Note
Draft status: MMv3-Intro (2026m04d06).
First draft of the general-reader introduction to PET (Matheo-1).
Modeled on the b12 intro (b12-intro_mmv3_2026m04d06.rst).
No formal notation. Plain-language walkthrough of all 14 axioms,
4 theorems, and the six-tradition convergence result.
Draft by Claude Opus 4.6 (dv_ClaOp46_v1_2026m04d06).
When Six Traditions Agree — What the Math Says About God and the World#
1. Why This Matters#
Billions of people act on their beliefs about God. The institutions built on those beliefs govern nuclear-armed nations. “We disagree about God” has been a reason for war for millennia — and the weapons have gotten bigger.
The disagreements are real. Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Hindus do not worship in the same way, read the same texts, or organize their communities by the same rules. But a structural question remains: do they disagree about the fundamental relationship between God and the world, or do they disagree about other things layered on top of a shared foundation?
Testing this question requires precision. Without formal definitions, theological claims are ambiguous. Two traditions can use different words for the same idea, or the same words for different ideas, and neither side can tell the difference. Mathematical logic provides the precision. It cannot prove God exists, but it can make claims about God precise enough to compare, test for contradictions, and locate the exact points of disagreement.
That is what PET — the Pan-En-Theistic axiom system — does. It formalizes the God-world relationship with enough precision to ask: where do the traditions actually agree? Where do they actually disagree? And where have they been arguing past each other for centuries?
2. What Panentheism Means#
Before the axioms, one word needs explaining: panentheism.
It comes from three Greek roots: pan (all) + en (in) + theos (God). All-in-God. The claim is that everything that exists is contained within God, but God is more than everything that exists. The world is in God, but God exceeds the world.
This sits between two alternatives that are easier to understand:
Pantheism says God is the world. The universe and God are the same thing. There is nothing beyond the universe. In formal terms: God equals the world.
Classical theism says God is wholly separate from the world. God created the world from outside, like a watchmaker building a watch. The world is not “in” God in any structural sense.
Panentheism says neither. The world is genuinely inside God — not separate, not identical, but contained. Like a fish in the ocean: the fish is in the ocean, the ocean is more than the fish, but the fish is never outside the ocean.
Why start here? Because when you try to formalize this particular claim — “all is in God, but God exceeds all” — you naturally reach for the mathematics of parts and wholes. “The world is part of God” is a claim about containment. “God exceeds the world” is a claim about proper parthood. These are precise relationships in a branch of logic called mereology (from the Greek meros, “part”).
Add to this modal logic — the logic of what is necessary (must be true in every possible scenario) versus what is contingent (could have been otherwise) — and you have the two tools that PET uses to formalize the God-world relationship.
No further technical background is needed. Everything that follows is in plain language.
3. The 14 Axioms in Plain Language#
The axioms are organized in five groups, like the floors of a building. Each group addresses a different aspect of the God-world relationship.
3.1 Group I — The Core Claim (ax1–ax4)#
These four axioms are the foundation. They say what panentheism means in precise terms.
ax1 (Containment): The world is part of God.
Everything that exists in the created world is contained within God. The world exists inside God, not separate from God. This is the “en” (in) of pan-en-theism.
ax2 (Transcendence): God is not part of the world.
While the world is in God, God is not reducible to the world. You cannot capture all of God by examining all of the world. Together with ax1, this means the world is properly contained in God — strictly less than God. This single axiom pair (ax1 + ax2) is what distinguishes panentheism from pantheism.
ax3 (Divine Surplus): There is something in God beyond the world.
God’s transcendence is not merely formal. There are aspects of God that no examination of the world alone could reveal. The secret things belong to God, as the Torah puts it.
ax4 (Universal Immanence): Every part of the world is in God.
Not just the world as a whole, but every individual part — every atom, every person, every corner of the universe. There is nothing in creation that is “outside” God. This is the “pan” (all) of pan-en-theism.
3.2 Group II — Necessity and Contingency (ax5–ax7)#
These axioms distinguish between what must be true and what happens to be true.
ax5 (Necessary Divine Existence): God necessarily exists.
In every conceivable scenario, in every possible way reality could be arranged, God exists. God’s existence is not an accident — it could not have been otherwise. “I AM WHO I AM,” as the Torah records.
ax6 (Contingency of the World): The world might or might not exist.
