What say you? — TheMadFool
By and large, Kaccayana, this world is supported by a polarity, that of existence and non-existence. But when one sees the origination of the world as it actually is with right discernment, "non-existence" with reference to the world does not occur to one. When one sees the cessation of the world as it actually is with right discernment, "existence" with reference to the world does not occur to one.
I don't think I said it was. I do think there is a different view of the purpose of language in Zen. That often text or speeches are considered lss containers of truth but eliciters of experience. What I am saying is not paraphrasable as 'insight and intuition'. .Insight or intuition is highly valued in Zen, if that's what you're essentially referring to, but it's hardly alien to the West — praxis
I wasn't speaking specifically about koans,but they would be included in eliciting-language.If you're talking about koans, I don't know much about them. I understand them to be a form of contemplation (meditation). — praxis
I think most of the overthinkers, which would be everyone in a way, know what they are getting into. They've thought about it. The idea that they are going to change their relation to thinking is not a problem. But a lot of mulling about, say, breaking down the subject object split or sartori or what the symbols in a certain story mean, that could get in the way. They you end up looking for in meditation and checking and comparing with internal images and hallucinations of what you think you are going to experience, for example.So perhaps the old master's desire to maintain the authority of the book has a valid purpose? Could the book, traditions, the teachings, the authority structures, the costumes, the ceremonies, the implied promises of something wonderful etc be the bait which lures the abstraction fueled becoming addicted student in to the trap of "dying to be reborn"?
You know, if you're trying to catch a mouse you use cheese as bait, not a cat. — Hippyhead
I think they get tossed a few bones, but a lot of abstract mulling is not going to be encouraged.If the goal of the Zen teacher is to serve the student they would seem to have no choice but to meet the new student where they currently are, which would seem to entail a lot of abstract mulling. — Hippyhead
If the goal of the Zen teacher is to serve the student they would seem to have no choice but to meet the new student where they currently are, which would seem to entail a lot of abstract mulling. — Hippyhead
There might well be a sign over the portal of most Zen monasteries NO PHILOSOPHIZING. (Anyone who has attended one of the 10-day Vipassana retreats would know that philosophical questions are likewise discouraged.) If you try asking tricky philosophical questions to a Zen teacher they’ll most likely whack you or assign you to cleaning duties. — Wayfarer
Why is our attention drawn away from the vast majority of reality and towards the tiniest fraction? — Hippyhead
No, I was pointing out that people here were contradicting Buddhism while treating Buddhism as an authority. Not everyone in the thread but those I responded to or those who criticized my response, since I then defended my response to the behavior of others. At no point was I saying that Buddhism was internally contradictory or hypocritical. I think Buddhism, and especially Zen, makes it clear that the kinds of analysis be carried out in this thread, in this context, by at least a number of the participants is a dead end at best and an obstacle to the goals of Buddhist practice at best.This is the subject matter of hypocrisy, and it is not a simple field of study. I think that you are intentionally making it even more complex in the way that you portray Buddhism. I think you represent Buddhism as intrinsically incoherent in relation to hypocrisy, as unknowingly promoting the sort of activity which they say ought to be avoided. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore, Abu Yaqub Al-Sijistani, a renowned Ismaili thinker, suggested the method of double negation; for example: “God is not existent” followed by “God is not non-existent”. This glorifies God from any understanding or human comprehension — Wikipedia
The point of the Ananda Sutta is not a comment on logic as such. The question was 'does the self exist'? And the response indicates it's not a Y/N question.
So the proposition 'the self exists' is neither true nor false. It depends on what you mean when you say 'the self exists'. To say 'it exists' simpliciter is to arrive at a wrong view. To say it doesn't exist is another wrong view.
