It's a pity you've spent so much time on this magnetism thing. Go back and re-read. Nowhere does he connect magnetism with repulsion. It was you who did that.
Me and every scientist for the past two hundred years.
There is no other force of repulsion in nature except magnetism.
Ergo, when Baba talks about "forces of repulsion" between things in nature, he must be talking about magnetism.
Because, there is no other force of repulsion between things except magnetism.
It's a pity you've spent so little time on this magnetism thing. Go read up on it.
Thus: "Even the forces of repulsion are in truth expressions of love, since things are repelled from each other because they are more powerfully attracted to some other things. Repulsion is a negative consequence of positive attraction. The forces of cohesion and affinity which prevail in the very constitution of matter are positive expressions of love. A striking example of love at this level is found in the attraction which the magnet exercises for iron. All these forms of love are of the lowest type, since they are necessarily conditioned by the rudimentary consciousness in which they appear."
Note: "...since things are repelled from each other because they are more powerfully attracted to some other things."
"Repulsion" is only an apparent effect: it is caused by attraction to "some other things", is the claim.
In reference to magnetism he only mentions attraction, not repulsion. Plus he only mentions an interface between a magnet and iron. Not two magnets like you did.
Strange, huh?
Almost as though he knew everything.
Every reference to a force of repulsion is a reference to magnetism. Same poles repel.
Strange, huh?
If he doesn't realize there is no other force of repulsion between things in nature except magnetism, it's almost as though he knows nothing about fourth grade electricity.
Maybe for you, as a materialist,
I'm not a materialist... (philosophically, I'm a pseudo-phenomenologist, with materialism as one noncommittal explanatory frame among many, but that's neither here nor there...)
it will be of some major importance that someone, in a discourse trying to explain love only mentions a magnet/iron interface rather than a magnet/magnet interface. I think most rational people would recognise it as completely trivial given the subject matter of the discourse.
"Rational people" would recognize that magnetism is one of the three or four basic forces of nature. There is nothing trivial about it. Your computer and the internet it is attached to are based on electromagnetism. Love is important too. Baba seems to think they are the same thing. They are not. They are both too important in their own right to be so thoughtlessly confused.
And "rational people", of which I am one, would recognize he is talking about magnetism when he talks about "forces of repulsion", because there is no other force of repulsion between things in nature, except magnetism. This is grade school science.
He mentions magnetism once explicitly, and once with the phrase "forces of repulsion", because, as may have been pointed out previously, there are no other forces of repulsion between things in nature, except magnetism.
Magnets are used in experiments to understand magnetism, the only force of repulsion. In the quote you provided, Baba says "forces of repulsion... since things are repelled..." How does this exclude magnets? Is the claim that magnets are not things? That a rock is a thing, a cloud is a thing, a pencil is a thing, but a magnet somehow is not? They are large things that repel. The principles derived from studying them apply to all things with an electromagnetic field, down to the atomic level.
No. More nonsense from you, unfortunately.
For clarity, my example:
... Well, if you and somebody who considered you unattractive were the only two people left on earth, and he or she didn't respond to your advances, he or she must be repelled by you, not attracted to someone else. ...
The example is you and someone else, the two last people on earth. He or she finds you disgusting. This person is repelled by you.
In Baba's theory, in truth the person is not repelled by you, he or she must be more powerfully attracted to other people. But there are no other people. So the person must be repelled by you. It cannot be attraction to any one else.
Think about it. Attraction and repulsion in this context would involve attraction and repulsion involving humans, not attraction and repulsion involving the rest of the non-human environment. If I were the only male option left to her on Earth then any attraction to me could not logically be any repulsion from any other males on Earth, seeing as they don't exist.
Simple.
And if he or she is repelled by you, as in the example I gave? It could not be attraction to anyone else on earth, since they don't exist. Simple.
Except Baba says repulsion is in truth always more powerful attraction to someone else. Apparent repulsion is always in truth attraction. It can't be in this hypothetical. Baba is wrong. (Unless you can demonstrate that you are irresistible.)
Where did he say there was no such thing as repulsion?
"Even the forces of repulsion are in truth expressions of love."
Uh-oh. You're misquoting your master Baba, turning a comma into a period.
Full sentence: "Even the forces of repulsion are in truth expressions of love, since things are repelled from each other because they are more powerfully attracted to some other things."
He is making a scientific claim that what appears to be repulsion between two things is an illusion. The "repulsion" occurs in truth "because they are more powerfully attracted to some other things."
Studies of the forces of repulsion, magnetism, show Baba's scientific claim to be nonsense. Magnetic fields have a limited range. Two isolated particles with the same charge repel each other when their magnetic fields overlap. They
repel each other, they are not
attracted to other things, as Baba claims. Repulsion is repulsion, not, in truth, attraction. Baba is wrong.
"Even the forces of repulsion are in truth expressions of love, since things are repelled from each other because they are more powerfully attracted to some other things."
This is the seventh sentence in the passage on
"Love" you linked to, as a superior definition to the "pretty poor replies , which is not surprising", offered before.
Again, it is false. The forces of repulsion, magnetism (same polarity), are forces of repulsion. Simple as that. Their range is too limited to be due to being "more powerfully attracted to some other things."
Baba was ignorant of this. Which is certainly no sin (to me at least). But it is a fact. Baba was wrong.
Including Baba. Great.
I'm always amused when people make these claims of "debunkage". Decided entirely by themselves. Like kids in the sandpit declaring they have won the game.
This is a skeptical forum. A claim was made that Baba was infallible. Close scrutiny above of this claim reveals that he wasn't. Make of that what you will.
It appears Baba was only a man after all. Oh well.
Never mind though. Continue with the discourses, and see what fault you can pick.
No point. He claimed to be an infallible authority on love (and everything else). He clearly isn't. He confuses the basic forces of nature with love, electromagnetic repulsion with attraction, and God with himself.
If a "perfect" person makes a mistake, he's not perfect. If he still maintains he's "perfect", he's either deluded, lying, or stupid. Whichever is the case with Baba, I won't be continuing with the discourses until I see evidence that Baba had at least the basic intelligence, decency, and self-awareness to admit he could make and had made a mistake.
So -- was this "wise man" in fact wise enough to admit his mistakes? Or was his mind closed to that wisdom?