dafydd
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2008
- Messages
- 35,398
Limbo, if you were wrong about all this, how would you know?
It never enters into a 'mystic's' head that they could be wrong about anything.
Limbo, if you were wrong about all this, how would you know?
Who cares what way I am asserting it. If the skepticism movement has a problem with the way I assert myself then it needs to stop worrying about the speck in my eye and start worrying about the plank in its eye.
Limbo, if you were wrong about all this, how would you know?
Wrong about all? Inconceivable!
Wrong about some minor details? Conceivable!
Wrong about all? Inconceivable!
Wrong about some minor details? Conceivable!
Sideroxylon, same question back at you bub.
Don't you see the problem with taking such a position?
The only thing I can think of that you may be referring to by the plank in the skeptics eye is the fact that skeptics have a higher standard of belief than you do. Is that what you're referring to?Who cares what way I am asserting it. This is the internet. Not a spring-time tea party. If the skepticism movement has a problem with the way I assert myself then it needs to stop worrying about the speck in my eye and start worrying about the plank in its eye.
Your error is in assuming that logic is the key to unlocking the riddle.
Once again with feeling.
Koans. Aren't. Riddles.
The only people who claim they are are those have read about Zen Buddhism, but never practiced it themselves.
ETA: Limbo must have me on ignore.
.The mystical experience curdles your brain and sets your apparent age forever at 16.
Yes, exactly right. A good riddle is specifically designed to be solved by logic. A koan is specifically designed to get beyond logic, though I can't for the life of me remember why.Once again with feeling.
Koans. Aren't. Riddles.
The only people who claim they are are those who have read about Zen Buddhism, but never practiced it themselves.
Seems that way for me too, though I don't recall ever being rude or nasty to him. I regularly see him respond to posters who have been much more abrasive than I have ever been, so I'm guessing its because he likes the drama.ETA: Limbo must have me on ignore.
Yes, exactly right. A good riddle is specifically designed to be solved by logic. A koan is specifically designed to get beyond logic, though I can't for the life of me remember why.
Thank you for your prompt information regarding 'poppycock' and satori.They are supposed to short circuit the thought processes so that one can achieve satori. Pure bilge, of course.
They are supposed to short circuit the thought processes so that one can achieve satori. Pure bilge, of course.
Very well put. Limbo should take a leaf out of your book, he seems incapable of explaining anything.Well, yes and no.
Zen Buddhism at its heart is a fairly pragmatic religion, but the mystical types just can't leave well enough alone. Since this is a thread about anecdotes, here is mine.
I practiced Zen Buddhism for a while, even attended what you might call "church services" in Japan, and found certain elements of it to be useful. For example, koan meditation using breath control really does have a practical application, such as dealing with traffic jams.
I live in California, and often have to work in the Los Angeles area. This means I often have to deal with the traffic nightmare that is the 405 freeway. A koan isn't a riddle, but something to be used as the starting point for reaching satori. The question about clapping that Limbo incorrectly posed (the classical koan isn't just the question, but includes an introductory statement) is a koan, the 405 freeway is a koan, a Charlie Parker solo is a koan. They are all just a starting place you can use for your meditation that will allow you to reach satori. Satori is usually described as a state of enlightenment, but as dafydd noted, it really is just the state of not actively thinking ("short circuit the thought processes").
So the way this works for me, is I will start off being frustrated and annoyed by the traffic, I will then use the traffic as a starting point for my meditation, which allows me to stop thinking about the traffic. Simple! I am no longer frustrated and annoyed by the traffic, because I am no longer thinking about it. It really is only a basic distraction technique, no "altered states of consciousness" are required.
The breath control bit is simply another layer of the process that gets me calm quicker. Breath control meditation as been shown to lower blood pressure, heart rate, and all that good stuff. But again, it is simple biology, nothing special.
The point where I get annoyed with the mystics over all this, it that while I certainly feel better about being stuck in traffic, it doesn't solve the problem. It simply allows me to ignore or accept it. Even if you manage to convince the entire LA basin to practice Zen meditation (the ultimate mystical goal!), you just have 10 million people ignoring a problem. Give me a decent transportation engineer and an unlimited budget, and I will guarantee you that science can solve the problem. However, an unlimited budget is unlikely, so the best that one can conclude from mysticism is that it is always cheaper to ignore a problem than to fix it.
Pure wisdom indeed.
Very well put. Limbo should take a leaf out of your book, he seems incapable of explaining anything.
If I had to guess, his response will be something along the lines of "you're doing it wrong."
Momma said.... 70 years ago...
"What can't be cured
must be endured".
Has always worked for me.