Philosophy
 

The Great Conscious of Nature

Religion-wiki — for all religions and none

The Great Conscious of Nature

Basic points/ Core beliefs/ Primary teachings: homeostasis

Rituals- star gazing, planting a tree, doing math, celebrating Earth Day

Creation of the world: The big bang theory

Views of the end of the world: a.)Humans or proceeding species will become too intelligent for their own good and cause their own demise, b.)many cyclical periods of ice ages and global warming will cause mass extinctions killing most life on Earth but not all until the Earth is no longer able to repeat the process, where upon all species die and the planets becomes barren c.)an enormous asteroid will collide with the planet and incinerate all forms of life

heaven/afterlife: There is no life after death. You live, you die, and then you become nutrition for bacteria, fungi, ants, worms, grass, etc. and your carbon and other elements are used by whatever uses your remains.

god- There may or may not be a higher being. No one will ever be able to prove either view definitively. But in all likeliness, there is no god. The concept of a god was likely invented by primative/ancient man as a way of explaining the unexplainable, ensuring nondeviant behavior(by the threat of punishment from above and or eternal damnation), as well as providing purpose in life and a comfort in death.

Primary teachers- Charles Darwin, Sir Isaac Newton, Gregor Mendel, Alexander Friedmann, Albert Einstein

Religious texts- Theory of Evolution, Modern Cell Theory, Ecological Systems Theory, Laws of Motion, basic biology (especially ecology), chemistry, and physics text books

Sacred sites- impact craters which have caused mass extinctions, such as the Chicxulub Crater, rainforests, glaciers, oceans, geysers, volcanos

Rules of living- treat others as you would want to be treated, take care of your planet: we are responsible for keeping it clean for future generations and other co-inhabitors. Reduce-Reuse-Recycle