Unlike God, the world did not have to exist. There are possible scenarios with no created world at all. Creation is a contingent fact, not a necessary truth. The universe began (the Big Bang) and may end (heat death); the fundamental constants could in principle have been different.
ax7 (Necessary Containment): If any world exists, it must be in God.
The containment of the world in God is not accidental. In every possible scenario where creation exists, creation is within God. There is no possible form of creation that is external to God.
3.3 Group III — Relationship (ax8–ax10)#
These axioms go beyond mere containment. A box contains its contents without being aware of them. Group III says God does not merely contain the world — God is actively present to it and sustains it.
ax8 (Immanent Presence): God is present to every part of the world.
Not just containing but aware of, in contact with every single part of creation. “Closer than the jugular vein,” as the Quran says. “Where can I flee from your presence?” asks the Psalmist. This rules out a “deistic” panentheism where God contains but ignores.
ax9 (Sustaining Dependence): If the world exists, God sustains it.
The world does not keep itself in existence. Its continued existence depends on God’s active sustaining. “Apart from me you can do nothing,” Jesus says. “God holds the heavens and earth lest they cease,” says the Quran.
ax10 (Asymmetric Dependence): The world does not sustain God.
The dependence runs strictly one way. God sustains the world, but God does not need the world. God can exist without the world; the world cannot exist without God. This distinguishes PET from process-theology variants where God genuinely needs the world.
3.4 Group IV — Divine Nature (ax11)#
This is the most important and contested axiom.
ax11 (Dipolarity): God has both an unchanging nature and a world-responsive experience.
God has two aspects. One aspect — the necessary divine nature — never changes. It is the same in every possible scenario. The other aspect — the contingent divine experience — varies depending on what happens in the world. God’s experience of a world with suffering differs from God’s experience of a world without it, even though the essential divine nature remains constant.
The Hindu tradition captures this most explicitly: nirguna Brahman (without qualities — the necessary aspect) and saguna Brahman (with qualities — the relational aspect). The Torah shows both: “I AM WHO I AM” (unchanging) alongside “the LORD relented” and “his heart was deeply troubled” (responsive). “Jesus wept” is a contingent divine experience; “Before Abraham was, I AM” is the necessary divine nature.
The alternative: ax11b (Divine Simplicity). Classical theism offers a different answer: God has no independently analyzable aspects. God’s essence, existence, will, and knowledge are all identical. This position sits in tension with ax1 and ax3: if the world is in God (ax1) and something beyond the world is also in God (ax3), then God appears to have distinguishable parts — which ax11b denies.
The axiom system is modular here. You can explore the consequences of ax11 or ax11b separately. A companion paper ([]) presents a formal argument that the tension between ax11b and the other axioms constitutes a structural incompatibility.
3.5 Group V — Testing Revelation (ax12–ax14)#
These are the most practical axioms. They do not ask you to accept any scripture as divine. They provide a method for testing whether human claims about divine revelation are internally consistent.
ax12 (Revelation Reliability): God’s self-knowledge is true.
This is tautological by design. God’s self-knowledge is defined as the set of true propositions about God. So it is true by definition. The real work shifts to ax14.
ax13 (Consistency of Revelation): God’s self-knowledge contains no contradictions.
If two claims appear to contradict each other, at least one of them is not genuinely true about God. The Quran states this directly: “If it had been from other than God, they would have found within it much contradiction” (4:82).
ax14 (Revelation Claims Test): Human claims about divine revelation must be mutually consistent and consistent with ax1–ax13.
This is the most powerful axiom. It distinguishes between what God actually reveals (which is true and consistent, by ax12–ax13) and what humans claim God reveals (which can be wrong). It provides two tests:
Do two claimed revelations contradict each other? If so, at least one is not genuinely divine.
Does a claimed revelation contradict any of the first 13 axioms? If so, it fails the test.
Notice: ax14 references ax1–ax13, not ax1–ax14. It does not test itself. This avoids the circularity of a test that tests itself.
ax14 turns theological disagreement into a diagnostic tool. Instead of “my tradition is right and yours is wrong,” it asks: “where exactly do our claims contradict each other, and which of those claims actually passes the consistency test?” This is the scientific method applied to revelation: test everything, keep what holds.
