articulett
Banned
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- Jan 18, 2005
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You can only deny the existence of "self" until you get hungry.
Or need to pee.
You can only deny the existence of "self" until you get hungry.
I don't really see the point in being a non-dualist if you end up spending so much time thinking about dualism.
What I wished to point out is that non-dual experiencing isn't metaphysically advantagous. It doen't give you the "real" world beyond experience. And it's more subtle than throwing everything into a blender.
You will probably point this our yourself, again and again, while most readers here continue to take it as metaphysics or the negation of self-awareness.
Such is life! People get confused and conflate an assortment of haphazard notions of altered states and spirituality-mysticism, choosing not to simply examine what something is.
Nick
Unfortunately my computer is already possesesd by the Microsoft Daemons.
Can get one here!
http://www.goldencompassmovie.com/
Click on "Daemons" tab.
I'll get a ferret and name it, "Kleinman."![]()
I can't speak for her, but i feel bad that most people are delusional.
You honesty think that most of the world's people; past and present, are delusional and you are one of the few with the truth.
Interesting.
Although it has no known physical existence, and cannot survive simple examination, the notion of personal selfhood presents a resistance to change as great as any of the forces studied in physics.
Nick
Although it has no known physical existence, and cannot survive simple examination, the notion of personal selfhood presents a resistance to change as great as any of the forces studied in physics.
Nick
Yes. I also know more about nuclear power than most people that have ever lived.
And now we return to the thread topic:
This very fabrication of a persistant, inherently real selfhood is at the base of Theism. God is the individual self writ large.
Moreover, there appears to be useful reasons why we think of "personal self hood" running individual bodies.
But the Theist still does project the image of man onto the cosmos.
The little "I" is inflated into the Great Metaphysical "I." The Divine is made out to be a person, just as ourselves. Theists project a controling, autocratic head for reality, much the same way we imagine we have a controling, autocratic mind (in spite of the way reality defies that every day.).
That's a lot closer to what I'm thinking that what Articulett is understanding.Piscivore,
I'm sorry that I haven't been following everything you have said recently (mainly because I agreed completely with your first post in the series and didn't have anything to add) and I'm too lazy to look back at all the posts, so please excuse me if you have already covered this topic.....
It occurs to me that there is a very important aspect to your view that explains much of religious practice -- it is theater. What happens in a theater is not created by a writer or the actors or the audience, but by all of them working together to create this 'other reality'. The same is true of religious ritual. Communion doesn't happen in a wafer or in a person's mind or with a priest but through all of them working to create another reality.
I wonder if the Greeks viewed theater in this way since it was part of a religious festival -- that the only sense of the divine we ever know is a social creation? It certainly speaks to our human community -- a real communion. Maybe that's what divine means? What we create together?
But, then, together we also created money and subprime lending practices...........
A basic sense of selfhood is an evolutionary pre-requisite. Survival and procreation dictate the need for it in our animal ancestors. But the human sense of personal identity is imo vastly disproportionate to the actual need for it. One doesn't need to believe an idea is absolutely "yours" to the degree that one will fight and kill for it. This phenomenal degree of identification begs the question - what is the underlying motivation of the subconscious psyche that is creating it? This is where the subjective sciences, the spiritual sciences, can come in. Some of them attempt to deal with it.
Nick
That's a lot closer to what I'm thinking that what Articulett is understanding.
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To my mind, there is one aspect of this activity that is justifiable, or at least understandable. In appreciating the extreme limitations of objectivity to provide reliable information in certain areas, so our more philosophical forbears used the notion of self-similarity (microcosm-macrocosm) as a potential means to explore terrain that was otherwise inaccessible.
Nick
The way I see it, in believing itself to be this body, this collection of thoughts and emotions, consciousness (I hate that word!) inevitably needs a vessel into which to place all the events which it can't ascribe to this sense of relative selfhood - ergo The World. Now, when there are experiences which don't even fit into this vessel, so it needs a bigger, catch-all vessel - ergo God! God is the great scapegoat, a giant wheelie-bin into which all the left-over and unexplained cogitations of ego get hurled.
Of course, this God's role is made all the more complex by the way in which the ego learns to examine the world.
Believing objectivity to be a priori real it starts pontificating about the "creation of the world" based around its experience of apparent causality in the world around it. Assuming causality to exist as an absolute phenomenon it starts to ask all sorts of questions about "how I got here," "what's my purpose?," and "how did it all begin?" The ego-created God has to deal with all this stuff.
When the ego develops to the point where it can examine its own nature more closely, so the need for God inevitably dissipates.
Nick
And if I were Clapton, I'd shake in my boots before matching my axe with Duane Allman or Dickey Betts.