Angel wrote:Poverello wrote:So far it's been established here, at least in my own conversation, that the word 'atheist' means "without belief in a God or gods" or simply "not theist".
I have another question:
Is it possible to hold a belief in God (Monotheistic) without any sort of anthropomorphic assertion or even any assertable conception of God whatsoever?
A general theist or deist may fit. These theists may generally believe that a higher being exists but don't ascribe much specifics to him unless it's theoretical perhaps. I've encountered very few of these types and they tended to go only by philosophy and some science and most likely would not follow or accept much of religion.
In Judaism, we have a notion of God called
Ein Sof. This
Ein Sof is thoroughly transcendent, attributeless (as we understand attributes, at any event) beyond humanity's ability to categorize and utterly impersonal. I think the notion of
Ein Sof is our way of saying "we don't know anything about what God is like."
You will meet some synagogue-going Jews who only hold with the
Ein Sof notion of God--they don't hold with the more personal notion of God that coexists in Judaism. (Every synagogue also has its token atheists, but that's another story.

)
Hinduism, likewise, has the notion of
Brahmam, which is similar to Judaism's
Ein Sof. Hinduism, like Judaism, also has an intensely personal notion of God (personified in Shiva, Durga, Vishnu, and so forth) that coexists with that transcendent, impersonal notion. I don't know if there are Hindus who focus just on
Brahman and reject the personal notion of God. I'd be interested to hear the answer if anyone here happens to know.
We had a discussion about
Ein Sof vs. a personal notion of God over the breakfast table after Sunday minyan one morning at my shul. One guy was giving very good arguments for just sticking with the idea of
Ein Sof. But my physchiatric make-up isn't prepared for that. I seem to require a personal God to argue with, so I much prefer a balance between the two notions.
Hope this helped . . .