Its not about some big daddy up there. You must get rid of the Christian baggage.
And you need not to take things so literally. I had qualified those odd phrases with the words "a spiritual something", which should have given you some idea of what I was getting at. In fact, the first expression "Old Nobodaddy" comes from William Blake, who used it to directly
refute the idea of "a big daddy up there". But Blake was no atheist - and in fact most of his poetry is concerned with developing what you would call "the higher regions of consciousness". Likewise, the second expression "Somebodaddy" comes from George Bernard Shaw, who was using it to suggest that there might be some kind of impersonal "life-force" (akin perhaps to the Hindu
prana) which was the source and sustainer of all living things. In this, he was doing exactly what you have been advocating - to find underlying common links between the religious belief systems of the world. Aldous Huxley (as I said) also advocated this kind of 'ecumenism'.
I have parted company with these ways of thinking now. But I'm a firm believer in 'getting civilised' - as I suspect are most members of this forum. What I haven't lost faith in is the power of the arts - particularly great music - to 'raise consciousness', as you might put it. I would say that the performing arts are very much the West's form of yoga, and may be more valuable to us here (being home-grown) than trying the whole-sale adoption of systems of thought which have a long period of development elsewhere. We can all learn from each other, but 'changes in perspective' have to come about organically. And, if I may say so, you're doing your own bit to be divisive by partitioning off human beings in the way you seem to be. If those of a more scientific and analytical bent are 'doing it wrong', then perhaps a phrase of William Blake's might be useful "An error must be taken to its extreme before it can be combatted". Maybe that's a bit extreme in itself in these dangerous times, but people have to start from where they are.