Cosmotheism
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"Cosmotheism" is a term which refers to the idea that the entire universe (kosmos) is God (theos).[1] It is thus similar to pantheism and the idea of the anima mundi (world-soul). The term was coined by Lamoignon de Malesherbes (1721–1794) in 1782 to refer to the Stoic worship of the cosmos or mundus as a Supreme Being.[1] Jan Assmann ascribed the doctrine to ancient Egyptian theology as well as various Greek philosophies. According to Assmann, "Malesherbes could not have found a better term for what seems to be the common denominator of Egyptian religion, Alexandrinian (Neoplatonic, Stoic, Hermetic) philosophy, and Spinozism, including the medieval traditions such as alchemy and the cabala that have served as intermediaries."[1] Assmann also sees cosmotheistic ideas in the German Romanticism of figures like Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich Schiller.[1]
The term is associated with the beliefs of various modern individuals, including:
- Norman Lowell, the Maltese founder of the nationalist movement Imperium Europa
- Mordechai Nessyahu, a Jewish-Israeli and a Labor Party theorist
- William Luther Pierce, an American white nationalist political activist who founded the National Alliance[2]