tradition is a root metaphor which fuses ideas of how things are and how we ought to live. So what root metaphor(s) operate among…
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Category: B. T. Newberg, Big History
Tags: atheist pagan, earth religion, naturalistic paganism, nature religion, pantheism, religious naturalism, science and god, science and myth, science and religion, Spiritual Naturalism
I’ve identified myself as an atheist for many years, but now I’m reconsidering this label. It’s not that my worldview has changed. It’s a matter of intellectual honesty. I started rethinking this after reading an essay on Religion Dispatches in…
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Category: atheism, Bart Everson
Tags: atheist pagan, earth religion, naturalistic paganism, nature religion, pantheism, religious naturalism, science and god, science and myth, science and religion, Spiritual Naturalism
We’ve had the habit for many years of constantly making stock. We are always saving any bits of vegetables left after slicing and dicing — carrot tops, onion skins — as well as the occasional bone. We save these in the fridge and, every few days, we boil them in water to make a stock. The stock grows richer, and darker, and more flavorful, with each iteration. Making stock is a metaphor for what I’m doing right now. As I continue my quest for discovery and definition, I’ve been storing up bits and pieces, ideas and aspects. I want to pause, take stock, simmer in my own juices for a moment, see where I’m at so far.
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Category: Bart Everson, practice
Tags: atheist pagan, atheist wicca, earth religion, naturalism, naturalistic paganism, nature, nature religion, pagan humanism, pagan pantheism, pantheism, religious naturalism, science and god, science and myth, science and religion, spiritual humanism, Spiritual Naturalism, spirituality and religion