4. The Convergence#
Here is the finding that makes PET more than an academic exercise.
After the 14 axioms were defined from panentheistic philosophy — without looking at any scripture — each axiom was checked against the scriptures of six independent traditions:
Torah (the five books of Moses)
Prophets and Writings (the rest of the Hebrew Bible, plus rabbinic and Kabbalistic tradition)
Gospel/Jesus (the direct teachings of Jesus from the four Gospels)
Christian (wider) (Paul, other New Testament letters, church tradition)
Islamic (Quran and mainstream Islamic theology)
Hindu (Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, major philosophical schools)
A seventh column — secular philosophy — maps the axiom structure to observations about reality without invoking God.
The result: All six religious traditions independently support the same formal structure for the God-world relationship across all 14 axioms.
Consider three examples:
ax1 (Containment — the world is in God): The Torah says “God in heaven above and earth beneath” (Deut 4:39). Jesus says “I am in the Father and the Father is in me” (Jn 14:10). Paul says “in him we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28). The Quran says “wherever you turn, there is the Face of God” (2:115). The Upanishads say “all this is Brahman” (Chandogya 3.14.1). Five traditions, five continents, the same structural claim.
ax8 (Immanent Presence — God is aware of every part): The Torah shows God present in an ordinary bush (Exod 3:2–5). The Psalmist asks “where can I flee from your presence?” (Ps 139:7). Jesus says “whatever you did for the least of these, you did for me” (Mt 25:40). The Quran says God is “closer than the jugular vein” (50:16). The Gita says “the Lord dwells in the hearts of all beings” (18:61). Again: the same structural claim, independently.
ax14 (Revelation Claims Test — human claims must be tested): The Torah commands testing prophets (Deut 13:1–3). Jesus says “by their fruits you shall know them” (Mt 7:16). Paul says “test everything; hold fast what is good” (1 Thess 5:21). The Quran says “produce your proof if you are truthful” (2:111). The Hindu Nyaya school develops formal criteria for valid knowledge (pramana). Every tradition tells its followers: do not believe blindly — test.
The convergence is strongest for the core axioms (ax1, ax2, ax4, ax5, ax8, ax9) and extends with varying degrees of directness to all 14. The most contested axiom is ax11 (Dipolarity): the Torah’s references to God “relenting” or being “deeply troubled” are read as anthropomorphisms by some classical theologians, as genuine divine responsiveness by others. The Hindu nirguna/saguna distinction is the most explicit and least contested source for ax11.
What this means: If the convergence holds up under expert review, it suggests that the theological disagreements driving real-world conflict between traditions may not be about the structure of the God-world relationship — where the scriptures agree — but about other claims layered on top of that structure. The axiom system provides a formal tool for distinguishing where traditions genuinely disagree from where they merely think they disagree.
What this does not mean: Convergence on structure does not prove the structure is true. The agreement could reflect a shared human cognitive pattern rather than an objective reality. But the convergence is specific — 14 axioms, not 3 vague principles; six traditions, not two — and the structure is testable. If it is noise, testing will reveal it. If it holds, the implications are worth exploring.
The atheist objection is fair and important: humans are pattern-seeking animals, and structural similarities can be found in religious texts if you look hard enough. The response is equally direct: look at the axioms. Are they vague enough that any text would fit? Or are they specific enough that the fit is informative? Fourteen axioms with precise formal content, independently supported by six traditions — that is a hypothesis worth testing, not a pattern worth dismissing.
5. The Theorems in Plain Language#
Four consequences follow from the axioms. They are not additional assumptions — they are logically proved from the axioms above.
th1 (No Godless Creation): It is impossible for a world to exist without God existing.
If you accept ax5 (God necessarily exists), then in every possible scenario where anything exists, God exists too. This does not prove God exists — it shows what follows if you accept the axiom. If you reject ax5, th1 does not follow.
th2 (Asymmetric Priority): God can exist without the world, but the world cannot exist without God.
There are possible scenarios where God exists alone (from ax5 + ax6: God is necessary, the world is contingent). But there is no scenario where the world exists without God (from th1). The dependence runs strictly one way.
th3 (No Isolated Part): Every part of creation is both in God and known to God.
From ax4 (every part is in God) and ax8 (God is present to every part), nothing in creation is hidden from God or outside God. No corner of the universe is overlooked.
th4 (Divine Experience Varies): Different situations produce different divine experiences.
