At the moment, I am reading on the transpersonal school of philosophy, and I wonder if you have read much in this direction? — Jack Cummins
I am interested in most traditions of current thought, but I may be the only person interested in the tradition of transpersonal philosophy. — Jack Cummins
It's always seemed to me that the question What is the real? persists unavoidably because it frames all other questions insofar as they (absolutely) presuppose it. Philosophical discourse reflects on its "ground rules", so to speak, even as philosophers strive to raise probative questions without begging them and thereby gradually unlearn irrational (i.e. self-immiserating) habits. In other words: Is the real "God", "gods" or godless? and the ontological, axiological & epistemological implications of these aporia, respectively. In the end, one decides on which aporia ("ground rules") to commit to, as much on that philosophically comparative basis as on an existential-exigent basis.I may give up communicating on this forum at all, because sometimes it feels as though the agenda is just about the question of whether God exists or not. — Jack Cummins
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