The Three Faces of God — or the Projection of Metaphysics onto Nature?, Frank Visser / ChatGPT (original) (raw)
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Frank Visser, graduated as a psychologist of culture and religion, founded IntegralWorld in 1997
. He worked as production manager for various publishing houses and as service manager for various internet companies and lives in Amsterdam. Books:
Ken Wilber: Thought as Passion (SUNY, 2003),
and The Corona Conspiracy: Combatting Disinformation about the Coronavirus (Kindle, 2020).
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Or the Projection of Metaphysics onto Nature?
Frank Visser / ChatGPT

Ken Wilber's notion of the Three Faces of God was meant as a unifying framework. He presents it as a corrective to the fragmentation of spirituality: science sees only the third-person cosmos; devotional traditions privilege second-person relationship; contemplative mysticism dissolves into first-person identity.[1]
- God as It (3rd person: nature, cosmos)
- God as Thou (2nd person: a cosmic Other)
- God as I (1st person: the Ground of Being or pure subjectivity)
Thus, according to Wilber, there aren't multiple metaphysical truths—only multiple perspectives on the same ultimate reality.
It sounds inclusive, elegant—and suspiciously too convenient.
The question is: does this trinitarian structure reveal something fundamental about reality, or is it merely a projection of human cognitive categories onto the universe?
1. Perspective Is Not Ontology
Wilber's system assumes that perspective—first-, second-, and third-person modes of awareness—maps onto metaphysical structure. But perspective is a feature of cognition, not necessarily a property of the universe. Language evolved to track social relations, agency, and objects in the world. Pronouns reflect grammar, not metaphysics.
To say:
"Because we can speak of reality as 'I', 'You', and 'It', reality must be those things,"
is a category error—a leap from phenomenology to ontology without justification.
Birds, dolphins, or octopuses—whose linguistic structures, if any, differ radically—would not arrive at Wilber's trinity. If metaphysics shifts based on grammar, then metaphysics is arbitrary.
2. The Cosmic “You”: Theology by Anthropomorphism
The second-person God—a cosmic “Thou”—has historically been a way of making the universe psychologically responsive: someone to pray to, bargain with, praise, or blame. Wilber frames this relational stance as a universal dimension of spirituality, but its plausibility depends on assuming consciousness precedes matter—an assumption science does not support.
The “You” perspective, then, may not reveal a cosmic interlocutor; it may simply express:
- Attachment psychology
- Social cognition
- Projection mechanisms
A universe that does not speak back is still silent, no matter how sincerely one addresses it.
3. The First-Person God: Mystical Monism or Solipsism?
The first-person God, the Ground of Being, is perhaps the most philosophically appealing. It resembles Advaita Vedanta, Brahman, the Buddhist Dharmakaya, and Spinoza's Deus sive Natura. Yet even here we find a shift from experience to assertion.
Mystical states can involve a dissolution of subject-object boundaries. But such states do not confirm metaphysical unity; they confirm altered brain function correlating with altered self-models. To infer from introspection that reality itself is nondual commits the epistemic inflation error: mistaking subjective experience for objective truth.
A sunset looks unified—yet we know it isn't.
4. The Third-Person God: Nature Without Need for Divinity
The only one of Wilber's “faces of God” that has empirical traction is the third-person “It”: nature, cosmos, lawful order. But calling this “God” adds no explanatory power. Gravity does not become wiser because we call it divine; DNA does not reorganize itself because we reconsider nouns.
Wilber insists the term is honoring spirit-in-evolution—but unless spirit explains something that natural mechanisms cannot, it is not an explanation but a metaphor.
5. A Simpler Interpretation: The Three Faces Are Human Meaning-Making
Instead of taking Wilber's trinity as a metaphysical map, we could reinterpret it as a taxonomy of psychological postures toward existence:
| Wilber's Face of God | What It May Really Be |
|---|---|
| 3rd Person God (It) | Scientific awe at a lawful universe |
| 2nd Person God (You) | Social cognition and projection of agency |
| 1st Person God (I) | Altered states dissolving the self-model |
This interpretation honors the experiences while withholding unwarranted metaphysical conclusions.
6. The Burden of Proof: Is There Evidence Beyond Grammar?
If Wilber's model is not merely a poetic map of experience but an ontological claim—that the universe is simultaneously person-like, subject-like, and object-like—then the burden of proof is immense.
So far, Wilber offers:
- analogy
- phenomenology
- perennialist appeal
- interpretive synthesis
None of these count as evidence.
What remains is metaphor.
Conclusion: Elegant Metaphysics or Linguistic Theology?
Wilber's Three Faces of God appear less like a discovery about the universe and more like a projection of human cognitive structure onto reality. They make sense psychologically—humans feel, relate, and perceive through these modes—but to elevate them to cosmic ontology is unwarranted.
The universe may not be a You, or an I, or even an It—because those are human grammatical frames, not ontological categories.
What Wilber treats as the deep structure of reality may instead be the deep structure of human meaning-making.
And perhaps the more parsimonious stance—the one closer to Ockham—is:
Nature is just nature. The rest is poetic overlay.
NOTES
[1] Ken Wilber, "From the Big Bang to the Big Three: The Evolution of the 3 Faces of Spirit", www.integrallife.com, June 15, 2012