but that it's strongly associated with samadhi, states of trance and metabolic suspension which enables yogis to maintain stillness of extended periods of time. — Wayfarer
How can one come to know all is one? One must only be that reality. — ENOAH
How can one come to know all is one? One must only be that reality.
— ENOAH
I'm not disagreeing. But I'm pointing out that it might be easy to say that, but it's very rare to actually see it. — Wayfarer
And mine is another world altogether…bills to pay, children to raise, prone to any number of distractions and ordinary human foibles. I came to realise that it's not straightforward nor obvious in the least. — Wayfarer
I think that you wrote a post to me some time ago about non-dualism. It is interesting that it can be an approach for approaching all metaphysics but is so often ignored within Western philosophy. It may be about the organisation of the right and left brain in thinking, especially within education. It may be that those with a more mystical leaning find it makes sense than those with a more theoretical approach. Ideally, I would like to be able to blend the two as a more synthetic understanding, going beyond the duality of right and left brain, Eastern and Western philosophy. I am all in favour of seeing bridges rather than inherent splits. — Jack Cummins
My view is that unless one is going to sit in prayer, meditation and contemplation for a very long time these issues cannot be untangled without a careful study of metaphysics. . . — FrancisRay
Tricky may be dependent on mere subjective inclination, insofar as there is an established transcendental idealism, while not “absolute”, is certainly dualistic. Or, perhaps, sufficiently demonstrates the intrinsic duality of the human intellectual nature. — Mww
And if we do 'untangle' these issues, what's next? — Tom Storm
What does theism mean by "separate from" if it still can affect its creation? What type of connection is it between a cause and its subsequent effects - physical, idealistic, something else or none of the above?Insofar as theism posits a creator separate from, though affecting, its creation (duality), atheism means rejection of theism (non-duality), no? — 180 Proof
Does "supernatural" need "natural" to exist or have meaning or is it the other way around? If its the other way around in that supernatural is only meaningful in the light of the natural, then it would seem that everything is fundamentally natural including God and the domain God resides in.When pressed for a quick label, I will use the label of “atheist”. However, it does give me pause when I do, because “atheist” is a parasite term. It needs “theist” to be defined before it is possible to be an “atheist”. For example, polytheists are justified in calling monotheists, “atheists” because they nowadays deny the existence of many gods. Or if your definition of God is the most powerful being then I might be a theist (Just depends on if you can prove power can be measured). So, in theist/atheist pairing, I can see one side of a non-dualistic relationship.
The question is the other side. Does theism need atheism to have meaning/exist? The best positive answer I can come up with is, “yes because without the denial (atheism) it quickly becomes pantheism”. If one cannot say this is not God then everything becomes God. And if everything is God, then “God” is functionally meaningless. Or it is a fun way to be a closet atheist. — Keith
Information is both mind-like and physical-like. Information is fundamental, not mind or matter.I wonder to what extent such a non-dualistic viewpoint offers a solution to the split between materialism and idealism, as well as between atheism and theism. — Jack Cummins
I, on the other hand, only accept any claim when there is sufficient evidence to support it. — Harry Hindu
There simply is no evidence that things will get better. It does not exist. Still, the only way to sit out a bad patch, is to believe it anyway in spite of having no evidence. The rational person will reasonably give up, while the spiritual one keeps going. This phenomenon seems to be enough to explain why atheist societies do not last long enough to actually make it into the history books — Tarskian
Well, at best, theism is incoherent.What does theism mean by "separate from" if it still can affect its creation? — Harry Hindu
"Idealistic" (i.e. supernatural).What type of connection is it between a cause and its subsequent effects - physical, idealistic, something else or none of the above?
Yes. However, theism posits a supernatural creator of nature, which is incoherent.Would it not be a naturalistic stance to take to say that because God has a causal relationship with its creation that God is natural?
I prefer anti-supernatural (though absurdist (Zapffe-Camus) would do).There simply isn't any valid evidence to support any of these claims .. reasonable/logical?
