This sounds a bit like the "curse of knowledge/expertise":humans, possessed of a more complex language, should be capable of understanding languages that are simpler, in fact too simple, like animal languages. Hence, The Too Simple Paradox Of Language. — TheMadFool
Yet the world has worked that way for millennia.No. It's called being silenced by a mob. — Book273
This is simply small town mentality, it has been around for millennia. It just seems more egregious when it's broadcatsed on tv and the internetz.I live in a society where a man on a TV politics talk show was told by a member of the audience that his opinion was illegitimate because of his skin colour; and that woman thought she was in the right - because the man was white. I live in a country pervaded by a form of reverse identity politics - that clothes itself in the garb of moral righteousness while stereotyping people, and discriminating against them on that basis. — counterpunch
And back when it was only the elites who had access to higher education. It seems that the elites somehow figured out what is proper to say and what isn't and didn't make much of a fuss about it, or settled it with a duel.Lurking behind this entire discussion is the question “what is the proper relationship b/w the university and the government?”, and that is a question that is very old, reaching all the way back to when the university was called the “academy”. — Todd Martin
Plebeification on steroids.Freedom imposed by law with legal penalties for not obeying its strictures is tyranny in double-think. — unenlightened
I suspect that the free speech clause in the US might have been actually motivated in a similar way as freedom of religion.So there are limits to free speech. On what grounds? — Isaac
It's not possible to do so anyway, so the whole idea is a non-starter. Deplatforming would be possible if there would exist neutral communication avenues, a no-man's land where everyone would equally belong and not belong. But there is no such place.You don't get to delegitimise, shout down, drown out and de-platform other people — counterpunch
Yes. It's called "being civilized".How Kafkaesque! Always on trial for a crime you might commit by saying something someone else might find offensive. — counterpunch
The early Buddhist teachings on karma and rebirth are _not_ mere "historical trappings".Remember, I am explicitly trying to think outside of the historical belief systems of Buddhism. — Constance
You're trying to force the issue. More below.I only want to know what meditation is at the level of basic assumptions.
I don't know what happens in that event, because what you describe is some new-agey meditation mishamash that has nothing to do with Buddhism.I mean, what really happens in this event in which one sits, ceases thinking, wanting, anticipating, and does this rigorously over time?
Well, as long as those self-declared "Buddhists" are also New Agers or practitioners of corporate mindfulness (that's a term, look it up).Buddhists famously want the purity of the event to be untainted by presuppositions,
And now they are gong to actively, governmentally champion stifling free speech!If the government has decided that universities need a "free speech champion" then free speech has been being stifled for a long time. — Book273
And yet they rule the world.The dogmatic view of certain religions kills the individual and transforms the herd's view in such a way that their actions, reactions, and emotions are almost made unconscious. — Gus Lamarch
Yes. If it doesn't hurt, it ain't the truth.That the more difficult something is to believe the more “genuine” or “correct” it is.
A morphing from “Truth can hurt” to “What hurts is the truth”. — khaled
I think this "just be true to yourself" (BTW, funny how people love to quote that line from Hamlet, when it's said by the one of the dumbest characters in the play) is not a lie, but a domination strategy and a self-defense strategy, and I suspect that people are aware of this.In fact I'd add 'the self' itself. As in 'true to yourself, 'not being yourself'... As if there were some sacred fixed point from which certain feelings rebelliously deviate. — Isaac
The Santa Claus story is an age-appropriate strategy to instill in children this hope, so that they can later on become sugar daddies and sugar mamas themselves (such as to their parents, ideally), and to not have qualms about looking for a sugar daddy or sugar mama and to use such relationships to their advantage.Santa Claus was good while he lasted, but the hope for some sort of imaginary gift-giver, some sort of sugar-daddy, lingers on. — Bitter Crank
Oh god, no.you are born and you receive an education, and you become this education, and once you have been duly assimilated into a culture with its language and history, and then, there is your private history that ends up becoming a repository for future possibilities, the plot and character development, if you will, of the narrative you will write into existence.
But the rub: this is the way of everyday living, and everyone lives this life of unfolding affairs with implicit trust and unquestioned confidence, and one is entirely absorbed in the grand narrative. — Constance
Eh ...?Then one opens a copy of Heidegger's Being and Time, and begins to question, and if s/he is lucky, or unlucky, there is an epiphanic moment of startling awareness that there is a discontinuity in our questioning self and the world that is there to meet questions at the basic level. /.../ Most are not disturbed by this, that is, until they start reading Heidegger.
If you like to question basic assumptions, then how about qualifying the above as a mere assumption and questioning it?For me, it is the question, "why are we born to suffer and die?"
*sigh*Those whom seek nirvana, will not find it and those whom do not seek nirvana will also not find it and yet nirvana may still be found, nevertheless! — Present awareness
This too, but I was thinking the other way around: "The world is real and important, but the individual is not. The individual is an intruder, an impostor, and it would be best if he didn't exist in the first place, and failing that, he should at least see to it that he makes himself as invisible as possible."If it is, it may explain many of the problems associated with civilization as well as philosophy. The belief the world isn't truly real or important as something else, like heaven, is; the belief that nature and our fellow creatures are ours to do with as we please; the prevalence of self-conceit; the indifference to the state of the planet; all can be seen as resulting from an assumption we aren't parts of the world or somehow superior to it. — Ciceronianus the White
The facet of my philosophical views that has perhaps gotten the most push-back on these forums is my view on the relationship between the parts of philosophy like metaphysics and epistemology, which I broadly call the descriptive side of philosophy, the side concerned with reality, truth, facts, etc; and the parts of philosophy like ethics and political philosophy, which I broadly call the prescriptive side of philosophy, the side concerned with morality, goodness, norms, etc.