If the world changes, God’s concrete experience changes. A world with suffering produces a different divine experience than a world without it. God is not a static, unaffected observer. This theorem follows only from ax11 (Dipolarity), not from ax11b (Divine Simplicity). Under ax11b, whether God’s experience varies is unanswerable.
th4 is the formal expression of divine responsiveness. It means that what happens in the world matters to God — not just in an abstract theological sense but in a formally provable structural sense.
6. The Companion Papers#
PET is the foundation. The companion papers build on it:
Matheo-2 (e7Day): Now that we have a formal foundation for the God-world relationship, what happens when systems built within this structure assess themselves? The e7Day model derives the self-assessment bifurcation: honest self-assessment leads to self-correction (ZION); closed self-assessment leads to self-destruction (BABL). The mechanism is structural, not moral.
Matheo-3 (e7He): What does this mean for each person’s journey? The hero’s journey modeled within the formal structure.
Matheo-4 (JUB): If God contains everything and sustains everything, why does suffering exist? And how do we build an economy that self-corrects? The innovation theodicy builds directly on PET and proposes the Jubilee System as a structural solution.
Matheo-5: The one contested axiom — ax11 vs. ax11b — and why it matters. A formal argument that Divine Simplicity (ax11b) is structurally incompatible with the relational axioms ax8–ax10.
Matheo-6 (RiskyMAD): Existential risk modeling. Why the OSCR (Over-Simplify, over-Complicate, over-Reach) collapse mechanism, operating at civilizational scale with nuclear weapons, makes honest self-assessment an urgent survival question.
Matheo-7: An experimental test of the system’s central prediction about the purpose of human life.
7. Addressing the Strongest Objections#
A system designed to be critiqued must face its strongest critics head-on.
“You’re just finding patterns in noise.” Perhaps. Humans are pattern-seeking animals, and structural similarities can be manufactured from any sufficiently large text corpus. But these are not vague thematic similarities. They are 14 specific, formally defined axioms, each with precise logical content, independently supported by six traditions that developed on different continents across millennia. If the fit is noise, it should be easy to show: find an axiom that a tradition does not support, or show that the axiom is so vague that anything would fit. The axioms are public. Check them.
“You’re reducing God to math.” No. Formalization does not claim to capture God. It captures human claims about God and makes them precise enough to test. If your tradition’s claims are true, they should survive formalization. If they do not, that is important information. The axiom system itself acknowledges its own incompleteness: ax2 and ax3 together entail that any formal system within the world is necessarily incomplete as a description of God.
“This is just another attempt to create a one-world religion.” No. This paper does not propose a unified religion. It identifies structural agreement that already exists in the traditions’ own scriptures. The traditions differ profoundly on many things layered on top of this structure — ethical practices, community organization, specific historical claims. The paper identifies the foundation; it does not prescribe the building. Each tradition’s unique contributions remain valuable and distinct.
“This is not peer-reviewed. Why should anyone take it seriously?” Because the math is public. #AuditTheMath. The system is designed for exactly this kind of scrutiny. If the axioms are incoherent, show the contradiction. If the convergence is illusory, identify the axiom that fails. If the proofs are wrong, point to the error. Peer review is one mechanism for quality control; public testability is another. This system invites both.
8. Conclusion#
Six traditions, across millennia and continents, agree on the formal structure of the God-world relationship. The agreement is specific: 14 axioms, not vague platitudes. The agreement is testable: the axioms are formal, the proofs are public, the scriptural evidence is cited verse by verse.
This convergence does not prove the structure is true. It could be a shared cognitive artifact. But it is specific enough that dismissing it as coincidence requires explaining why six independent traditions converge on the same 14 formal claims. And if it is not coincidence — if the traditions really do agree on the floor plan while arguing about the furniture — then a great deal of inter-faith conflict rests on a misunderstanding that is now formally identifiable.
The traditions agree: test everything. The Torah says test the prophets. Jesus says test by fruits. Paul says test everything. The Quran says produce your proof. The Hindu schools develop formal tests for valid knowledge. Every tradition built its own version of ax14.
The traditions agree. The formalization is testable. The stakes are nuclear. #AuditTheMath
The system is designed to be critiqued, not believed.