--- In ppiindia@yahoogroups.com, "Lina Dahlan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:


Ilmu dan Agama akan datang jalan beriringan bahkan bergandengan 
tangan. Contohnya, apa yang  telah dilakukan oleh Dr.Maurice Bucaille.

------------------------

DH: Mungkin, kalau daya bathiniah manusia sudah begitu berkembang, 
akan kita lihat, bahwa ilmu dan agama menuju satu titik yang satu. 
Mbak kan juga bisa gandengan dengan seorang yang agamanya lain, asal 
satu dalam paham kan? Misalnya sama sama menemukan suatu theori dalam 
Fisika atau Biologi. Gak perlu harus bertentangan..

Mbak sebut Bucaille. Ada juga akhli falsafah yang namanya Spinoza, 
yang mempunyai gambaran lain mengenai keilahian. Coba kita baca:

Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677)

Baruch Spinoza was one of the great philosophers of the age of 
Rationalism and a major influence thereafter, as on, paradoxically, 
both of the bitter enemies Arthur Schopenhauer and G.W.F. Hegel. From 
a Portuguese Jewish family that had fled to the relative tolerance of 
the Netherlands, one of the most famous things about Spinoza was his 
expulsion from the Dutch Jewish community. This is often called 
an "excommunication," though, as I used to have a high school teacher 
protest, there is really no such thing as "excommunication" in 
Judaism. Nevertheless, Spinoza was expelled from the Jewish community 
and anathematized. Although he is today recognized as one of the 
greatest Jewish philosophers ever, and the chief Rabbis of Israel 
have been petitioned to formally lift the curse upon him, this has 
not happened:  Spinoza remains a controversial person in Judaism, for 
very much the same reasons that led to his expulsion in the first 
place. Spinoza's God is not the God of Abraham and Isaac, not a 
personal God at all, and his system provides no reason for the 
revelatory status of the Bible or the practice of Judaism, or of any 
religion, for that matter. 

Spinoza's alienation from his community is reflected in an 
alternative version of his name. "Baruch" in Hebrew (bārūkh) 
means "Blessed"; but Spinoza began using the name "Benedict," which 
in Latin (Benedictus) would mean "spoken well of" or "praised." This 
reflects the circumstance that Spinoza, with whom Jews were forbidden 
to associate, inevitably found friendship with Christians instead. 
Nor was he unsympathetic with Christianity. However, there never was 
any chance of Spinoza adhering to Christianity as a religion anymore 
than Judaism. Spinoza's sympathy for Christianity, like Thomas 
Jefferson's, was entirely for the moral teachings of Jesus, not for 
the theology, Christology, or the promise of the means of salvation. 
Like Jefferson, again, Spinoza was a kind of Unitarian, for whom the 
purely religious aspects of the religions were nearly meaningless. 

Although his major works went unpublished in his lifetime, Spinoza 
did acquire concerned friends and some measure of favorable 
reputation. He had made a living for a while by grinding lenses, 
where the dust had damaged his lungs. The pension that his friends 
later obtained for him thus did not prevent him from dying at a 
tragically young age of 45. His chance for an established academic 
career, with an offer from a German university, was rejected, 
naturally, because of the confessional conformity that would have 
been required. Spinoza's life, consequently, though not irredeemably 
horrible, seems on the whole sad, isolated, and blighted. 

Besides tragedy, Spinoza's life and thought is most noteworthy for 
paradox. No one would ever have thought to call Thomas Jefferson "the 
God intoxicated man"; but although honoring, apparently, the same 
sort of rationalized, secularized, and impersonal Deity, this is 
precisely what Spinoza has been called. How does one, indeed, 
become "intoxicated" with such a God? Since Spinoza explicitly 
identifies his God with Nature, it doesn't even seem to be a God at 
all. How about "the Nature intoxicated man"? Spinoza today is often 
cited by people who advocate a reductionistic scientism but who are 
willing to retain some traditional terminology, so that the 
term "God" adds nothing to the very same natural world described by 
science. This overlooks a great deal of Spinoza's metaphysics, but 
the real challenge is how Spinoza's God, even properly conceived, 
would provide any of the solace, comfort, and meaning of traditional 
religion to someone like Spinoza. Exactly what was the emotional pull 
of Spinoza's God on him? 

We find the answer to this question in the realization that Spinoza 
is not entirely a modern thinker and that his God in fact has 
antecedents in the Middle Ages. It is too easy to get carried away 
with the evident conformity of Spinoza's system to the requirements 
of science and overlook the foot that it still has planted firmly in 
Mediaeval Jewish mysticism. Mediaeval Jewish philosophy, in fact, was 
closely allied to the Neoplatonic philosophical tradition of Late 
Antiquity, as this had been taken up and developed during the 
intellectual flowering of Islām in the 9th century. The details of 
Spinoza's metaphysics, ironically but significantly, share much more 
with Islāmic theology that with that of either Judaism or 
Christianity. It is not clear that Spinoza was even aware of this (or 
that "Benedict" would be a better translation of 
Muh.ammad, "Praised," than of "Baruch"), but it could even be said to 
be the result of a similar emphasis on the uniqueness and power of 
God. 

