dafydd
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- Feb 14, 2008
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There is an esoteric current running through world religion and myth. An interpretation consistent with it can't be extraordinary, because it is universal and experiential.
No.
There is an esoteric current running through world religion and myth. An interpretation consistent with it can't be extraordinary, because it is universal and experiential.
Go ahead and stare at me.
But let me ask you this, then... if you think it's a god, then describe that god to me.
You can't do it, because the god has no description.
It's been de-defined, and all that's left is what it supposedly did... and we know the universe was created, so unless you say what this deistic god is supposed to be, we're left with "something created the universe" just as if I'd claimed that fluxnor created the universe.
The deistic fallacy is to believe that the claim "god created the universe and then didn't interfere with it" can be a claim about god if you don't say (or know) what you mean by that term.
In other words, it doesn't change the terms of the debate one whit.
If you simply take a known even and attribute it to <whatever>, you have not produced any argument in favor of the reality of <whatever>.
Those hoofprints behind my house might have been made by a unicorn I'll never see.
So do those hoofprints constitute evidence (much less an iron-clad argument) in favor of the existence of unicorns?
No.
To propose a god you have to propose a god.
Talk about what it does later, but first say what it is.
Attributing a known event to it doesn't move anything along.
And if you say you can't know what it is... at all!... then how in the world can we be talking about it?
I'm not suggesting anything mysterious about the painting of the Mona Lisa. I'm giving an example of the existence of thoughts, like the internet they may not occupy 3D space, but they do exist do they not?
More precisely the subjective content/concept of thoughts does exist. Or is it a mirage?
There is an esoteric current running through world religion and myth.
An interpretation consistent with it can't be extraordinary, because it is universal and experiential.
Yes, of course.
With that I disagree. There are three possible basic interpretations consistent with it and they are the same three that we keep discussing over and over. One is materialism. One is idealism. And one is substance dualism. The latter requires extraordinary evidence because it is an extraordinary claim. Materialism and Idealism are indistinguishable; they simply amount to two different ways of approaching the world.
If I am to be a teacher then the student has to give me the authority to assign homework and tasks. Otherwise the teacher-student relationship just doesn't work. Only you can give me or deny me that authority.
The esoteric current leads to personal transformations that defy materialism.
Materialism is not consistent with the esoteric current of world myth. Nor is it consistent with the numerous 'paranormal' experiences I've had over the years.
The esoteric current leads to personal transformations that defy materialism. Only mental monism or neutral monism are consistent with it, imo.
This is another claim.
Yes, I'm afraid for you that it is. The esoteric current is a generalization of world myth, an extraction of the essence of the stories.
Yes it is a simplified model and could be refined.
I'm not suggesting anything mysterious about the painting of the Mona Lisa. I'm giving an example of the existence of thoughts, like the internet they may not occupy 3D space, but they do exist do they not?
More precisely the subjective content/concept of thoughts does exist. Or is it a mirage?
And then before you know it your kundalini has awoken. Do you grok what that means?
That's a half-truth. The other half of that truth is that the esoteric current is an application of the essence. An application to your life, to your essence. It requires a participation mystique; a connection to a mystical tradition and a practice.
And then before you know it your kundalini has awoken. Do you grok what that means?
Yes, I have a pretty good idea, which is about all that I can say of anything.
But none of that means that materialism is false.
I have a pretty intimate idea, thanks to Divine Grace. Let me tell you, there is nothing like it. Materialism has no clue.
Along with an awakened kundalini comes various supernatural or preternatural powers. They are described pretty consistently across world religion. Including our modern space-age religion.
Space-Age Myth?
"The UFO phenomenon is unsettling enough, but that discomfort is significantly heightened when one considers its first cousins: crop circles, orbs, men in black, alien contact and abductions, telepathic communications, and so on. This phenomenological complex bears a resemblance to experiences reported in shamanic, psychedelic, mystical, religious, and psychic states, and to folklore, mythology, and religious lore.
Perhaps these apparently disparate phenomena may all be connected in some way. A comprehensive justification of this suggestion is beyond the scope of this article, but consider the following: The modern era of the “flying saucer” began in June 1947 when pilot Kenneth Arnold saw a series of flying disks performing strange maneuvers, “like a saucer would if you skipped it across the water.” The June 26 issue of the Chicago Daily Tribune quoted Arnold: “I saw . . . a series of objects that were traveling incredibly fast. They were silvery and shiny and seemed to be shaped like a pie plate.”
[...]
One of the first to explore the notion of mythology manifesting as physical reality was psychoanalyst Carl Jung, who in 1957 published the book Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Sky. More recently, authors Jacques Vallee (Dimensions: A Casebook of Alien Contact) and Keith Thompson (Angels and Aliens: UFOs and the Mythic Imagination) and folklorists Peter Rojcewicz and Thomas Bullard have written about the parallels among UFOs, folklore, and mythology.
“Space-Age myth” does not imply that UFO sightings or encounters with angels, aliens, fairies, sprites, elves, or demons are fantasies. Rather, it suggests that some of these experiences may literally be psychophysical, blurring conventional boundaries between objective and subjective realities.
Some may object that this proposal doesn’t account for the physical traces associated with some UFO reports, but this misinterprets what Jung and others have proposed. They suggest that the manifest world emerges from mind, that is, that mind shapes matter. Where have we heard this before? In his book Global Mind Change, former IONS President Willis Harman discussed three basic ways of looking at the world. He called the current Western scientific worldview “materialistic monism,” or “M1.” Within M1, everything—both matter and energy— is made of a single substance. From matter emerges everything, including the brain-generated illusion called mind.
In M1, angels and aliens walking through walls are fine plot points for an episode of The Twilight Zone, but they are impossible in the real world. In M1, UFOs are conceivable, but only in terms of hard, physical spacecraft with humanoid pilots. Most of the modern technological world was created based on M1 assumptions, so it carries enormous persuasive power. But the whole panoply of noetic experiences defy materialistic explanations, suggesting that M1 is an incomplete worldview. Detailed taxonomies of these anomalies are described by all cultures; they include, among others, the Hindu siddhis, the Catholic charisms, Sufi attainments, and, in indigenous societies, shamanic magic.
Harman’s second worldview, M2, represents dualism, which assumes two fundamentally different kinds of substances in the universe, matter and mind. Many scientists today reject dualism because it begs the problem of how two deeply different substances could interact at all. In addition, it seems lavish to require the universe to maintain (at least) two distinct essences, when it would be far simpler to have only one.
The third worldview, M3, is transcendental or mental monism, which Harman argued is the source of both the perennial wisdom and the emerging worldview of the twenty-first century. In M3, consciousness is primary, and matter and energy are emergent properties of consciousness. M3 accommodates everything that M1 and M2 allow for, as well as rogue phenomena like telepathic ETs, observation-shy UFOs, and collective mind–manifested UFOs. Evidence in favor of M3 has been slowly amassing for over a century. Such recent books as Irreducible Mind, Entangled Minds, and Measuring the Immeasurable (see review 0n page 41) discuss the empirical evidence in detail, ranging from psychic phenomena to creative genius to mind-body interactions to evidence suggestive of reincarnation."
Limbo, youve been told several times on this forum that there are many members who have done similar things, and come out the other end realising it was all wishful thinking.
Yeah, I could show anyone here how to replicate my results, but it would require them to read certain books and practice certain spiritual exercises. Time-consuming stuff. It requires commitment and perhaps lifestyle changes.
In theory you could do it. The only thing stopping you is yourself.