Kant's idealism (….) is quite a vague affair, but it could be interpreted as a first step towards non-dualism — PeterJones
Such people cling to hope — Jack Cummins
Interesting notion. How would you suppose non-dualism to arise from it, on what….logical?…. ground would it be possible? — Mww
Well, I think materialism (i.e. only 'the material' is real) is a form nondualism.I see both materialism and idealism as being a bit limited and 'flat'. Non-dualism may be one option amongst others. — Jack Cummins
On the contrary, they preceeded Berkeley by millennia in both Western and Eastern philosophical traditions.Naturalism and realism can be seen as a radical departure from the idealism of Berkley.
I.e.the dual existence of mind and body or their embodied unity
At the moment, a friend who has become a Jehovah Witness, keeps sending me 'preachy' emails, saying that the Bible holds the 'truth' for the troubles of the world, the 'end times', which will be replaced by a better world for the righteous to inherit. Such people cling to hope, which may be similar to the romanticism of the 'new age'. — Jack Cummins
If God exists, then who created the circumstances of your hopelessness in the first place to then look to it for hope? God created childhood cancer, schizophrenia, our bodies that have the capacity to be tortured, etc. I can imagine a more moral universe than the one we live in today, but that doesn't mean that I don't want to live in this one. This one isn't all that bad, so hope isn't necessary for me to continue existing - just the curiosity to continue to see what happens next. As Christopher Hitchens once put it, death is like being told you have to leave the party when the party is still going on.That can be a problem in difficult times when what you need is hope while the situation looks utterly hopeless. There simply is no evidence that things will get better. It does not exist. Still, the only way to sit out a bad patch, is to believe it anyway in spite of having no evidence.
The rational person will reasonably give up, while the spiritual one keeps going. This phenomenon seems to be enough to explain why atheist societies do not last long enough to actually make it into the history books. — Tarskian
I think that anti-supernatural is too restrictive. Maybe anti-delusion?What does theism mean by "separate from" if it still can affect its creation?
— Harry Hindu
Well, at best, theism is incoherent.
What type of connection is it between a cause and its subsequent effects - physical, idealistic, something else or none of the above?
"Idealistic" (i.e. supernatural).
Would it not be a naturalistic stance to take to say that because God has a causal relationship with its creation that God is natural?
Yes. However, theism posits a supernatural creator of nature, which is incoherent.
There simply isn't any valid evidence to support any of these claims .. reasonable/logical?
I prefer anti-supernatural (though absurdist (Zapffe-Camus) would do). — 180 Proof
Why do you think so?I think that anti-supernatural is too restrictive. — Harry Hindu
If God exists, then who created the circumstances of your hopelessness in the first place to then look to it for hope? God created childhood cancer, schizophrenia, our bodies that have the capacity to be tortured, etc. I can imagine a more moral universe than the one we live in today — Harry Hindu
Citations?The incessant attacks on every living being are inevitable.
In the beginning, when God created the universe, he decreed that everything in existence has the right to seek to perpetuate its own existence. What about me? Said the original nothing. Now that the universe exists, I have disappeared. Can I also seek to exist? The universal Lord responded: Yes. There are no exceptions to the law. You have the right to attack and destroy everything that exists in the universe in order to reappear, including every living creature.
The reason why the original nothing has the God-given right to attack and destroy us, is not an injustice. On the contrary, it is the consequence of divine justice. The original nothing is not doing anything illegal. On the contrary, he may be our enemy but he is also a faithful and obedient servant of the universal Lord. God could have chosen to be unjust to the universal nothing but he didn't.
Hence, creating a more moral universe than the one we live in today was not possible. Such universe would have been based on a glaring fundamental injustice. — Tarskian
Citations? — Harry Hindu
if God is eternal then there was never nothing to begin with — Harry Hindu
If nothing can speak — Harry Hindu
You make a claim without incorporating the other characteristics associated with God, like being eternal. — Harry Hindu
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