The person who does not have the same insight as another might still have the capacity to have that insight, if the way is shown. — Metaphysician Undercover
But insight is present or it is absent, and there is no method, or training, or process or 'way' towards it. That is mere knowledge that is accumulated over time. — unenlightened
how is it developed, if not through magic? — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, you did mention it! :grin: It's too late now. You must tell us about it and not just leave us in mystery!And in interest of letting you folks continue i'm not even going to mention Un-Gnosis. — skyblack
Well, you did mention it! :grin: It's too late now. You must tell us about it and not just leave us in mystery! — Alkis Piskas
Mystery can create various effects: from despair to frustration to indifference to wondering to interest to thurst for knowledge ... The mystery I mentioned had nothing to do with any of them. It was just a figure of speech. :smile:Does mystery bother you? Or does it move you? — skyblack
Mystery can create various effects: from despair to frustration to wondering to interest to thurst for knowledge ... The mystery I mentioned had nothing to do with any of them. It was just a figure of speech. — Alkis Piskas
That is to say that I regard anything experienced and anything known to be aspects of the physical and thus not spiritual. This is not to deny the reality of the spiritual, because such would be a gnostic claim to know the unreality of the spiritual. Rather I would place the spiritual in that place 'whereof one cannot speak'. — unenlightened
You make 'the spiritual' sound like 'the emotional'. (that's not intended as an adverse criticism, just an observation). — Tom Storm
I don't see what else it could be. Can you think of an alternative? — Janus
What is different about Gospel of Thomas is the emphasis upon betraying one's own being as the danger involved. The proximity between what can kill you or give you life. — Paine
Have you ever had a puzzle or a problem that you have tried to work out for a long time without success, and then suddenly, without effort, you have the answer, clear and simple? Is that magic? — unenlightened
Do you not see that this exchange is exactly what I have described, that there is an understanding that cannot be conveyed - I say some words, but I cannot make room in you for a new idea. You need to have an insight! — unenlightened
I just call it the ineffable. But I generally agree with you. For some believers I suspect there is a recognition of transcendence that sits above and beyond emotion and is more in keeping with apophenic traditions. — Tom Storm
Did you mean apophatic? — Janus
The former (transcendental) perspective seems to have more in common with apophatic stances, and the latter (transcendent) with the cataphatic, but I must admit that the more I try to think about this distinction the more it seems to dissolve into a kind of fog, and it starts to look like a fudge. — Janus
Right.But it is usually better to ask. It also gives the other a chance to process more. — skyblack
You might say that it just came to me, "bang!", as insight, but I would say that it is really the product of all those no's, and going around in circles. The solution never would have come to me if I hadn't gone through that process of elimination first. — Metaphysician Undercover
Looking at the state of the modern human world, seemingly headed for complete self-destruction guided by secular science, it is apparent to me that the total contempt for religion that is so fashionable may be leading to the neglect of something important. I call it 'insight', and emphasise that it is something one cannot control or produce at will, but something that comes to one perhaps, or does not. It is something personal, but not of the self. This is not a contradiction of science, but it is beyond the scope of the scientific method, which without it becomes inhuman and mechanical and leads to destruction. In the small, it is a sudden understanding of something; in the large, it is a 'road to Damascus' transformation of one's life. It would be a serious mistake, if one has such a moment, to imagine that one has deserved or achieved it; that would be to add to the self when one should subtract. — unenlightened
as to internal boundaries, I'm not at all clear what you mean. — unenlightened
Consider the "thinking self" as a type of system. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's like playing Monopoly on a Risk board. — unenlightened
maybe because you've already designated that place as "whereof one cannot speak', you see no point in trying. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suggest a new thread. — unenlightened
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