
This presentation explores how the concept of God emerged within human societies through the framework of Mocombe’s consciousness field theory. Drawing on insights from near-death experiences and related phenomena, it examines how consciousness can be understood as a universal consciousness manifesting in the absolute vacuum once it is no longer part of the phenomenal world. The discussion concludes by showing how, within Mocombeian epistemology and ontology, the God concept represents humanity’s reification of the universality of the absolute vacuum as an ontologically real phenomenon.

Paul C. Mocombe, Ph.D. is a Haitian philosopher and sociologist, and Professor of Philosophy and Sociology at Keiser University as well as lecturer at the London Institute of Education. His research applies his general theories of Phenomenological Structuralism and Consciousness Field Theory to questions of consciousness, race, class, and globalization. In this presentation, Dr. Mocombe examines how the concept of God emerged within humansocieties through his consciousness field theory, highlighting its relation to near-death experiences and the universality of the absolute vacuum.
Meeting ID: 222 502 643 530 76
Passcode: z683N7sX