MONOTHEISM AND THE SPIRITUALITY OF REASON
abstract
In this paper I propose a cognitive interpretation of the emergence of
monotheism. I first distinguish between two fundamentally different
conceptions of representation, one intuitive--which favors an analog model
of rational cognition--and one discursive--which favors a digital model.
While both Hellenism and Judaism may have been instrumental in setting
civilization on the path to reason and law, it is the discursive or
digital conception of God as a single universal Judge, I argue, that
provides the foundational axiom of the moral logic of the Hebrew
Scriptures. That is, in monotheism, God came to be represented
differently.