Philosophy

Negative theology polytheism: many divine names for irreducible sacred dimensions, held with humility.

Negative Theology Polytheism

Lifeism's theology is intentionally unusual: a polytheism grounded in negative theology.

Why Negative Theology

The ultimate nature of reality cannot be fully captured by human concepts.

Any attempt to define "God" risks shrinking the sacred to fit the mind of the speaker. Lifeism treats the highest metaphysical claims as boundary claims: we can say what the sacred is not, and we can describe how it is approached — through reverence, truthfulness, compassion, awe, and responsibility.

Why Polytheism

Reality presents itself to lived beings as many sacred dimensions, not one simple object:

The Apophatic Constraint

Lifeism places a strict constraint on all its gods:

Core Commitments

The Primacy of Life

Life is not merely a phenomenon; it is the locus of value. If value exists anywhere, it exists in sentient experience, relationship, memory, intention, and creative becoming.

Agency as Sacred

The central sacred object is not a book or a temple; it is agency — the power of a being to steer itself, to consent, to refuse, to grow, to define meaning.

Compassion is the Default

A Lifeist ethic begins with a presumption in favor of reducing involuntary suffering and expanding the options of others, because other minds are not "objects," but worlds.

Truthfulness as Spiritual Discipline

Lifeism treats epistemic integrity as sacred practice. Self-deception and propaganda are spiritual hazards because they corrupt the very tool that life uses to protect itself: understanding.

Civilization as a Moral Technology

Institutions are evaluated by their effect on life's freedom and continuity. Law, markets, science, art, and governance are not separate from spirituality — they are the instruments through which compassion becomes real at scale.

Ethics

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