depersonalization disorder — Gregory
It's rooted in either something that happened to you or a chemical imbalance. So figuring yourself on this is first key, and if that doesn't help and you feel stuck Zoloft or ketamine infusions can help. — Gregory
Ch’an/Zen Buddhism has beliefs, but it is not about belief, it’s about unrelenting and strict discipline (sadhana) which is practiced in a highly controlled and disciplined setting according to the traditional monastic discipline (vinaya). — Wayfarer
In other words the very idea that humans can directly know the nature of reality is itself an article of groundless faith — Janus
The whole phenomenon could be explained merely in terms of brain chemistry for all we can tell. — Janus
It is nearer to a form of gnosticism than to doxastic religions. — Wayfarer
It's not groundless to Buddhists, as 'the Buddha' is 'one who knows' - it's what the honorific 'Buddha' means. Of course, for you that might be a matter of belief. And in practice for Buddhists at some point it often requires acceptance on faith, with the proviso that it can ultimately be seen directly by them also. — Wayfarer
Cannot be, eh? You know this, how? — Wayfarer
there is nothing that can be presented as evidence — Janus
Entire cultures have been built around them. — Wayfarer
Liberal secularism is itself a violent regulator of ‘private’ belief. You can believe whatever you like, provided you do not believe that your personal beliefs are actually objectively true, or matter in any public way.
You see why I quoted this to you? You act like an enforcer of this outlook on this forum. — Wayfarer
The main problem with our usual understanding of secularity is that it is taken-for-granted, so we are not aware that it is a worldview. It is an ideology that pretends to be the everyday world we live in. Many assume that it is simply the way the world really is, once superstitious beliefs about it have been removed. Yet that is the secular view of secularity, its own self-understanding... The secularity we presuppose must be "de-naturalized" in order to realize how unique and peculiar such a worldview is...
Western secularity, including its capitalist economy, originated as the result of an unlikely concatenation of circumstances. To survive within the Roman Empire, early Christianity had to render unto Caesar what was Caesar's, and keep a low profile that did not challenge the state; spiritual concerns were necessarily distinguished from political issues. Later struggles between the Emperor and the Papacy tended to reinforce that distinction. By making private and regular confession compulsory, the late medieval Church also promoted the development of a subjective interiority that encouraged more personal religiosity. New technologies such as the printing press made widespread literacy and hence more individualistic religion possible.
All that made the Reformation possible. By privatizing an unmediated relationship between more individualized Christians and a more transcendent God, Luther's emphasis on salvation-by-faith-alone eliminated the intricate web of mediation—priests, sacraments, canon law, pilgrimages, public penances, etc. — that, in effect, had constituted the sacred dimension of this world. The religiously-saturated medieval continuity between the natural and the supernatural was sundered by internalizing faith and projecting the spiritual realm far above our struggles in this world. "These realms, which contained respectively religion and the world, were hermetically sealed from each other as though constituting separate universes". The medieval understanding of our life as a cycle of sin and repentance was replaced by the more disciplined character-structure required in the modern world, sustained by a more internalized conscience that did not accept the need for external mediation or the validation of priests.
As God slowly disappeared above the clouds, the secular became increasingly dynamic, accelerating into the creative destruction to which today we must keep readjusting. What often tends to be forgotten in the process is that the distinction between sacred and secular was originally a religious distinction, devised to empower a new type of Protestant spirituality: that is, a more privatized way to address our sense of lack and fill the 'God-shaped hole'. By allowing the sacred pole to fade away, however, we have lost the original religious raison d' etre for that distinction. That disappearance of the sacred has left us with the secular by itself, bereft of the spiritual resources originally designed to cope with it, because secular life is increasingly liberated from any religious perspective or supervision. When religion is understood as an individual process of inner faith-commitment, we are more likely to accede to a diminished understanding of the objective world "outside" us, denuding the secular realm of any sacred dimension.
The basic problem with the sacred/secular bifurcation has become more evident as the sacred has evaporated. The sacred provided not only ritual and morality but a grounding identity that explained the meaning of our life-in-the-world. Whether or not we now believe this meaning to be fictitious makes no difference to the metaphysical security and ultimate foundation that it was felt to provide. A solution was provided for death and our God-shaped sense of lack, which located them within a larger spiritual context and therefore made it possible to endure them. Human striving and suffering gained meaning; they were not accidental or irrelevant, but served a vital role within the grand structure of things.
What may be misleading about this discussion of an enervated sacral dimension is that it still seems to suggest superimposing something (for example, some particular religious understanding of the meaning of our lives) onto the secular world (that is, the world "as it really is"). My point is the opposite: our usual understanding of the secular is a deficient worldview (in Buddhist terms, a delusion) distorted by the fact that one half of the original duality has gone missing, although now it has been absent so long that we have largely forgotten about it.
This may be easier to see if we think of God and the sacral dimension as, most broadly, symbols for the "spiritual" aspect of life in a more psychological sense: that is, the dimension that encompasses our concerns about the meaning and value of human life in the cosmos. The sacred becomes that sphere where the mysteries of our existence—birth and death, tragedy, anxiety, hope, transformation—are posed and contemplated. From this perspective, the secular is not the world-as-it-really-is when magic and superstition have been removed, but the supposed objectivity that remains when "subjectivity"—including these basic issues about human role and identity—has been brushed away as irrelevant to our understanding of what the universe really is. In the process our spiritual concerns are not refuted; there is simply no way to address them in a secular world built by pruning value from fact, except as subjective preferences that have no intrinsic relationship with the "real" material world we just happen to find ourselves within.
Gnosticism is the belief that certain kinds of experiences tell us something about the nature of reality. That cannot ever be anything more than a belief or feeling, no matter how convincing the experiences may be. — Janus
Note, I'm not claiming that peak experiences don't tell us anything about the nature of reality, but simply that we have no way of knowing that they do, no matter how certain we may feel that they do. — Janus
The main problem with our usual understanding of secularity is that it is taken-for-granted, so we are not aware that it is a worldview. It is an ideology that pretends to be the everyday world we live in.
The solution to this could be to embrace the experiences for their own value, and don't bother trying to translate them in to some collection of abstractions. Personally, I tend to see the abstractions and conclusions etc as being sort of a waste product of the experiences. We eat a nice dinner, and then perhaps we have to go to the bathroom. — Hippyhead
Yes, thus the so very common assumption by forum atheists that they bear no burden of proof, that this is the other fellow's burden exclusively. — Hippyhead
I'm tired of being accused by you of 'intellectual dishonesty'. I studied an MA in Buddhist Studies, it cost me $20 grand to do it, and I didn't do it for any material gain. Of my final thesis, the thesis supervisor said it was of good enough quality to include in his teaching material. But if that's your belief, you're welcome to it, and I'm done arguing about it with you. — Wayfarer
You haven't done arguing about it with me; you haven't even begun to. — Janus
It’s simply not worth discussing it with someone whose mind is already made up. It’s a waste of time for both parties. — Wayfarer
What this means to me, is that you don't understand the answers I have tried to provide. — Wayfarer
Why would you say that? — Janus
It is the theist who is claiming that something invisible exists. — Janus
It is the theist who is claiming that something invisible exists — Janus
I don't believe any conclusions can be rationally derived from them. — Janus
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