Belief System

From metawiki
Revision as of 20:15, 20 June 2023 by Fractalguy (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A Belief System represents a person's generalized world view, typically organized around a religion or philosophy of life. It can also consist simply of one's pe...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

A Belief System represents a person's generalized world view, typically organized around a religion or philosophy of life. It can also consist simply of one's perspective or interpretation of the universe and how to make the most of our time within it. The key feature is that all of life's experiences are interpreted through the framework of the belief system, hopefully making sense of the universe and making the believer more successful at navigating life.

The metaculture belief system is based on a simple Pantheistic interpretation of theology that assumes god and the universe are one and the same. When viewing science and religion from this perspective, everything else follows logically. When viewed through this lens, scriptural allegory must be interpreted in a way that assumes there is a real-world analog. So the creation story is an allegory for the big bang and evolution. Morality handed down from god is an allegory teaching us how to deal with our evolved emotional wiring.

The other aspect of the metaculture belief system is the fractal organization of the universe. This perspective services as an overall organizing principle to help understand the interaction of things in the universe at multiple levels of scale. The universe is made up of singular entities that combines in huge numbers to create emergent properties, whether those entities are atoms, stars, or people. The fractal metaphor helps make sense of all kinds of complex systems and therefore serves as a perfect framework for understanding an infinitely complex, self-similar, self-organizing universe.