anything with an -ism is a set of beliefs and values.
Embolism. Volcanism. Alcoholism. Chromaticism. Criticism.
Well, s'not really saying much. Everything period is a set of beliefs and values, because that's the only lens humans have to interpret the world around them. Concept system,
away!Seriously though, Re: The title question, it'd depend on what you call a god. Some definitions of god would be implied by materialistic pantheism. Some wouldn't. Certainly standard monotheist divinities are largely excluded by it, but if one considers all of physical existence to be the totality of god or to comprise the essence or foundation of god, well, then god is implied. Because you've defined "god" as the totality of physical reality or whathaveyou. You could easily refer to the same concept as "nature" or "existence" or... whatever, really. Reality is what exists (It is the "I am the I am", so to speak), you've just decided to call that "god".
As the aside, my philosophy teachers probably would have shot me if I tried to turn something like the text earlier in the thread to them
Conciseness and clarity are the two fundamental virtues of philosophic writing, yeah. Sad thing is I've seen basically all of that much better put, I've just... forgot where. I am a
terrible student
Though... as for actual comments, I would say that the only reason we can't full describe human behavior and everything related and stemming from it via mathematics is that we haven't finished the work for that,
yet. Give it time, and we'll manage to quantify everything. Emergent phenomena is less a thing in itself than it is a perception of a thing whose actual existence is that which creates it, yes. Human perception is just a not-yet fully defined chemical/neurological system. Nothing particularly non-physical about that