August 22, 2020
 
Who is God
In other words, what is God? And what is God? There are two ways to ask this question.

First, we can see that the concept of God as a being with no relationship to things actually comes from Kant's conception of Kantianism, which is the idea that we are, to some extent, the same, and that all things are related to one another in some kind of way. Kant's conception of Kantian ism was, to some extent, a kind of "pure science," but the more Kantian he was, the less he appreciated that the idea of God came from Kantianism. But Kant also thought that the idea of God could be applied to other things, such as things with no relationship to them at all. As a result, he understood something as being, to some extent, a kind of "partner" for the things he and his followers believed to be created.

The second way, in Kantianism, the idea of God comes from the idea of the Self as a being with no relation to things. This might seem, to some degree, counter intuitive. For Kant, in order to be true to himself, we have to know his real nature, his real relationships, and the nature of his relationship to them. So it is not surprising that, for Kant, the concept of God as being with no relationship to things came from the concept of Kantianism.

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