To my mind, this was a really great OP on this forum — ssu
In the 19th Century they had a far more apt name for economics. They called it "Political Economy". And that's what it is, no matter in how much in mathematics you disguise it, it is political and part of politics. It's basically a straight lie to try to make economics to be something like a (natural) science and somehow apolitical. It simply isn't that. The dominant questions have been the same since Antiquity. The story of the Grachi brothers tells that the question about redistribution of wealth isn't something we started thinking about thanks to Marx and the 19th Century socialists. — ssu
For me, the simple reason why there can be "enchantment of magic" is that these questions are moral, not something objective, which using the scientific method can give us the right answer. If it's subjective, why not have some magic in it? — ssu
So I posit two somethings: a self and a spell. — Moliere
I'm not sure I follow. Religion and nationalism clearly exist in the world, so why would they be necessarily supernatural in any respect? — Count Timothy von Icarus
maybe someone will find it interesting. — Jamal
What would you say is this 'self'? Is that I that posits? — unenlightened
A tiger doesn't proclaim his tigritude, he pounces. — Wole Soyinka
We have all been processed on Procrustean beds. At least some of us have managed to hate what they have made of us. Inevitably we see the other as the reflection of the occasion of our own self-division. The others have become installed in our hearts, and we call them ourselves. Each person, not being himself either to himself or the other, just as the other is not himself to himself or to us, in being another for another neither recognizes himself in the other, nor the other in himself. Hence being at least a double absence, haunted by the ghost of his own murdered self, no wonder modern man is addicted to other persons, and the more addicted, the less satisfied, the more lonely. — R.D. Laing, The Politics of Experience/The Bird of Paradise
Thisness—which is also known by medieval philosophers as haecceity—has its own special version in the work of Adorno, namely the non-identical. It’s the part of the thing that remains unique to it when you bring it under a category or think of it in terms of concepts, but which is lost sight of in this process. The singular thing is non-identical with the specimen, the latter being an instantiation, an example defined by categories, universals, or concepts. But the thing is not exhausted by any category you put it in, any abstract universal you bring it under, or any set of concepts you apply to describe it. — Jamal
Thisness—which is also known by medieval philosophers as haecceity — Jamal
Tathata, which means "suchness" or "thusness," is term used primarily in Mahāyāna Buddhism to denote "reality," or "the way things truly are". It's understood that the true nature of reality is ineffable, beyond description and conceptualization.
Tathata is the root of Tathagata, which is an alternate term for "Buddha." Tathagata was the term the historical Buddha used most often to refer to himself. Tathagata can mean either "one who has thus come" or "one who has thus gone." It is sometimes translated "one who is such."
Tathata is used interchangeably with śūnyatā to denote the true nature.
Tathata
I can't help but also notice the resonances with Heidegger's 'presencing'.
Outside the web of discursive thought and conceptualisation. — Wayfarer
What we have now in postmodernity (or “liquid modernity”) is the negative disenchantment, without much of the positive, critical disenchantment, which was at its height with the socialist challenge to capitalism and the supporting Marxist theoretical challenge to ideology. — Jamal
I agree. Objectivity isn't limited to the scientific method used in natural sciences.I think we can describe things objectively without describing them on the pattern of natural science. — Jamal
Maybe people are increasingly escaping the spell of ideology—it’s just that there seems to be nothing they can do about it. — Jamal
Bankei, a Zen teacher, was giving a talk to a gathering of students interested in learning from his wisdom.
In the midst of the talk, a follower of another teacher arrived and expressed their doubtsabout Bankei’s authority in comparison to their own teacher. The individual interrupted Bankei and began speaking proudly of the impressive feats of their own teacher…
”The founder of our sect can stand on one side of the river, hold a brush in his hand, and write calligraphy on a scroll on the other side of the river. He has many miraculous powers.”
He then asked Bankei, ”Can you perform such miracles?”
Bankei gently replied, ”These are impressive tricks, but that is not the manner of Zen. My miracle is that when I feel hungry I eat, and when I feel thirsty I drink.”
