Transpolytheism and transtheism Main concepts of transtheism are transpolytheism and transtheism. Nathan Katz in
Buddhist and Western Philosophy (1981, p. 446) points out that the term "transpolytheistic" would be more accurate, since it entails that the polytheistic
gods are not denied nor rejected even after the development of a notion of the
Absolute that transcends them, but criticizes the classification as characterizing the mainstream by the periphery: "like categorizing Roman Catholicism as a good example of non-
Nestorianism." For example, in Buddhism, there are multiple deities, but its main focus is not on them. Scholar
Peter Harvey calls this "trans-polytheistic." The term is indeed informed by the fact that the corresponding development in the West, the development of
monotheism, did not attempt to "transcend" polytheism but to abolish it, while in the mainstream of the
Indian religions, the notion of "gods" (
deva) was never elevated to the status of "God" or
Ishvara, or the impersonal Absolute
Brahman, but adopted roles comparable to Western
angels. "Transtheism," according to the criticism of Katz, is then an artifact of
comparative religion.
Paul Tillich uses
transtheistic in
The Courage to Be (1952), as an aspect of
Stoicism. Tillich stated that Stoicism and
Neo-Stoicism are the way in which some of the noblest figures in later antiquity and their followers in modern times have answered the problem of existence and conquered the anxieties of fate and death. Stoicism in this sense is a basic religious attitude, whether it appears in theistic, atheistic, or transtheistic forms. Like Zimmer, Tillich is trying to express a religious notion that is neither theistic nor atheistic. However, the theism that is being transcended in Stoicism according to Tillich is not polytheism as in Jainism, but
monotheism, pursuing an ideal of human
courage that has emancipated itself from God. The courage to take meaninglessness into itself presupposes a relation to the ground of being which we have called 'absolute faith.' It is without a special content, yet it is not without content. The content of absolute faith is the 'god above God.' Absolute faith and its consequence, the courage that takes the radical doubt, the doubt about God, into itself, transcends the theistic idea of God.
Martin Buber criticized Tillich's "transtheistic position" as a reduction of God to the impersonal, "necessary being" of
Thomas Aquinas. == Buddhism as transtheistic ==