Mediaeval Jewish philosophy reached its height in Spain with Moses 
Maimonides (1135-1204) and Moses Nahmanides (1194-1270), as Mediaeval 
Jewish mysticism reached its height with the Zohar of the Spanish Jew 
Moses ben Shem Tov. Although more rationalistic than Nahmanides, 
Maimonides, one of the greatest philosophers of the Middle Ages, was 
nevertheless in the Neoplatonic tradition that had originally mixed 
both considerable rationalism and mysticism, i.e. the belief in the 
possibility of personal knowledge, even union, with God and the 
notion that "religious" truths are often really rational truths 
packaged in a way comprehensible to the masses. Such views are the 
most plainly and accessibly stated in Lenn Goodman's translation of 
the book of the Spanish Islāmic philosopher Ibn Tufayl, Hayy Ibn 
Yaqzan. Islāmic philosophers eventually got in trouble for such 
ideas. Jewish philosophers were less likely to get in trouble with 
the authorities, until, that is, Spinoza. 

We can gather how this works in Spinoza by examing the details of his 
metaphysics, as found in Book I of his postumously published Ethics. 
The fundamental thing to keep in mind when thinking about Spinoza is 
one simple, striking, and paradoxical proposition:  God is the only 
thing that exists. Although a relatively unfamiliar notion in Western 
philosophy and religion, this is a venerable position in India, and 
Spinoza's theory can be classified as a version of "qualified Advaita 
Vedānta," where everything that we ordinarily think of as existing, 
does exist as a part of God. It is also noteworthy that the Jewish-
Islāmic Mediaeval mystical tradition also approached this. L.H. 
Grunebaum says of the Sufis, the Islamic mystics, "The mere 
attribution of reality to any entity besides the One is polytheism" 
[Medieval Islam, University of Chicago, 1946, 1969, p. 133]. 

In terms of modern philosophy, we have the term "pantheism," that God 
is everything; but this can convey the wrong idea. It is not that God 
is everything, as though everything exists individually and is 
somehow God, but that nothing exists independently except God and 
that the "everything" we ordinarily think of is a feature of God. 
Another term occasionally used for Spinoza is "panentheism," that God 
is "in" everything; but this is even more deceptive, since it makes 
it seem like God is a feature of things, rather than the other way 
around. 

The way that Spinoza argues it is that there is only one substance, 
and then that there is only one individual of that substance. In the 
tradition of Anselm and Descartes, God is a "Necessary Being," who 
cannot possibly not exist. Existence is part of his essence, and he 
cannot be without it. But existence is not the entire essence of God. 
Instead, the one substance is characterized by an infinite number of 
attributes. Besides existence, we are only aware of two of these:  
thought and extension. Thus, where Descartes had seen thought as the 
unique essence of the substance soul, and extension as the unique 
essence of the substance matter, Spinoza abolished this dualism, and 
the paradoxes it generated. Thought and extension are just two, out 
of an infinite number of, facets of Being. A reductionistic scientism 
that wants to claim Spinoza as one of its own typically overlooks 
this aspect of the theory:  Spinoza's God thinks, and also is or does 
many other things that are beyond our reckoning and comprehension. 
Thus, although Spinoza was condemned by his community for the heresy 
of saying that God has a body (denying the transcendence of God 
common to Judaism, Christianity, and Islām), God is nevertheless much 
more, indeed infinitely more, than a body.


As God is eternal and infinite, so are his attributes eternal and 
infinite. The things we see that are transient and finite are the 
temporary modifications, or "modes," of the attributes. This gives us 
the same relationship between things and the attributes as Descartes 
had between individual bodies and thoughts and their substances. A 
material thing is a piece of space itself (space is not the vacuum, 
but actually matter), the way an individual wave is identifiable in 
the ocean but does not exist apart from the water that it consists 
of. In the same way a specific thought is a temporary distrurbance of 
the attribute (like the Cartesian substance) of thought -- or, we 
might say, of consciousness. The wave metaphor is apt:  Our existence 
is a ripple on the surface of God. 

The structure of substance, attribute, and mode is the foundation of 
Spinoza's metaphysics. But there is another distinction that cuts 
across this, the difference between natura naturans and natura 
naturata. Natura is simply the Latin word "nature," and what Spinoza 
has done is add participle endings to that noun. Naturans is 
thus "nature" plus the active participle ending, which is "-ing" in 
English; so "Natura Naturans" is "Nature Naturing." Naturata 
is "nature" plus the past passive participle ending, which is "-ed" 
in English; so "Natura Naturata" is "Nature Natured." This gives us a 
contrast between what is creating and what is created. What is 
creating is the eternal existance and nature of God. What is created 
are the modifications that we see around us as transient things. This 
distinction cuts across the nature of the attributes themselves, 
since there is an eternal and unchanging aspect to each, i.e. space 
itself or consciousness itself, and a transient and changing aspect, 
i.e material objects in space or specific thoughts in consciousness. 
At the same time, there is nothing changing about substance as such 
or unchanging about the modes as such. 