But you posit self and spell. I am asking about the ontology. — unenlightened
A summary. I propose/suppose:—
1. Enchantment. The magician, or the enchantress, tells you that you are Mummy's special little boy, or God's beloved creation, or a terrible sinner, or whatever, brave or cowardly, smart or stupid, rich or poor, a Roman or a Jew. You believe.
2. Disenchantment. The magician, or the enchantress, tells you that you that The Enlightenment has happened and you no longer believe anything except the truth. You believe.
3. Enlightenment. There is no you, no belief, no enchantress or magician, and no enlightenment, and yet there is sleeping and waking and eating. The narrative has stopped. — unenlightened
Those few who took the trouble to visit Japan and begin the practice of Zen under a recognized Zen master or who joined the monastic Order soon discovered that it was a very different matter from what the popularizing literature had led them to believe. They found that in the traditional Zen monastery zazen is never divorced from the daily routine of accessory disciplines. To attenuate and finally dissolve the illusion of the individual ego, it is always supplemented by manual work to clean the temple, maintain the garden, and grow food in the grounds; by strenuous study with attendance at discourses on the sutras and commentaries; and by periodical interviews with the roshi, to test spiritual progress. Acolytes are expected to develop indifference to the discomforts of heat and cold on a most frugal vegetarian diet and to abstain from self-indulgence in sleep and sex, intoxicating drinks and addictive drugs. Altogether Zen demands an ability to participate in a communal life as regimented and lacking in privacy as the army. — Harold Stewart
In the story towards enlightenment it seems dis-enchantment is a necessary intermediate step, because it's a dis-spell meant to sent an enchanted one on a quest or path which will unfold the original enchantment — Moliere
In a soldier's stance, I aimed my hand
At the mongrel dogs who teach
Fearing not I'd become my enemy
In the instant that I preach
My existence led by confusion boats
Mutiny from stern to bow
[Refrain]
Ah, but I was so much older then
I'm younger than that now — Bob Dylan
Not really, the way I'm telling it. Which is that 'disenchanted' is the identification of the 'gritty realist' who stalks the boards explaining to us primitives how our beliefs keep us detached from reality. Instead of examining their own beliefs – 'Life has no meaning' as a meaningful fact. It is a step off the path, rather than a step on it, like Bunyan's Slough of Despond. — unenlightened
But everything one reads about a real enlightenment suggests that there is no path. One requires a disciplined intention to strip oneself of unnecessary baggage, but the step out of oneself is a single step, not a journey; a step that one cannot take oneself, but that is given by grace, or comes as a sudden insight, unexpectedly when the ground has been prepared.
In a soldier's stance, I aimed my hand
At the mongrel dogs who teach
Fearing not I'd become my enemy
In the instant that I preach
My existence led by confusion boats
Mutiny from stern to bow
[Refrain]
Ah, but I was so much older then
I'm younger than that now
— Bob Dylan
The attainment of youth, you see, is the real cure. One dies every day and thus remains Forever Young. — unenlightened
↪unenlightened I think the free-and-easy depiction of Zen Buddhism propagated by popular books in the West is nothing like the lived reality. — Wayfarer
Thus a disrespect for power does not lead, as in the days of the socialist movement, to an actual challenge to that power, or even a notion that it could be challenged. Isn't this what we saw in fascism, and more recently in the Trump presidency: the desire instead to see the replacement of "generic bores" with "powerful, awe-inspiring and even terrible individuals"? — Jamal
are people today enchanted by magic spells? — Jamal
:up:Max Weber, to whom we owe the concept of disenchantment in sociology, had the dialectical idea of re-enchantment via disenchantment, identifiable in a society marked by "incommensurable value-fragmentation into a plurality of alternative metanarratives" (SEP) in the vacuum left by the disenchantment of the Enlightenment.
The fact that these narratives are incommensurable somewhat goes against the thought that because there are so many of them competing, they cannot be incontestable. With the fragmentation of values, ostensibly competing narratives do not compete rationally, judged by the same standards and according to the same logic. They are a matter of personal taste, and nobody can argue you out of what you like. — Jamal
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