In what sense is it "beyond" sensory/rational experience? Is it beyond them in the same sense that taste is beyond sight?beyond the merely sensory/ rational experience, then, yes, no problem. — John
Why is it transcendent? Transcendent is an ontological category, you know that right?With the rational intellect we understand the outer, with the intuitive intellect we understand the inner. The outer is the immanent in the sense that it is within sense experience; the inner is the transcendent in the sense that it is both beyond sense experience and rationally discursive understanding.
So the transcendent movement is not a movement upwards, but a movement inwards. — John
But you did ask why "sex isn't necessarily immoral" which is kind of strange if you think it isn't necessarily immoral. Anyway, what does "inherently" mean to say in the above sentence?I never said that sex is inherently necessarily immoral. — Heister Eggcart
I'm not sure Schopenhauer really wanted to be a "spiritual exemplar" himself. As he put it, the job of the philosopher is different than the job of the saint.I think the difficulty for Schopenhauer, is that he never encountered a 'spiritual exemplar' who could help him understand how to 'actualise' such a mode of life, so for him it remained a remote (and impossible) ideal. — Wayfarer
This is nothing but anthropomorphism if you ask me, and definitely not "central" in my humble opinion.For that reason, a central belief of Buddhists is that being born as a human is both very rare and extremely fortunate, because only in the human realm can you hear and practice the teachings. — Wayfarer
Yes but the non-duality of Samsara and Nirvana is clear - so I'm asking you, conceptually, how is it possible to speak of transcendence? Do you simply mean a transcendence of one perspective to another? The transcendence from ignorance to understanding?That's why it has to be interpreted carefully! If you read the early texts, the unique station of the Buddha is precisely transcendence of samsara, meaning, escape from the cycle of continued re-birth. This is stated precisely, dogmaticaly, and unequivocally.
According to Buddhist mythology, beings are continuously and unwillingly born into the six realms of existence. (This is where there is a strong parallel with Schopenhauer's 'Will' and the Buddhist 'tṛṣṇā', the 'thirst' or 'craving' which 'drives' the wheel of life-and-death.)
In the early schools, the difference between the life of ordinary mortals and that of the Buddha was posed as an absolute duality, with nothing whatever in common. It was one of the doctrinal innovations associated with the beginning of Mahāyāna that introduced the idea that they're not really separate realms, but the same realm seen from completely different perspectives. In a memorable aphorism, 'samsara is Nirvāṇa grasped, Nirvāṇa is samsara released'. It also introduced the idea of the bodhisattva, one who can be re-born voluntarily for the benefit of all beings, rather than 'escaping' into Nirvāṇa for once and for all. (Scholars see a possible cross-cultural influence between Buddhism and Christianity, via the silk road, in such ideas.) — Wayfarer
It's "merely" understanding reality because there is no transcendent there. Merely refers to the fact that there is nothing more than that.Again, you say 'merely', as if 'understanding reality' is a trivial matter. Who, really, 'understands reality'? — Wayfarer
Okay but why do you think love is in short supply?Life is hollow without love. Were this not true, then I'd have long ago rolled back over and into the grave from whence I came. — Heister Eggcart
I don't get this joke. He fucked God? His hand? dafuq? — Heister Eggcart
Why God or his hand when the bit that I quoted you on spoke about bitches?fuck bitches — Heister Eggcart
Sure so? This isn't to say that life is long and love is short... So I'm asking you what in particular grounds your belief regarding this.I didn't say that they did, only that priorities can be hard to straighten out. — Heister Eggcart
>:O As far as I know he really only fucked one properly >:)fuck bitches — Heister Eggcart
