T Clark
The west interpreting the east in a western way. This doesn't say anything about the actual ideas. — Noble Dust
unenlightened
Episode 7: We’re Together In Dreams: Dreaming and Western EsotericismEach and every person on Earth, including you, gentle listener, enters into radically altered states of consciousness, ands visions on a regular basis. we've all experienced the kind of impossible occurrences in which magic specialises.
The west interpreting the east in a western way. — Noble Dust
Noble Dust
Noble Dust
I think the glamour for us will be more to do with atheistic superiority. — unenlightened
unenlightened
Isn't that the world we live in? — Noble Dust
Banno
Did you start a podcast Banno? — The Opposite
unenlightened
T Clark
But the point remains that we interpret Eastern thought through a Western lens, i.e. your description of Taoism as "meat and potatoes philosophy". — Noble Dust
unenlightened
Don't make me come down to NY and lay some Tao upside your head. — T Clark
javra
I would appreciate particularly the sceptical response to Episode 5: Methodologies for the Study of Magic. — unenlightened
Heracloitus
P.s. Me? I too will sometimes blow a runny nose but I don’t make much of it — javra
Agent Smith
ChatteringMonkey
I would appreciate particularly the sceptical response to Episode 5: Methodologies for the Study of Magic. However the warning about glamour particularly applies to the sceptic if they assume a superior position. One of the aspects of magic discussed is that of its normativity - magic as foreign/illegitimate religion. The high priests of science have cast out all the demons? Then why are we not in heaven already? — unenlightened
unenlightened
That's something that is lacking in Western philosophy, which tends to focus on mind/pure thought (forgetting the body), and which gets a whole lot more attention in eastern philosophy (rites, meditation, etc.). So I do think this is an important topic, but I would rather want to explore it from a psychological/physiological naturalist point of view, rather than from a magical supra-natural point of view... if that makes sense. — ChatteringMonkey
ChatteringMonkey
Well I'd say the esoteric is whatever Western tradition ignores.... and Western tradition is more than Western philosophy I suppose, we did have a couple of religions playing a role in our history.That's something that is lacking in Western philosophy, which tends to focus on mind/pure thought (forgetting the body), and which gets a whole lot more attention in eastern philosophy (rites, meditation, etc.). So I do think this is an important topic, but I would rather want to explore it from a psychological/physiological naturalist point of view, rather than from a magical supra-natural point of view... if that makes sense.
— ChatteringMonkey
The esoteric as whatever Western philosophy neglects or denies, is almost a tautology. — unenlightened
But I wonder how a naturalist account of the supernatural, or a rational account of the irrational can possibly work. I'll have to wait and see I suppose... — unenlightened
Jack Cummins
javra
If one believed in magic, one might say these phrases are magical incantations. — emancipate
unenlightened
The question still remains, how does one deal with the irrational with reason? — ChatteringMonkey
Noble Dust
unenlightened
unenlightened
Changeling
unenlightened
unenlightened
The Shadow is hidden in moral knowledge. — frank
unenlightened
frank
Perhaps I need to explain my own aphorism. Moral knowledge is esoteric because it requires an initiation, which is described in the OT as 'The Fall'. It means nothing to the uninitiated, who think it must be a species of desire or some such. — unenlightened
Ciceronianus
unenlightened
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