I suggest you listen to that lecture series that Pixy Misa posted. It's fascinating!
I'm a bit strapped for time at the moment and busy with finding gibbon sounds. Does the series deal with identification at all? With the process by which human minds come to believe they have personal identity?
CS said:
What does this insight (that self identification is a contrivance) mean to you?
Well, it sets off more thoughts, more identified thoughts! (Is there no end!?) Amongst which it becomes apparent that free will is entirely illusory, at the end of the day; that this force of identification has created the whole human world and completely guides human destiny; and that nothing can be said about that from which thought arises. Of course these are just more thoughts.
CS said:
Non-duality, I guess. Everything looks the same but it is not happening to any
one!? Something like this.
CS said:
Is this Great Magical Agent innate to the biological organism, or is it a force independent of the organism experiencing it?
I don't know.
The organism is merely driven to do things because it is unaware of the presence of the GMA. There is the assumption that the thoughts have identity and that they must be acted on. If awareness of the GMA arises then things will change.
I guess at some point either there are less thoughts, or more likely there is less reflection upon thought.
In Genesis, the serpent lures Eve into tasting the fruit of the Tree of knowledge of good and evil, the tree of dualistic knowledge, thereby bringing about the Fall. It's a perfect allegory for the phenomenon of identification. The serpentine GMA creates the experience of personal identity through somehow causing thoughts to be experienced as personalised. Thus objectivity and the world of duality, of "I/not I," arises.
CS said:
It's just fine as evidence. In order to negate the evidence, you require a Great Magical Agent to account for the "illusion" of evidence.
If the apparent fact that other people behave in a certain way is adequate evidence for you, then that's your truth.
CS said:
I mean human beings are self-reflective. We can think about thinking. Our brains function non-linearly, and we can both passively observe our thoughts and feelings and actively guide them toward specific actions.
Yes, I agree. Though I think this is an ideal state of affairs. I often find that there are beliefs that I'm (!) sure are mine and I (!) find I'm very attached to them. It's hard to passively observe! Thoughts come up and it's like...
these are my thoughts!
Nick