Okay this may be so, but you haven't outlined a "correct understanding" either. If Samsara and Nirvana are non-dual - not two - how is it possible to talk of transcendence? There is no transcendence - the removal of ignorance isn't transcending anything, but merely understanding reality.I am very familiar with Zen literature, but it is often quoted out of context, as it was greatly popularised by the Beat generation and their successors in the 1950's and 60's. Read that way, seems to fit comfortably with existential or nihilist philosophy, but that is far from the truth of the matter. Zen Buddhism is still Buddhism, and the 'meta-narrative' of Buddhism is transcendence of the realm of samsara. And yes, Mahāyāna Buddhism asserts the 'non-duality of Samsara and Nirvāṇa' but again that is something that must be interpreted carefully. It is still a religion, concerned with transcendence of mundane (worldly) existence, without that dimension the sayings of Bodhidharma and the other Zen patriarchs are just desk-calendar slogans. — Wayfarer
I will look into this.Nietszche, Schopenhauer, and many others interpreted the Buddhist philosophy of śūnyatā to mean 'voidness' or 'nothingness' (indeed there is a whole book on that subject, The Cult of Nothingness: The Philosophers and the Buddha, Roger-Pol Droit), but I think this is also based on a fundamental misconception, or rather, the absence of insight into any higher truth. — Wayfarer
But what if down is really up? If man lost paradise, then down (back where man came from) is exactly where he must be going.They're only aware of 'down'. They're not aware of anything 'up'. That is a deficiency, not a virtue. — Wayfarer
Why do you think they ignored those in their life who supported them? For example, what would you have had St. Augustine do, for example, not to ignore those in his life who supported him?Those men did not live entirely solitary lives. One might like to think that they've nothing but "God's love" in their life, yet I'd argue they've merely ignored those in their life that support them. — Heister Eggcart
Hmm but what would you say to folks like Augustine, Aquinas, etc. who found God's love to be sufficient for life not to "suck"? Do you think they're wrong? God's love isn't sufficient?Life wouldn't suck so much ass if love wasn't a rarity. — Heister Eggcart
I think you in particular would like him :PAh, I've heard of that first one. I'll look into it (Y) — Heister Eggcart
Why do you think that "love is short"? Have you read, for example, Augustine's Confessions to see how God's love plays a role in guiding his life, and ultimately changing him - always there with him even when he didn't see it?I have. I think that he'd agree with me that love is short and life is long. Seneca's gall is rather inspiring to me. — Heister Eggcart
Really now.... really...? What if philosophy is precisely the disease that must be cured? (Wittgenstein would agree ;) ) Do you remember the story of Bodhidharma and the Chinese King coming to him, troubled by his mind, and Bodhidharma saying "I have this stick with me, show me your mind and I will quiet it", and the King, afraid - there was this bearded guy with a stick, and he was all alone with him - spent some time, and said "there is no mind, all is quiet"?It simply doesn't interest me, and I don't see the point. Philosophy is supposed to be the cure, not the disease. — Wayfarer
You should read Seneca's "On the Brevity of Life" then :P you said you liked Roman philosophy ;)Life's too long in my estimation! — Heister Eggcart
"The Trouble with Being Born" (if you want a more mature work) or "On the Heights of Despair" if you want an introductory work (also happens to be his first work). "Short History of Decay" and "The Fall Into Time" should be next.I haven't, though he seems like someone I'd like. What do you suggest I read first? — Heister Eggcart
How is that a slight on you or him? I know you've found his work interesting, I suppose that must be because he isn't labelled an atheist and a nihilist on Wikipedia, otherwise you wouldn't have bothered with his work no? :sI took 'Krishnamurti as homeboy' as a slight on both myself, and him. — Wayfarer
And I have noticed that discussions with you reduce to "he's a nihilist/materialist/atheist, dismissed". Really Wayfarer, you call this philosophy? Reading about Cioran on Wikipedia and taking that as sufficient to give you permission to dismiss him so that you can avoid engaging with his thought, merely because he's labelled as a "nihilist" there?I have noticed that discussions with 'Agostino' quickly degenerate into name-calling and ad homs. — Wayfarer
Common bruv it's just a poem, we wouldn't go through all the hassle of stealing :PPeople steal. — Heister Eggcart
How interesting that your homeboy J. Krishnamurti would say precisely the same thing... destroy much (your conditioning) to recover paradise. Don't you see that you are just being biased?But we left that stage a long time ago: we would have to destroy so much to recover paradise
