Well, ok. As a person who can see the end of his life on the horizon, I agree that there are many things worse than my death. Are you willing, as XandertheGrey is, to extend that to the deaths of thousands, tens of thousands, millions of people? Are there things worse than that? What are they? I think I understand XtG's answer to that question. His take is utilitarian. Kill all the people who use more than their share of resources so that people who have access to less than their fair share will have a chance. Is that ok with you? In principle if not in practice? — T Clark
As you indicate, values are not absolute, but I think some are fundamental to our nature as human beings. Among those fundamental values is the value placed on human life - both for individual humans and for humanity as a whole. By calling a value "fundamental" I mean two things. First - I think they are built into the physical, biological, and genetic structure of who we are. We have evolved as social animals. We have no choice but to like each other. Second, no society could survive without these fundamental values. These are not "guidelines." They are bedrock foundations for human social life. No group of humans could survive for long without them. — T Clark
Language is required in order for us to become aware of some things. So, placing all awareness as prior to language is a mistake for it renders you unable to take proper account of the things which only language facilitates our awareness of — creativesoul
How does your understanding of the mechanistic lives of people jibe with your dismay about their inauthenticity? Is that where the inauthenticity comes from? — T Clark
It wasn't my intention to pull rank on you with my 40 year history or discount your own experiences. — T Clark
Interest and respect are irresistible. If your heart is pure, there is no good reason anyone would want to resist them. — T Clark
One of my favorite songs, although I'll only listen to it on Mondays — T Clark
In my experience, which is limited to one 40 year continuing marriage plus observations of others from the outside, problems in marriages are not primarily related to inauthenticity. I think they are caused by unexpressed conditions, desires, fantasies, that marriage partners are generally not fully aware of. I remember vividly how my girlfriend's attitude towards me and our relationship changed abruptly when we got engaged. People expect things, and feel entitled to expect things, from spouses that they would not expect from lovers or friends. We can argue if you'd like about whether those expectations are reasonable, but they are there nonetheless. They can cause irreparable damage to love, friendship, and commitment. — T Clark
I doubt that's how the Buddha saw it. — T Clark
Seems to me that is a flaw in my ability to surrender to what meditation has to offer rather than a flaw in the method — T Clark
Tolle's description of that problem was excellent, and a wake-up call. ...how people's internal conceptual narrative about description, evaluation, & classification--and the related or resulting perpetual postponement of satisfaction (the present is just something to get through, for something better later)--displaces actual genuine experience. — Michael Ossipoff
Almost everyone is interesting. Almost everyone has a real place inside them which is not very deeply hidden. — T Clark
There are some people, very tightly wrapped types, who don't seem to be able to relax their defenses, take off their masks, and just be themselves. I think it must be a really very unhappy condition to live with.
There is also the fact that for some people "authentic" isn't also "nice". The "real person" can be unpleasant. — Bitter Crank
It is almost always in your power to make any conversation authentic by being authentic yourself. That doesn't mean you confront others with their falsity or try to be inappropriately personal. "Authentic" doesn't mean profound or complex, it only means human. Be a human being and think of, treat, others as human beings.
You can have an authentic conversation about the weather or "How about them Red Sox." You can have an inauthentic conversation about the most personal things in your life. — T Clark