I'm curious if it's just a few vocal people here who disagree so vehemently, rather than the dominant opinion, and also more generally where people fall in their views on the relationship between these two domains. — Pfhorrest
(You say this so nicely.)The difficulty I have with much of this is its de facto assumption of the world as something apart from us. I think that conception is embedded in any claim of being thrown into the world without choice, as if we're from one place and have come unwilling into another. I think it's also assumed whenever we speak of the world being suspended for our viewing and understanding, and perhaps most clearly when we complain of alienation. — Ciceronianus the White
I would think that everyone thinks so, at least intuitively. It's not like people actually confuse words for reality.I completely agree with this. But there is a certain inevitability. There is the nature of language itself which is inherently mediatory, standing "between" actualities like the feeling of happiness or dread, or deliciousness or disgust; I am referring to the actuality of these events that are qualitatively distinct from the thoughts we have of them. We call a thing by its name and its concept subsumes all particulars, but this is NOT the feeling of being abandoned by a a loved one, e.g. We don't "know" what this is, but in the calling it something, we reduce it to a manageable form that can be discussed and fit into pragmatic contexts. The point is, and this is straight out of Kierkegaard's Concept of Anxiety, reason and actuality, understanding and the "real" events of the world are ontologically different. — Constance
Yes. That's why a line "drawn" in the air isn't a meaningful demarcation.What is fascinating to me, off the charts fascinating,is that we can "understand" this, making, as Wittgenstein put it, for ( I know this is rather esoteric; apologies) the "other side" of the requirement for posting something. Consider when he says, "in order to draw a limit of thought, we should have the limits of both sides thinkable."
I'm not sure I understand what he meant here ... He may be saying something that is strongly influenced by Christian and anti-Christian thought. Metaphysics have such a bad reputation ... and I'm not sure I can redeem it in one forum post.THIS is his line: Metaphysical "talk" is talk about something the "other side" of which is completely unknown; no, not unknown, but just nonsense, because such an "other side", is not conceivable, for in the conceiving, one deploys "this side's" language, logic, ideas, and so forth.
Still, language is good enough. It serves a purpose.So, one cannot "say" the color yellow. And this makes references to the color AS color impossible.
You're not an alien. You're part of this universe. :)Why I say this is so fascinating is this: It is my palpable, intuitive grasp that there is someting "other" there that is not language that affirms my own metaphysical Being, for the intuitive grasp of the thing, or the color, or the pain or bliss, does not issue from the thing out there, but from me. The nonconceptual Being of the world is my own Being affirmed in the relationship.
I am aware this likely sounds far flung, but this is the way it is, and I am quite willing to defend it.
There is an important difference here, though: the early Buddhist samvega narrative and the existential anxiety narrative are different./.../ Samvega was what the young Prince Siddhartha felt on his first exposure to aging, illness, and death. /.../
The term sought for here is Existential Anxiety. Again, and especially the reference to childhood, see Kierkegaard's Concept of Anxiety, this above plays into existential thought in a central way, not merely a sideline issue. It is THE issue, for this deathbed realization is a withdrawal from from the grand "narrative" we all live in, going work, raising a family, outings with friends, all "blindly" priveleged and hermeneutically sealed.
Heh.hermeneutically sealed
The Buddhism of philosophers, a la the God of philosophers ...I know you would like thinking more controlled in this way. Tell you what, I'll call what I do with Buddhist thinking, "philosophical Buddhism". Just thought of it, and it seems there should be no objections.
Do you mean the things you ascribed to the Buddha? No.My point is this: regardless of word accuracy, does what was said resonate within you as being true? — Present awareness
The perfect Humpty Dumpty land, then!The strength of the US is that the US means so many different things to different people. — ssu
One cannot just ascribe to someone some words just because they "make sense to one". That's bestial.It does”t really matter whom said what or if anyone said anything, what matters most is does any of what was reported as being said, make any sense to you? — Present awareness
I was being cynical.The US is a free country and everyone is responsible for themselves.
— baker
...and there's your problem. — Banno
The opposite: I was expected to believe, on pain of physical punishment, that the world is a good place.Growing up, it was my family constantly reminding me that the world outside is a 'bad place'. — OneTwoMany
Such states are trivially possible. Just ask any meth addict.The OP was not asking about the veracity of Buddhist doctrine, but only if any human mind can achieve an altered state in which the sufferings of life, and the fear of death are of no consequence. — Gnomon
But it _is_ _their_ argument.Faith is not an valid argument. — Gus Lamarch
At 27 posts, you should be able to already post links.There is no such thing as an enlightened person, there is only an enlightened moment. All religions are based on someone else’s words.
If you google Buddhism, the text will be there. — Present awareness
That would be more Mahayan-ish.Which one says it's all an illusion? — frank
Who is President now?
So, you have nothing. — Benkei