While for Spinoza all is God and all is Nature, the active/passive 
dualism enables us to restore, if we wish, something more like the 
traditional terms. Natura Naturans is the most God-like side of God, 
eternal, unchanging, and invisible, while Natura Naturata is the most 
Nature-like side of God, transient, changing, and visible. When 
Buddhism says that there is no God, it means that there is no 
substantive, eternal, unchanging, invisible, and creative side to 
reality. One of Spinoza's principal metaphysical categories, 
substance, is explicitly rejected by Buddhism. This is revealing, 
since it shows us how much there is to Spinoza's metaphysics and 
Spinoza's conception of God that would not have to be accepted, 
whether we are comparing it with Buddhism or, more importantly, with 
a reductionistic scientism. 

How does Natura Naturans do the creating? By necessity, the necessity 
of God's own nature. Spinoza's God does not make choices, does not 
really have a will -- which would imply deliberation or alternatives. 
Spinoza's God is perfect, which means everything is as it must be and 
cannot be otherwise. God's eternal nature necessitates the things 
that happen, which happen just as they must and cannot happen 
otherwise. This all follows from the premise of God's perfection. It 
is deterministic. Chance or randomness would be an imperfection. 
Since only God exists, it is also true that God causes everything to 
happen that does happen. This is the "Occasionalism" developed by the 
Cartesian Malbranche, that the only cause of anything is God himself; 
but determinism and occasionalism are also characteristic of Islāmic 
theology, especially that of al-'Ash'arī (873-935) and of the 
philosopher al-Ghazālī (1059-1111). This is Spinoza at his most 
Islāmic. However, Spinoza goes a bit further. His God does nothing 
for any purpose. There are no ends or "final causes" in Spinoza. It 
would be an insult to God's perfection to imagine that he does things 
to bring about some end, which would mean to make things better or to 
bring into existence something that doesn't exist already but should. 
Things are already perfect, and everything that will ever exist 
already exists, since God (we recall) is the only thing that exists. 

The purpose of mystical rapture is often not just to see God or know 
God directly, but to become one with God through complete loss of 
self. This is what we often see in Islāmic mysticism, Sūfism, but 
also in India, where the self can ultimately be identical 
(advaita, "non-dual") with Brahman. In Spinoza, indeed, there is no 
independent substantial self. The Qur'ān says that God is as close to 
us as the juggular vein, but Spinoza goes rather further than this. 
Everything that we are is just a modification of an attribute of God, 
just a small and transient part of the existence of God. We are 
absolutely nothing apart from God. This gives a considerably stronger 
impression that we might think from the notion of the "intellectual 
love of God" that Spinoza is often said to recommend. To really feel 
an absolute absorption into God and abolition of self 
(fanā', "extinction" in Arabic) would be a mystical rapture indeed. 
This may be the key to the emotional pull of Spinoza's theory for 
him:  It would be a consolation of religion indeed for him to lose 
all sense that his life, circumstances, and misfortunes are of more 
than the most trivial consequence. Sub specie aeternitatis, from the 
viewpoint of eternity, nothing imperfect ever happens, and we can 
imagine Spinoza transported right out of his own rather sad and 
solitary existence into the comforting companionship of God. 

This is the key to Spinoza's paradoxical and even disturbing view 
that things like right and wrong, good and evil, do not exist for 
God. Things only appear right or wrong, good or evil, to a self, and 
the self does not have substantial existence. Spinoza rather heatedly 
disputes the relevance of this to God, in whom all is perfect. It is 
only our selfishness that generates these dichotomies. However, we 
also might say that it is selfishness that results in wrongs and 
evils as matters of action, since people do bad things expecting some 
personal benefit from them. It would not occur to someone without 
sense of self to be harming others for personal gain. This is an area 
where Spinoza is appealing to Schopenhauer, who sees selflessness as 
the motive for good and noble action, and who sees the denial of self 
as the basis of all holiness and emancipation from the Will. But 
where Schopenhauer would see holy selflessness as freedom from the 
thing-in-itself as Will, Spinoza would see it as freeing us from the 
transient and the individual to become one with God. Where 
Schopenhauer, a determinist also, saw the denial of the Will as the 
only truly free action available to us, the corresponding free action 
for Spinoza, as we might interpret him, would be to turn towards God. 

While a deterministic Natura Naturata would be a world safe for 
science, it should now be clear that Spinoza's doctrine allows for 
the solace of religion by a mystical turn towards something that is 
invisible to science, the eternal and unchanging Natura Naturans, the 
infinite essence and existence of God. This is more than enough to 
enable us to understand Spinoza as the "God intoxicated man," whose 
convictions got him through the tauma of rejection by his own people 
and a brief life when it was not even safe to openly publish his 
views. This all qualifies him, in Schopenhauer's terms, as a Saint -- 
someone who is no longer troubled by the misfortunes and ordinary 
expectations of life. It also enables us to see Spinoza in his proper 
place in the history of Judaism, in the mystical tradition so 
characteristic of the Middle Ages, but sharing rather more with Islām 
and Neoplatonism than with Biblical based Judaism or Christianity. 

----------------
Salam

danardono






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