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The druid said: “I am the God experience!”
The
druid’s minim — “I am the God experience” — is not a mystical claim or
a statement of personal greatness. It is a precise description of existence
within a monist framework. In
Procedure Monism, there is no separate creator, substance, or hidden essence
behind reality. There is only a single universal procedure — a rule-set (like the Universal Turing Machine) that
continuously generates all things. “God” refers to this generative process
itself, not to a being. Every
entity — human, animal, or object — is a local instance of that same
procedure. Like identical code running in different environments, each
instance is shaped by local conditions but derives from the same source. When you say “I am,” you are not pointing to a fixed self or inner
essence. You are identifying a live execution of that universal
procedure. Your existence is the process happening here, in this specific
form. This is
the meaning of: It means: ·
The universal process is not elsewhere — it is operating
as you. ·
You are not a fragment — you are a complete, perfect
local iteration. ·
There is no separation between “God” and “world,”
only multiple instances of one system. This
removes both ego and insignificance: ·
Not special — because everything is equally an
instance. ·
Not trivial — because each instance is fully real
at its level. Your
sense of “I am” is simply the system registering its own operation locally. In this
view: ·
Identity is a temporary boundary condition.
·
Consciousness is a user-friendly
representation of underlying processes. ·
Reality is a continuous generation of events,
not a static thing. So the statement resolves to a
clear claim: To exist
as a bounded system is already to be the universal process in action. “I am the
God experience” is not belief — it is a direct description of what is
happening. “The druid said: “I
am the God experience!” (analysis) |