What does ontology imply about our relationship to the Causative Force?
Part II of II
...Science also has had its problems of faith in itself.
Cosmology is beginning to take seriously the idea that the began with an explosion and is expanding.
This presents the problem of what happens when it expands so far out that no star is near another.
What happens when the stars burn out?
But this is not the most perplexing problem science has.
Their most perplexing problem now appears to be what happens when the expansion reverses itself and we begin to contract into what we were before the explosion.
Science, like religion, is patient but it, too, has its doubters.
Logic, a philosophical understanding of a Causative Force would definitely help bolster the confidence in both regarding their understanding of our relationship with the Causative Force.
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An understanding of the Causative Force would undoubtedly provide reassurances to both religion and science.
This would provide reassurances to all of us as individuals and as a species as well.
This understanding could, if we wanted it to, connect us logically to a Causative Force.
Our connection to a Causative Force would force us into a strengthened mode of “positive behavior,” a less abusive form of behavior towards each other.
Defining a significant relationship with, rather than to, a Causative Force would direct us toward potentially less abusive behavior in regards to other life forms in the universe.
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