Michael Ossipoff         
         Nisargadatta said that birth is a calamity. Well, you're in a life because you're the protagonist in one of the infinitely-many hypothetical life-experience possibility-stories. Therefore, it would be quite meaningless to speak of the person distinct from the life. The person, by his/her very nature, is in the life.
.Can you prove this?
.I can see what you mean in a "possible worlds" scenario but that is not quite the same as a soul migrating to different bodies.
Michael Ossipoff         
         .It goes back to the idea of what makes me "me". Can I ever be otherwise? Is that even a legitimate question? I don't think it is.
.If I was not me, there is/was/will be no me. However, the possibility of a person can be projected, though this is not the same as the possibility can be actualized by just any birth-related event. It would have to be that birth related event to be me.
.Have you ever had the experience of waking from a dream in which you knew something that was really important,and really, indescribably, good, but not remembering what it was?
.
A number of people report that experience. Spiritual teachers say that it wasn't a dream. They say that you were waking from deep-sleep, and experiencing a rare memory of it.
.Possibly. But this just speaks to the fact that, every night, people mostly look forward to this blissful state of conscious-nothingness. Unfortunately for me, I'm a bad sleeper, so rarely experience this.
.I'd say that is the ideal state. No stress, no decisions, no suffering, just purely existing.
.Yes, [in deep sleep]the brain is doing "something". It is not complete physical-nothingness. However, it is very close to conscious-nothingness.
.As with birth, what is the point of experiencing at all? What are we really trying to do here in waking life with all this instrumentality of the everyday?
Michael Ossipoff         
         
Magnus Anderson         
         I understand the problem. NOTHING, defined as nonexistence, is difficult to grasp. We're in the habit of or are confined to understanding in terms of attributes/properties which, by far, are positive in nature. What I mean is we need some attributes that are attached to a concept or object and only then do we even begin to understand them. However, unlike most objects (mental/physical) NOTHING is defined in the negative. In fact it is the ultimate negative - the absence of everything. In a way we could say "There's NOTHING to understand." — TheMadFool
This probably doesn't make sense give what I've said above but I have commented on how math can make sense of NOTHING by equating it to zero. — TheMadFool
I think "nothing", the word, is quite different from other words. Other words have physical/mental referents but "nothing", by definition, lacks any referent. — TheMadFool
Negative concepts are defined in relation to one's expectations. — Magnus Anderson
Cabbage Farmer         
         I presume not. How many senses of the word are there? I'm not sure the list is determinate, nor that I could make myself responsible for all the relevant senses from here to eternity.And you mean that in every sense of the word? — Janus
1x0         
         
Devolved         
         
believenothing         
         
wellwisher         
         
believenothing         
         
Marcus de Brun         
         
believenothing         
         The eyes and brain don't actually see the type, since there is no photon output, coming from the type, to stimulate the brain. — wellwisher
believenothing         
         The concept 'No-thing' presupposes the existence of things, and as all things are mind constructs, the concept comes attached to both a (P) world and an (M) world. Therefore 'nothing' can be correctly defined as the absence of things in a universe that is apriori composed of things, and thinking things. — Marcus de Brun
wellwisher         
         "if you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares back at you" : Nietzsche — believenothing
charles ferraro         
         
charles ferraro         
         
charles ferraro         
         
Joshs         
         
charles ferraro         
         
Joshs         
         
Christoffer         
         In what other way can we make sense of N? — TheMadFool
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