The purpose of religion is to supply meaning. A system of meaning binds a community in common values and purpose. That is its essential purpose and anything else like 'true peace', salvation, or the experience of emptiness is entirely optional. — praxis
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I hesitate to poke my nose into this argument but each of us has personal outlooks that may disagree with what billions of others my believe. Sites devoted to interesting individual ways of discerning reality are devoted to many odd ways to view the universe. It is no insult to disagree with common opinions and should not raise problems. Obviously any opinions should be questioned insofar as their validity is concerned but I doubt insult is useful. — Jan Sand
.Isn't it implied that pretty much everything said here is an opinion?
.Seems like common sense to me, more than philosophy. (Actually, more generally, isn't anything anyone ever says, just an opinion ?
.I mean ... what is a "fact" exactly ?
.If we had clear facts, we wouldn't need this forum. But, that is a separate debate.)
.I mean, this is not a forum for experts, is it ? This is a forum for laypeople to share ideas and thoughts, isn't it ?
.If that is the case, isn't it implied that most of what people say on this forum is not a fact ?
.If, by default, everything said here was a fact, (which seems astronomically unlikely)…
., there would be no real discussion. Just a stating of facts.
.The assumption that whatever anyone says is fact (unless explicitly stated), to me, seems like it could really open up a can of worms. Meaning ... do I need to qualify my responses, each time, as opinions ?
.This is an honest question. If I need to qualify each response, perhaps I need to have a pre-defined signature that will act as a disclaimer, to avoid this kind of unpleasantness each time.
I have responded harshly to what I see as the contemptuous and condescending way he talks about other people - the general public in the previous thread — T Clark
I experience not being separate by simply eating and breathing - consuming things that are not me so that I may continue being me.Sure, fine, but there's a difference between conceptual understanding and experience. Meditation or other forms of manipulating awareness are designed to experience this lack of separation and transcend our own worldview or interest, and view the world from a vantage point that is, in Thomas Nagel's words, "nowhere in particular." — praxis
.I'm curious about your background ... occupation / life phase ... answering is totally optional, of course :)
The consciousness that animates every living form is eternal, but the form that it animates is temporary. So, when one is born, it is the one (eternal) consciousness manifesting as a form, but when one dies, the consciousness doesn't die with that form. In other words, you can think of the form as a channel for the consciousness to pass through. So, each form gets an opportunity to "live" through that consciousness. — Aurora
If this sounds like bullshit, ok, it is not the easiest thing to see.
Just try this one thing ... let's say that someday, you are overwhelmed with anger or some powerful negative feeling/emotion, and suddenly you find yourself stepping back from that emotion and seeing it instead of getting lost in it ... just as an observer, without any judgment of thought ... totally neutral ... and the turmoil suddenly turns to peace. What is that place you are watching those negative emotions from ? Is it the mind ? Or is it something outside the mind/body ? — Aurora
Or, let's say you find yourself staring at something beautiful, like a sunset or a bird on a tree branch, and suddenly, you find yourself at total peace. There is no mind involved, no body involved. Just a perceiving without imposing any ideas/thoughts on it. What is it that perceives? — Aurora
Sometimes, even after a loved one dies (or simply leaves, as in a breakup), the survivors say, "I still feel his presence around the house." The form is dead/gone, so what is it that lingers ? (And no, I'm not alluding to some horror movie crap). — Aurora
What this is really about (and spirituality, in general) is giving a person a new perspective from which to look at life and the world. One might think that this esoteric abstract bullshit has no practical purpose, and that it is just for the books. On the contrary, when you are able to distance yourself from your mind and body, when you realize that your identity is no longer just your mind and body and other forms like material possessions (which is to say, how good you look, how much you know, how much money you make, etc, etc, etc), think about how much it simplifies your life and how much peace is to be had from that realization. — Aurora
Have you ever planned a kickass vacation with a lot of great anticipation ? And then, when the vacation actually came, it sucked ? Or you were anticipating a great date with a hot new girl/guy ? And it turned out to be crap ? Think about it for a minute - what does that prov ?