LOL Why hide it? :PYes, so no. — Heister Eggcart
Sure, well that's plausible. Higher animals - elephants, some birds, dogs, cats, primates - are 'beings', although again, they're not human beings. — Wayfarer
awareness of death and the transience of life — Wayfarer
What they wouldn't be able to do, is to contemplate the meaning of death as you say — Agustino
Why? Most people would say probably not. Why is that?Obviously I don't know for sure, but I would say 'probably not'. — John
>:O Pollock - it's a metaphor for the penis which can flop around just like the pollock does!Pollock - a big flopping fish? Polock or Polack? A flopping person from Poland? Either would work. — Bitter Crank
I was tricked :’(Assess its size against the pine needles. — John
But if they have some awareness of death, then to me they already know this. What they wouldn't be able to do, is to contemplate the meaning of death as you say. But that's already different from simply being aware of transience.I think the awareness of death and the transience of life is one of the peculiar attributes of humans. — Wayfarer
:D But I do know all this, and I do have a look at my stool briefly every time I go to the toilet. I'm not freaked out by stool regardless of what I see - I've seen for example dried pieces of tomato, I've even picked up pieces of stool, I've even seen blood in stool. That's why I say I was shocked - I'm not a person who gets easily disgusted, and especially not by my own stools. But that was something entirely different. I wouldn't have imagined that if I would see such a stool I would have such a reaction. It was a primal and more basic reaction.Sig Freud!
You'd better come into the office and lie down on the couch right away. You're a very sick man.
It is interesting that you wouldn't mind standing next to someone who was smelly, but wouldn't want to be seen by others as having tolerated their smelliness. Shades of other-directedness.
At some point, life becomes easier when we come to terms with our own shit, literally. Raising children (which I haven't done) and raising dogs (which I have) are effective at busting up our cleanliness obsessions, and alleviating the shock of the stool -- that what goes in comes out and in sometimes quite identifiable condition. Once our young dog got into the dog food and stuffed herself. A bit later, while I was sitting on the back step, she crawled into my lap and vomited up an enormous Science Diet slushy. Yuck. But, because it was OUR dog, I wasn't freaked out--as I would otherwise have been. What she ate was sometimes quite identifiable when I picked up her stool for disposal. Like bits of raw carrot. Chewed up and swallowed bits of fabric. Wild baby rabbits swallowed whole were still whole.
Why feed a dog expensive dog food? Because it promises to produce a very firm, drier stool -- easier to pick up. Turned out to be true.
Having chronic bowel problems has helped many people understand that unexamined shit may not be worth excreting. Stools are a window into our bowels -- a place we do not want to go ourselves. — Bitter Crank
But by re-directing them it seems to me that it can create entirely new combinations of feelings and reactions that we would never have before. And this isn't only in terms of intensity, but in terms of the whole experience of whatever the situation is.Natural disgust prevents you from re-eating those tasty seeds, thus protecting you from worms and e-coli infection. Advertising does not create anything in humanity that is not already there, it elicts, distorts, redirects, exaggerates, trains, feelings that are pretty universal. — unenlightened
See, this is the problem, even among the truth there is infiltration.Your only best last hope for the liberty of your own mind is philosophy. Buy some today and install it at once. You really cannot afford to miss this discussion. — unenlightened
>:OYour only best last hope for the liberty of your own mind is philosophy. Buy some today and install it at once. You really cannot afford to miss this discussion. — unenlightened
:-xLet me tell you a comfortable lie. All this stuff only works on the great unwashed. You are educated and intelligent, and so your freedom and independence are assured. — unenlightened
>:O so true, so true...You do realize that virtue has nothing to do with how your penis feels when in this or that crevasse, right? — Heister Eggcart
