Our subjective unity and the objective unifying power of nature are originally identical. […] The things that we designate as mountains, rivers, grasses, trees, insects, fish, birds and beasts all have their own respective individuality. Nature as a truly concrete reality does not come into being without having a unifying activity. Nature therefore possesses a kind of self, too. Only when there is a unifying self does nature have a goal, take on significance, and become a truly living nature. […]
Most people of religion conceive of God as something like a great human who stands outside the universe and controls it. This notion of God is extremely infantile … As previously stated, there is a fundamental spiritual principle at the base of reality, and this principle is God. This idea accords with the fundamental truth of Indian religion: Ātman and Brahman are identical. God is the great spirit of the universe. …
Just as there is no world without God, there is no God without the World […] God is none other than the world and the world is none other than God … The criticism of pantheistic ideas – such as the idea that all things are a manifestation of God – is voiced in conjunction with the problem of explaining the origin of evil. To my way of thinking, there is originally nothing absolutely evil; all things are fundamentally good, and reality, just as it is, is the good.
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