You can't shove everything into the procrustean bed of logical propositions. But that's really not a comment on logic per se. The Buddha's discourses are generally a model of rationality. — Wayfarer
I think Buddhism, and especially Zen, makes it clear that the kinds of analysis be carried out in this thread, in this context, by at least a number of the participants is a dead end at best and an obstacle to the goals of Buddhist practice at best. — Coben
Habit and context. As Wayfarer said, this is a philosophy forum (an online place where people come to chat about philosophical ideas, and generally with much less rigor that even college papers. Now I think Wayfarer meant, it's a philosophy forum, so it's fine. Well, sure. But not if one is treating Buddhism, especially Zen Buddhism, as the authority. And so when I say Habit, I mean, if any idea comes up, it is habit or culture here to throw analytical thinking and speculation at it. Which is of course fine in terms of philosophical chat, and also nothing I have anything against personally, since I am not a Buddhist, nor do I share Buddhist goals. Though I do think Buddhist masters have some excellent heuristics for achieving those goals. Now if we go against those heuristics while, it seemed to me, putting up other words of masters as authority, it seems like there are some missing assertions. Like, the masters are good and wise in telling stories but their cautions about minimizing abstract thought and speculating about what one will experience or what stories that may not suit their level in meditative experience mean are off. And then one wonders how this was determined. It might be right. But it seems like something worth explaining, directlyI'm not qualified to comment on what Buddhism is. Assuming the above to be true, and we wish to keep doing that which is not suggested :-) it seems reasonable to wonder why Buddhist culture appears to be clogged to overflowing with the kind of analysis Coben is referring to. — Hippyhead
I notice a lot of team identification but not necessarily hving the skills one's team works with. LIke people will be for science, against religion, but in their arguments make all sorts of assertions that neither deduction nor induction support or are even referred to. Mindreading is often quite common is people who see themselves as representing science. If a thread said there were psychic phenomena they would weigh in against it - iow they agree with the conclusions of science but are not so aware of their own methodologies - and so assert things like 'You believe this because you are afraid of death.'And so philosophy becomes a game of wack-a-mole. We can declare faith to be really bad, and so the atheist stops having faith in religious authorities, and begins having faith in science authorities. We can declare analysis to be bad, and then insist on analyzing why that is so. We can declare hate to be bad, and then find ourselves hating fellow Catholics who have a different interpretation of this doctrine. — Hippyhead
As Wayfarer said, this is a philosophy forum (an online place where people come to chat about philosophical ideas — Coben
Now if we go against those heuristics while, it seemed to me, putting up other words of masters as authority, it seems like there are some missing assertions. — Coben
I notice a lot of team identification — Coben
At no point was I saying that Buddhism was internally contradictory or hypocritical. — Coben
I think Buddhism, and especially Zen, makes it clear that the kinds of analysis be carried out in this thread, in this context, by at least a number of the participants is a dead end at best and an obstacle to the goals of Buddhist practice at best. — Coben
3. In the logic we use everyday - classical logic - the "middle" in the law of the excluded "middle" is a contradiction. If you violate the law of the "excluded" middle as the Buddha is doing (described above in 2) the end result should be a contradiction. In other words, the Middle-Path of the Buddha amounts to claiming contradictions are true. Thus, as I mentioned earlier, Zen koans are either full-fledged contradictions or evolving contradictions - Madhyamaka or the Middle-Path manifests in classical logic as contradictions. — TheMadFool
So long as the problem is defined as residing within the content of thought (ie. incorrect understandings) isn't philosophy inevitable? — Hippyhead
I doubt it. I don't believe that Buddhism is being inconsistant on that issue. It is extremely focused on practices, every community and master I encountered, and this is in a wide range of locations, both East and West, discouraged intellectualizing ideas in Zen and to some degree in general.You didn't say it, but you implied that. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you describe the content of thought as "incorrect understandings". Do you think that thought is necessarily wrong? — Metaphysician Undercover
As far as the rest, there are all sorts of admonishments, especially in the Zen form of Buddhism, to avoid intellectualizing issues around Zen. — Coben
Sure, and that's a different thing. That's when you are taking a stand and saying, I can question the masters. What I was reacting to was treating the master's words like scripture and engaging in intellectual analysis in a tradition that discourages that, especially in regard to Zen itself.Yes, but it seems reasonable that one of the things we inspect, challenge and chat about are any limitations involved in the methodology we are using. — Hippyhead
Thank you, concisely put. It would be another thing if the context was critical. and by critical I do not mean necessarily negative.I hear what you're saying, there is a conflict between treating these teachers as authorities, and then ignoring what they are teaching. — Hippyhead
