One only works towards a chosen ideal of Truth (meaning, an end to suffering, nonduality, what have you) — Nasir Shuja
I probably shouldn't speak for Nasir, but I'll give my interpretation:
Truth with a capital "T" is different from "truth". Truth is the ultimate goal of any spiritual being, but whilst one is living in the material realm, one can only catch glimpses of ultimate Truth. One must act in the material realm where we find ourselves in this life, and whenever we act in this realm things will not be perfect as Truth is. We have to find meaning and strive to limit suffering (in Truth there is no suffering but in the material realm which isn't perfect suffering is unavoidable), to become more spirit than matter (Truth is Spirit with a capital "S", hence Nasir's use of the term "nonduality"), etc.
Logic and empiricism are good tools to understand the material realm; but love, peace, joy, empathy, understanding, and patience are needed to understand Truth. — Noah Te Stroete
Well, you are entitled to that opinion, but the virtues listed above are good for atheists, too. — Noah Te Stroete
Spirituality has nothing to do with critical thinking — Noah Te Stroete
Ontology and phenomenology rarely dealt with critical thinking in the Anglo-American analytic sense — Noah Te Stroete
Ontology and phenomenology rarely dealt with critical thinking in the Anglo-American analytic sense
— Noah Te Stroete
That's a sentence you could write. I just don't know why you'd write it. — Terrapin Station
Anglo-American analytic philosophy's handling of ontology is lacking in how things seem or feel — Noah Te Stroete
and consistent and coherent with scientific observation. It's mathematical models have very accurate predictive power. — Noah Te Stroete
Unfortunately philosophy should have something to do with critical thinking. — Terrapin Station
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