I think he was referring to the term 'flow' in music or being in the 'zone'. One is in the present moment and doesn't deviate from it. — Posty McPostface
Whatever it takes to break out of near-solipsism, which I think almost trapped me, and has become more common recently. — 0 thru 9
The present is a division between the future and the past. There is no "present moment" because by the time you say "now" it is in the past. So what we call "living in the present" is not living in that moment which is a dimensionless boundary between past and future, because there is no such thing. What we call "living in the present" is living in a time which is partially past and partially future. Depending on what we are doing, and thinking about, we might sometimes focus more on the past part, and other times more on the future part. We can't focus on the present part because there is no such thing. That would be delusional. In doing something like playing music we must be very much focused on the future part "what is coming", and very little focused on the past part, "what has just happened". — Metaphysician Undercover
This sticks out from your post. Or has significance to me. If you feel trapped in solipsism, then is doubt possible? No, hence you live in reality if doubt is possible. So, the Cartesian evil demon is there to remind us that we live in reality, and not in some solipsistic world. That's how I resolved the problem of solipsism. — Posty McPostface
Don’t exactly know how this relates, but a quote occurs to me somewhat dealing with identifying, etc.
I can’t remember the exact words or who said it. But something like...
Perhaps the problem with our egos is not that they are too big, but that they are too small. Too narrow, local, and limited. You’re the whole world. You are everything, all mass and all energy... everything you see, everything that is... that is your true bottomline identify.
— 0 thru 9
Thanks for the quote. Quite interesting to posit things that way. I think it's true that we have a small sphere of interest and enlarging it would result in more care in the world. But, then how does one enlarge one's ego without the negative connotation associated with it? — Posty McPostface
But how? How do you disidentification yourself from thought? — Posty McPostface
What is the primary purpose of this thread from your point of view?
1) Understanding detachment theory.
2) Experiencing detachment. — Jake
So if there is a way to completely scrub the mind free of thought for at least a short time, then that could be worth having.
— 0 thru 9
A lack of precision in my words above may have given the impression that I'm arguing for a "mind free of thought". What I meant to suggest, and should have said more better :smile: is to enhance our ability to manage thought. That's a more realistic goal, a more practical plan, something that can be acted on immediately. Again, we generally take such a common sense, practical, ongoing management approach with other functions of the body, and no one has presented a convincing argument as to why we shouldn't do the same with the bodily function we call thought.
I must say the same about your untenable argument against thought itself, unfortunately. I’m sympathetic to it, but as of yet still unconvinced. Keep trying though if you’d like, for I think it an interesting discussion.
— 0 thru 9
I would agree from long experience that tracing the problem back to it's source in the medium of thought is not especially useful, because what almost everybody prefers to do is debate at the level of the content of thought. So for example, I'd suggest that taking up yoga would be far more useful than my intellectual analysis of the problem. But intellectually, within that limited sphere, I agree it's interesting. It surely is to me obviously.
The best I seem to be able to do at the moment in terms of persuading you that human suffering arises from the way thought itself operates is to point to the universality of human suffering. Perhaps we need another thread on the nature of thought so we don't further clog this thread with that subject? — Jake
’ve never heard “thought” referred to as a “bodily function” before. But I appreciate creative writing. — 0 thru 9
However, I would agree that thought is intimately related to many if not all problems one experiences. — 0 thru 9
Both.
— Posty McPostface
Both = Neither. — Jake
However, I would agree that thought is intimately related to many if not all problems one experiences.
— 0 thru 9
Not intimately related. Problems are literally made of thought. Situations exist independently of our minds. Problems are our relationship with a situation, ie. thoughts. — Jake
So, then let's start with this if both can't be had. — Posty McPostface
When I was in college I read a lot of Jiddu Krishnamurti, a speaker/writer who addresses these kinds of topics. His career lasted something like 60+ years and he was quite prolific, so there was a lot to read. — Jake
Around the same time the book Be Here Now was published by Ram Dass. The book looked much like a children's comic book so I thumbed through it once and then dismissed it because after all, I was a college sophomore, I was an intellectual, I don't read baby books!! :smile: — Jake
EXPERIENCE: The three words "be here now" from Ram Dass are an extremely more efficient way to proceed towards experience. And putting the theory so concisely is very much in the spirit of the experience itself, whereas theorists like Krishnamurti (and this post!) are essentially heading in the opposite direction. — Jake
But this subject doesn't really work like that. A little theory might be useful as a kind of circus to get the attention of compulsive over thinkers like you and me, a kind of bait. But the theory very quickly becomes more of an excuse standing in the way of the experience rather than a path to the experience. — Jake
1) If it's theory you want, enjoy the vast pile of it already available.
2) If it's peace you want, proceed towards "be here now" by the shortest possible path.
3) If you don't know what you want, you probably won't get it. — Jake
Yes, I understand; but, how does this relate to 'disidentification'? I can see some relation to it in terms of the futility of disidentification in regards to confronting the present if that's all possible as you say. — Posty McPostface
"narrative" I think is the word you missed. Anticipation happens, but in the absence of narrative thought, which is the sense of self, the music plays itself. — unenlightened
Problems are literally made of thought. Situations exist independently of our minds. Problems are our relationship with a situation, ie. thoughts. — Jake
To tell you the truth, I've been reading this thread, and haven't yet figured out exactly what disidentification is. Maybe it involves recognizing that we live in the past and future, rather than at the present. Therefore there is no such things as "I am", only what I was, and what I will be. — Metaphysician Undercover
My question would be what is identity in the sense being used here, as one's personal identity? Is your identity what others assign to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
In this case detachment would be to separate yourself from this, and create your own identity. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is your "existing identity" and which way are you going in your detachment? — Metaphysician Undercover
So which identity is it that you are seeking detachment from, the identity you have assigned to yourself, or the identity which others have assigned to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Wouldn't that just be assigning yourself an identity though? How could you detach yourself from this "ideal identity" you've assigned to yourself, without turning back to the identity which others have assigned to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
To tell you the truth, I've been reading this thread, and haven't yet figured out exactly what disidentification is. Maybe it involves recognizing that we live in the past and future, rather than at the present. Therefore there is no such things as "I am", only what I was, and what I will be. — Metaphysician Undercover
So which identity is it that you are seeking detachment from, the identity you have assigned to yourself, or the identity which others have assigned to you?
— Metaphysician Undercover
Both. — Posty McPostface
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