I haven't tracked everyone's participation. Since you started responding to me, you didn't seem to be putting the teachings, via the story, in an authority position. I could be wrong. :razz:Part of the problem may be that those who are truly sincere about walking away from analysis etc tend to be culturally invisible, and thus never become teachers. Thus these fields tend to become dominated by people like me, those who like to endlessly talk about non-talking. :-) — Hippyhead
As far as the rest, there are all sorts of admonishments, especially in the Zen form of Buddhism, to avoid intellectualizing issues around Zen. Not merely that it is unnecessary. — Coben
That's when you are taking a stand and saying, I can question the masters. — Coben
Since you started responding to me, you didn't seem to be putting the teachings, via the story, in an authority position. I could be wrong. — Coben
In metaphysics there are two distinct customary ways (sets of conditions) for violating the law of excluded middle, one is neither is, nor is not, the terms are not applicable, and this is expressed by Aristotle, and the other being both, is and is not, and this is expressed by Hegel. — Metaphysician Undercover
Meditation, chores or work, whatever your duties are. You might end up getting a koan to fuss your brain over. I mean, ya gotta live your life.Ok, to further my Zen education, if intellectualizing is supposed to be largely discarded, what is that supposed to be replaced with? What are the primary methodologies involved, other than being whacked and doing the teacher's laundry? :-) — Hippyhead
Certainly not off topic, no. Perhaps in this thread, but not in the forum.But really what I meant was that given that philosophy is often a process of questioning everything, it seems relevant and appropriate to include philosophy itself in the list of things being challenged. Not off topic on a philosophy forum in other words, imho. — Hippyhead
Yes, and the West tends to take a reductionist relation to such things: they take pieces out of the range of practices. But of course on can be critical. And for me, what if the goal is not my goal, for example. Perhaps the practices are exceptionally good at reaching the goals in Buddhism (and I tend to believe this) but it's not what I want? One can be critical of authorities on this level also. And of course some facets may just be habit and not necessary.As quick example, if religion with all of it's authority structures etc was a living species, we'd have to say it's proven pretty well adapted to it's environment, the human mind. Buddhism is something like 2,500 years old, yes? — Hippyhead
As far as the rest, there are all sorts of admonishments, especially in the Zen form of Buddhism, to avoid intellectualizing issues around Zen. — Coben
But I am going to drop out of this thread. I actually find the amount of negative reactions to this being pointed out rather odd. — Coben
So again, if Buddhism is a process of editing thought content, isn't analysis and philosophy inevitable? — Hippyhead
To illustrate through a contrast, let's imagine that we were to instead define the problem which is being addressed as arising primarily from the nature of thought itself. In such a case, the suggested remedy might be simply reducing the volume and frequency of thought by various mechanical methods, which wouldn't necessarily require much if any philosophy. — Hippyhead
Aristotle seems to have opted for 4 and Hegel 3 in their acts of violating the law of the excluded middle but they're equivalent - different sides of the same coin - because ~(p v ~p) = p & ~p. — TheMadFool
As you can see 18. ~(p v ~p) violates the law of the excluded middle, and the Buddha and Nagarjuna have set their sights on exactly that - they're the Middle-Path guys. But, in classical logic, 18. ~(p v ~p) = (p & ~p) i.e. violating the law of the excluded middle takes the form of a contradiction and this is why I think Zen and Ch'an Buddhism are all about tackling paradoxes which are, to my knowledge, contradictions. — TheMadFool
Well, maybe I accidentally made a good argument that Buddhism is hypocritical. Not my intention. Further I don't think they make an intellectual admonishment. They suggest other activities. The use koans to overload the mental verbal looping. I am presenting it in a more intellectualized form, but hey, I'm not a Buddhist. But if you think they're hypocrites, I am not upset. Further they don't and I am not presenting this in binary terms. It is not 'never intellectualize' but avoid long forays in it. Avoid focusing on it.The point is, that such an admonishment is an intellectualization itself. Therefore presenting this as you do, is to represent Buddhism as hypocritical. — Metaphysician Undercover
Which I get to make since I am not a Buddhist. Honestly this all seems extremely defensive.It's only "the pointing out" which you are doing which is odd, not the reaction of others to it.. You are making the conclusion that Buddhism portrays intellectualizing as necessarily wrong, but that in itself is already an intellectualized conclusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you can't see the difference between long posts analyzing symbols and discussing abstract ideasIf you would follow the example, which you yourself put up, to "fist empty your cup", then you would see that it would be impossible to proceed to the conclusion that one ought to avoid intellectualizing, because this conclusion could only be supported through intellectualizing. — Metaphysician Undercover
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