I realise from experience it´s hardly worth replying, but here goes..
A bit touchy, are we?
In other words you´d rather not fully adress the point. Probably because it´s the first time it has been presented to you and you have no pat preprepared good materialist response that someone else would have written.
No, my stance on the nature of the self is more in line with Buddhist ideas with a little bit of Dan Dennett thrown in. As far as I am aware, materialism does not have much to say directly about the self, and I do not think it is terribly relevant to the fundamental nature of reality.
The customary lazy appeal for evidence when you don´t have any strong or at least interesting counter arguments to make.
You made the claim, provide the evidence.
Also your misrepresentation of me saying that those with ego loss would be the primary occupants of mental asylums. I never said such.
Then what did you mean by this:
Mental asylums are full of people who have, for one reason or another, suffered ego loss.
Perhaps you can clarify, and maybe provide a bit o' evidence.
To an ant? Clearly you avoid my point. As elsewhere.
You introduced the ant, not I. I did not see what the point of that was then, and I do not now -- I just want a decent explanation of what Universal Consciousness is supposed to be or what
it is supposed to explain. You brought up the ant, presumably in some sort of attempt to imply that any answer would necessarily be beyond human understanding. If that is the case, how is Universal
Consciousness a parsimonious concept, much less a useful one?
nescafe said:
Well, what is the point of even positing it, then? You posit a thing called Universal Consciousness, call it the fundamental nature of reality, but then assert that questions about how it works are meaningless? Sounds like a useless concept to me.
In what sense would the ultimate nature of reality need to be useful?
My take on it:
The ultimate nature of reality (noumenal reality) is unknowable -- Kant nailed that one. Therefore, any particular metaphysic we happen to explore is useful to the degree it helps us understand the reality we perceive and how well it integrates with the rest of our fields of study.
By far the most useful stance we have when trying to investigate reality is methodological naturalism, which does not imply any specific metaphysic. If I am forced to take a specific metaphysical stance, that stance is naturalism -- it does not matter what the ultimate nature of reality is, only that whatever rules it obey be consistent.
The fact that you keep repeating these prejudices indicates they go pretty deep in you. Most likely on little evidence except what you´ve been raised to believe.
Getting a little personal, are we? Try attacking my argument instead of resorting to amateur psychoanalysis.
´How it works´ is not synonymous with understanding.
It is as close as we can get. Ultimate understanding -- understanding noumenal reality -- is not possible. Even if we happen to stumble across the "right" explanation, we still have no way of proving that it is, in fact, the right one, only that it is correct in all cases so far.
Any understanding you came to of how particular things work would not include how those particular things managed to come into existence and maintain their existence. Thus your approach
is flawed.
Of course it is flawed. It is merely consistent with everything else in my understanding, and is subject to revision in light of new facts, as any good explanation should be.
Ít´s entirely useless to explain the interrealtionship of things if you cannot explain the genesis of the things themselves. So your effort in this regard would always be futile.
We don't have a single widely agreed on explanation of how life originated -- does that make the Theory of Evolution useless as an explanation of the diversity of life, or make biology as a whole useless in explaining how life works right now? Of course not. Try a different line of reasoning, this one does not work.
nescafe said:
The accounts I have read of both from people who are not mentally ill is close enough that I assume they are the same phenomenon.
Superficial investigation then.
Yup, just some anecdata from myself and some of my friends (both of the kensho experience and chemical experience), some biographical literature from experienced psychonauts and Buddhist monks. All I have time for, really -- being a sole provider for my family and all that.
Then why invoke the experience of dying in your reply as some kind of support?
I didn't. I merely noted that death is the final ego loss. Sorry you misunderstood.