This paper aims to discern the latent positive metaphysics of divinity in Brook Ziporyn’s concept of mystical atheism. Ziporyn provides a taxonomy of four ways of characterizing the relationship between divinity, the ultimate character of existence, and human experience: Emulative Theism, Compensatory Theism, Compensatory Atheism, and Emulative Atheism. Ziporyn favors Emulative Atheism. He then adds a further subcategorization to the view: Emulative Intersubsumptive Atheism. This is the view Zip…
Read moreThis paper aims to discern the latent positive metaphysics of divinity in Brook Ziporyn’s concept of mystical atheism. Ziporyn provides a taxonomy of four ways of characterizing the relationship between divinity, the ultimate character of existence, and human experience: Emulative Theism, Compensatory Theism, Compensatory Atheism, and Emulative Atheism. Ziporyn favors Emulative Atheism. He then adds a further subcategorization to the view: Emulative Intersubsumptive Atheism. This is the view Ziporyn finds most clearly in Tiantai Buddhism, though he hints that Classical Daoism, Confucianism, Spinoza, Nietzsche, and Bataille may also count as cases. This paper claims that there is a latent positive metaphysics of divinity to Emulative Intersubsumptive Atheism. It does so by showing that Ziporyn’s modal notion of the divine as ‘raw infinity’ resembles logical pantheism, the view that God is the greatest conceivable being insofar as it is the totality of all possible and impossible worlds, logical space itself. However, Ziporyn modifies logical pantheism to involve a novel global metaphysical view, one-all monism. In other words, this paper claims that Emulative Intersubsumptive Atheism entails a one-all monist version of logical pantheism. Ziporyn’s positive view of divinity involves a kind of pantheism wherein a fully symmetrical and reflexive identity is found between the one perfect divine being and each and every possible and impossible world.