The core of the idea of progress is the belief that human life becomes better with the growth of knowledge. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Some suggest that all historical civilizations can be interpreted in the analogy of birth, childhood, maturity, old age, and death. — Cavacava
human nature has remained essentially the same across recorded history. — Galuchat
Debatable. — Banno
I don't think history is cyclical, nor is history following a course -- like, toward ever more progress. One event follows another, and this event leads to that event, and if sometimes the result is pleasant, at other times it is not. — Bitter Crank
I don't know if this is at all answering your questions, and it is said without authority, as my own best understanding. Most of it is stolen from here. — unenlightened
However, identity-denial (as the OP proposes) is not one of them, and for good reason: the destruction of a person's identity destroys the culture they are part of, and vice versa. — Galuchat
I don't know about that. — Wayfarer
'Identity' is not something set in stone, it is dynamic. — Wayfarer
Basically the OP is picking up some principles based on Eastern teachings and practices which do indeed challenge the centrality of the ego. — Wayfarer
Hence "identity-denial" is innacurate description of what OP is suggesting. — Arran
The final step I envisioned was shedding identity - along with the criticisms and self-imposed restrictions that often accompany it - in order to achieve lasting peace of mind. At this stage, identity loses its importance, and becomes just another choice of how one lives their life. I am most interested in your thoughts on whether enduring contentment (in the absence of familial loss or threats to survival) could be achieved by lessening the importance of identity. — CasKev
'Laying aside the self' is also basic to Christianity, although not all Christians will utilise the terminology. But there's not as big a gulf between the Christian and 'Eastern' teachings on such ideas as there is often thought to be. — Wayfarer
Many would agree that over the past 50 or 60 years, there have been tremendous changes in the cultural, economic, educational circumstances that have seemed to have a weakening effect on the "fabric of society". Why and how might be another topic... — 0 thru 9
Some have compared the situation to that of the Native Americans after their cultures were overrun and destroyed. Even though many physically survived, their way of life was in ruins. — 0 thru 9
To me those [the study of cosmology and quantum mechanics] would all be included in the world-for-us. We don't directly experience them via our senses but we do experience their effects on us and the world of our experience. In fact, they constitute the very world of our experience. — Brian
And everything we know about the world is the world-for-us, even when discussing cosmology or quantum mechanics. Such studies are meaningless in the face of a world wholly unrelated to our experience of it. — Brian
...what ever is known is only known th[r]ough thought. — Cavacava
I would differentiate these with the terms the-world-for-us and the-world-in-itself. — Brian
...recognizing the potential limits of the human identity/ego is somewhat of a central topic of Eastern philosophies...Western psychology, from what I have seen, does approach the subject, and various pathologies. Eg. the work of Freud and especially Jung. — 0 thru 9
Are you = your thoughts? Are do you have thoughts? That is quite a leap to say if one is not equivalent to their thoughts then they do not exist. — 0 thru 9
Is there any evidence of psychoanalytic insight in such a case? — Galuchat
possibly, there's an element of tongue-in-cheek in there — Sapientia
Interpreting it as God might be understandable, but that doesn't make it any less "crazy" in my sense...if I have had such an experience, I haven't jumped to the conclusion that it was God - I'm not crazy. — Sapientia
Develop Awareness
You are not your thoughts - your true self is the formless observer that is aware of your thoughts — CasKev
Presence - presence is achieved by using the five senses without background inner dialogue — CasKev
Stop Judging
Human Nature - authentic human nature is to seek peace, and to act with love and integrity — CasKev
Illusion of Control - the ability to choose is an illusion; everyone is a function of their physical being and their experiences; a person has no control over their creation, nor their initial environment, and therefore no true control over whatever follows... — CasKev
Belief is an attitude which accepts a proposition as true without evidence. As such, there is no premise which supports, hence; no argument which proves, anything about God. — Galuchat
But if that is true, than why is it not acceptable of any other belief that doesn't have to do with God?...If what you say is true in your post than why should someone be upset if they think that agnosticism is self defeating? — dclements
I'm talking about 'logical' type reasoning for believing in 'God', if such a means even exists. — dclements
If we're going down this line where altered states of consciousness (which dreaming is) is proof then why isn't being drunk vs being sober also evidence? There is an obvious phenomenal difference between the two. — JupiterJess
I think dreams are evidence the waking experience is not [what] we think it is. I believe it is just a continuation of the same ontological sort but with the sensory inputs combined into it... if you focus on the between the waking moment or going into sleep you can actually feel the change first hand. — JupiterJess
...dreams are neither sufficient evidence nor arguments for the truth of 'idealism'...We could, of course, discuss the nature of dreams, whether they have anything to do with the nature of reality and so on... — jkop
The question though, is a question for the lucid dreamer who has control over the dream. How can one have control over what is happening in the dream, yet still believe that what is being seen in the dream is as real as what is seen in waking like? Wouldn't having control over it make it like a daydream? And in a daydream I know that what I am daydreaming is not real, because I have control over it. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's the thing with dreams, they are apprehended as real, when they are going on, but when you awaken they are dismissed as unreal. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that dreams are also what can be regarded as a form of reality, although impermanent and vague. — Question
I think that laws are rules set by people in power as an effort to control an aspect of the population. — MonfortS26
It seems that things other than words, and how they are used, are imbued with meaning. You don't need language to know what these things mean. You simply need prior experiences with these things to know what they mean. — Harry Hindu
...language needs to be defined. — Marchesk
Thus language is not about a transfer of some essence of conceptual meaning from my inner world to your inner world, but something that operates in the physical world. — unenlightened
What makes something beautiful? — River
Not all mental states can be inferred all the time.I am not sure peoples motives are that easy to pin down. — Andrew4Handel
Writing and speaking are actions. Thinking is also an action. As far as history is concerned, the difference between corporeal and mental action is one of evidence as it varies on a continuum between strong and weak.Are we going to judge history on peoples actions or do we have to also invoke their words and mental states? — Andrew4Handel
Knowing how a person or social group has acted in the past provides a degree of predictability about their future actions in similar situations....maybe history is somewhat predictable or mechanistic. — Andrew4Handel
History is a social science which reduces to (can be explained in terms of) sociology, and sociology reduces to psychology, however; psychology doesn't reduce to physiology.I suppose the closest to science would be a behaviourist analysis of history. A series of stimuli-response events. — Andrew4Handel
It seems to be like saying morality exists, and yes most will agree, it is saying there must be a right and a wrong, but on the application of these terms many disagree. What is morality in-itself, I think 'rights' are here. — Cavacava
I don't agree with historians using psychological analysis without emphasing that it is speculation. — Andrew4Handel
The anti-relativism (or maybe moral superiority?) that's amply displayed in the UN's list of rights suggests to me that a certain characterization(s) of what is meant to be human ought to be included in our understanding of what a right is. — Cavacava