Well, I for one will try my best to respond to what you state, and not jump to any conclusions about your sanity. — universeness
For me, this is a brave claim/conviction indeed. May I ask you for a percentage credence level that you would currently assign to all the 'truths' put forward by Buddhism and/or Buddhists, as a kind of 'general' or 'ad hoc' metric? For example, I consider myself more in line with hard or strong atheism, in that I am 99.999% personally convinced that the supernatural has no demonstrable existent.
Would you be willing to state that you are 100% sure that the main tenets of Buddhism are sound? — universeness
I am happy for you if you have found a doctrine of life (Buddhism), that you find so compelling and that has acted as a strong bulwark for you, as you face life's inevitable personal adversaries, but, as perhaps an annoying skeptic. I have to ask, what are these sums you are talking about?
How can you be so sure you are adding them up correctly?
philosophical foundation of mysticism — FrancisRay
You say "Perennial Philosophy" explains but you do not give (or summarize) the explanation. — 180 Proof
It predicts that all metaphysical questions are undecidable and gives answers for all such questions. — FrancisRay
You are claiming to know a fact that you cannot possibly know. The recent work by folks like Stuart Hameroff in conjunction with Roger Penrose. An attempt to find common ground between quantum mechanics and human consciousness, demonstrates to me, that we will always tug against your statement above. I think it's unwise to think that the scientific method will never crack at least the 'how' of human consciousness.There is no empirical method for proving that consciousness exists. — FrancisRay
In what way is behaviorism or its past popularity proof that there is no empirical method that can prove consciousness exists? A human beings 'behaviour,' impacted or influenced by the instructions/education/nurture/daily experiences/culture a person was 'raised' within, has little to do with whether or not consciousness exists. Are you suggesting that a newborn human, maintained physically (perhaps by non-communicative machines,) but not interacted with by any other sentient, would not be conscious?This is proved by the past popularity of Behaviorism. — FrancisRay
A science of consciousness would require a study of the actual phenomenon, and not just a lot of speculation. — FrancisRay
The study of the actual phenomenon is called mysticism. — FrancisRay
Thank you for the mention. It's been a while. — Existential Hope
For instance, it is today fairly uncontentious in the sciences to claim that God does not exist, that space and time do not exist, that consciousness is fundamental and that the source of existence is empirically invisible. As these ideas and others are developed and integrated we come ever closer to the world as described by the Upanishads. The quantum pioneers were well aware of this, albeit that mainstream physics seems to have regressed since then into an entrenched ideological position. . ,.. — FrancisRay
Thank you for pointing this out. @FrancisRay is like too many others who traffic in "doctrines" and dogmas and take offense when someone attempts to cross-examine their so-called "truths". So now @universeness is taking a different approach but I suspect he won't get anywhere philosophically interesting with FrancisRay either because there is no there there – just :sparkle:180's approach to philosophy is dialectical. A mode of inquiry. It is antithetical to doctrines. It asks questions but a doctrinaire approach is based on the assumption that answers to these questions have been given. There may be some common ground here in undecidable. Socratic (but not Hegelian) dialectic is an examination of opinions ... — Fooloso4
I steer well clear of these sorts of speculations. I stick to metaphysics, where logic and reason are the only deciding factors. — FrancisRay
Quite so. the idea is ridiculous. What is not ridiculous is the idea that the Ultimate lies beyond sensory empiricism and so looks exactly like nothing, which is the view I endorse. — FrancisRay
As I have revealed to you, I am indeed a Hindu (and specifically someone who follows Advaita). — Existential Hope
In his book The Continuum Hermann Weyl points out that nobody experiences time. It is created from memories and anticipations, a story we tell ourselves. He draws a careful distinction between the extended 'arithmetical' continuum, which is a theory, and the 'intuitive' continuum, which is extensionless. — FrancisRay
It would be a terrible mistake to image we experience time rather than create it, and it would lead to a deep misunderstanding of mysticism. — FrancisRay
All that would be truly real is the 'Eternal Now' and the 'Forever Here', which is Weyl's 'intuitive' continuum. This is what is discovered in meditation. Thus Meister Eckhart warns us not to become entangled in time. . — FrancisRay
there may be phenomena associated with life-processes whose feedback is long term and complex (read, "karma"), which, as real as they are, may not be measurable in any trivial sense. We need to always bear in mind that science functions explicitly by reductive abstraction. — Pantagruel
It has a lot to say — Pantagruel
William James introduced the concept of "radical empiricism" to challenge traditional empiricism and provide a more inclusive framework for understanding human experience. Radical empiricism can be summarized as follows:
Experience as the fundamental reality: James argued that our understanding of reality should begin with individual human experience. He believed that traditional empiricism, which focused on sensory data as the sole basis of knowledge, was too restrictive. Instead, he advocated for a broader view that considers all aspects of human experience, including thoughts, emotions, and even mystical or transcendent experiences.
Pluralistic perspective: Radical empiricism acknowledges that there are multiple dimensions to experience, and it rejects the idea that reality can be reduced to a single, objective viewpoint. James emphasized the importance of considering diverse perspectives and taking into account the richness and complexity of human consciousness.
Rejecting the "block universe": James also critiqued the idea of a fixed, predetermined universe, arguing that experience is continually evolving and that the past, present, and future are interconnected. He rejected the notion of a rigid "block universe" in favor of a more dynamic and open-ended view of reality.
In essence, radical empiricism encourages us to explore and understand the full range of human experience and to recognize that reality is not limited to what can be empirically observed through the senses. It emphasizes the importance of individual and subjective perspectives in our quest to comprehend the world.
if you are suggesting that 180 Proof, is an example of the persona you are trying to describe in the sentence — universeness
Rupert does seem to get more of a hearing amongst respected scientists than most on the fringe. — universeness
he comes across condescending, affected and incapable (im gathering, unwilling is the truth of it) to engage with many arguments he doesn't like. — AmadeusD
seems to be asking for evidence to support a series of claims that keep getting repeated without significant justification. — Tom Storm
Please clarify. Examples would be helpful. — 180 Proof
Just an observation - It may be the case that the remainder of your defence of 180Proof is correct - but he comes across condescending, affected and incapable (im gathering, unwilling is the truth of it) to engage with many arguments he doesn't like. — AmadeusD
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