You enjoyed the anticipation of the future event, not the future event itself, and you enjoyed that anticipation now. You cannot plan to be happy :) ... for the simple reason that you cannot predict the exact circumstances or "form" a future moment will take. You can only react to the form of the present moment (by being happy or sad or whatever). So, you cannot plan to be happy in the future, because the future may involve a divorce, bankruptcy, an earthquake, or a black ant in your food (or a million other things you cannot possibly foresee).
If you really want to "plumb the depths", ask yourself what real happiness is. Is it the temporary ego satisfaction that comes from a new car or a raise at work or how about a sexy new partner ? Or is it something deeper. And, if it is something deeper, does it need to be planned for ? Or enjoyed now ? — Aurora
Views are subjective because they only contain a certain amount of information about the world as opposed to all of it (which would be an objective view, or a view from everywhere). — Harry Hindu
That's bullshit — creativesoul
It might help to flesh out your ideas if you interact with others. creativesoul is no intellectual slouch. — praxis
I say what I have to say about this, not just as some obscure theory I read/heard somewhere and arbitrarily decided is true. I'm quite a practical person; theory doesn't appeal to me much without practical application. So, whatever I speak about here, almost always, is the result of direct practical application in my own life, i.e. based on my experience. Although I have been greatly influenced by one spiritual teacher, I don't take everything he says for granted ... some of what he teaches proved true in my life and some didn't. Needless to say, I'm talking about the part that proved true for me. — Aurora
Did you say to whom you are referring somewhere in this thread or did I miss it? — Buxtebuddha
Oh, I mentioned it here and there, but the guy I'm referring to is Eckhart Tolle. — Aurora
I've heard of him quite a bit but have never read him. I suppose that I should? Is he more insightful than the first Eckhart? — Buxtebuddha
No. Is he new agey? I don't pay that stuff much attention. — Buxtebuddha
So is your expectation that I will respond to (or even read the entirety of) such a post from you :) — Aurora
Don't bother responding to any of my posts again. You're the newest member on my shit list. Congratulations ! :)
I can tell a lot about a person by the way he/she writes ... that includes the choice of words, the tone, etc. I can tell when a piece of prose has substance/depth and when it's just someone trying desperately to sound intelligent :) I can also tell when someone is in a desperate emotionally supercharged struggle to prove himself/herself "right". I instinctively stay away from such people, because they're "unconscious" - completely immersed in ego. I don't need their drama.
And no thanks, I'm quite confident that creativesoul has nothing to teach me. I'm not a complete idiot. I'm not missing anything — Aurora
I think you mean that one needs to detach their emotional investments from what they experience. That would be a more objective outlook if one could attain such a thing.I believe views are also subjective because they’re predisposed to particular objectives. Thought and it’s concepts are goal oriented. A view from nowhere has no purpose. — praxis
Why do you think that there are people that need it and those that don't? What is the difference in those people? What is the difference in those being offended by being called names, and those that aren't? I think you will find the answer to both questions to be the same.To reiterate, the point of this experience is essentialy to relieve existential anxiety. Though I’ve only achieved a very shallow experience of it to date, I believe it works as promised. I imagine there are many people, perhaps you for instance, who are not in need of this relief. — praxis
I think you mean that one needs to detach their emotional investments from what they experience. That would be a more objective outlook if one could attain such a thing. — Harry Hindu
Views have a purpose and that is to provide knowledge of how things are at the moment. — Harry Hindu
If one already knows how things are in all places and at all times, then one wouldn't need a view at all, would they? — Harry Hindu
Why do you think that there are people that need it and those that don't? What is the difference in those people? What is the difference in those being offended by being called names, and those that aren't? I think you will find the answer to both questions to be the same. — Harry Hindu
Well, yeah - a view from everywhere. I don't know how that would possible either, just a like a view from nowhere. So it seems to me that to talk about view from nowhere and from everywhere is complete nonsense. All that makes sense is a view from somewhere at some moment. A view of emptiness is a still a view from somewhere, as I'm not viewing emptiness at the same time you are. In other words, you are simply looking somewhere that I'm not, from somewhere that I am not.Rather, I suppose they would have all views. I can't imagine how that's possible. — praxis
Genes and upbringing, then?I think it's much more complex than what you may be suggesting here. Whatever it is that makes a person more or less prone to existential anxiety may have little to do with their self-confidence or emotional intellegence. — praxis
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