Mystrikast — What Are Gods?
A Mystrikal Take on One of Humanity’s Most Persistent Superstitions.
This episode begins a 12-part Mystrikal analysis of the god concept, and the first move is deliberately unsexy: define the term. Because most “god debates” collapse not from a decisive victory, but from the fact that nobody agrees what “god” even means, and the definition quietly mutates whenever pressure is applied.
We lay out a broad, comparative definition of “god” (covering everything from personal creator-gods to abstract ultimates and symbolic language), then contrast it with the narrower classical-theistic “God” targeted by a lot of Western theology, the omnipotent, omniscient, perfectly good, worship-demanding, prayer-answering kind. That distinction matters because a vague “something beyond” doesn’t magically become the specific deity of someone’s childhood religion.
From there, we follow the Mystrikal method: conceptual clarity, evidence standards, and philosophical hygiene. We talk about why unfalsifiable claims aren’t serious explanations, why prayer and miracle claims should leave detectable traces if they’re real, and why the problems of evil and divine hiddenness hit hardest against the “perfectly loving, all-powerful” God claim.
Importantly, this isn’t about stripping life of meaning. Mystrikism argues you can keep the human goods religion often provides, community, ritual, grief-support, moral seriousness, and “spirituality”, without pretending supernatural claims have earned their authority. Awe stays. Mystery stays. What doesn’t stay is special pleading.
The Mystrikal stance, in one line: we don’t claim to know no gods exist, we claim god propositions haven’t met the standards required for belief. Because we provisionally do not know, we provisionally do not believe.