Yeah... doesn't really roll of the tongue and it sounds kind of boring. — Tom Storm
In my OP, I was wondering if enlightenment means the same thing in different cultures. I guess I was asking if it is the case that enlightenment (if and when it takes place) transcends culture and religion.
I am somewhat surprised that no one yet has said something like 'enlightenment is a myth'. — Tom Storm
Except that pretty much everyone is, to use your word, such a fuckwit about one thing or another.
Some people refuse to abandon their broken cars that are on collision course with a train. Some stay in dysfunctional, destructive relationships. Some maintain a religious affiliation even though they don't believe the tenets anymore and only pretend to do so, which is making them miserable. — baker
One can only give up a lesser happiness when one has sight of a bigger one. — baker
With such prospects, what can possibly motivate a person to give up their attachments, when they've got nothing higher to live for? — baker
Clearly, not everyone knows that they can let go of attachment to things when we need to. — baker
Since when does letting go of attachments mean non-attachment? — praxis
I don't see how you can say that it's odd, you're not even sure that non-attachment is possible, or so you've said in this topic. — praxis
Clear as mud, as I suppose it must be. — praxis
What do you mean by a belief being justified? Because I understand it as meaning that, given the information available, a rational person can cogently infer the subject of belief. As such, a fake ID can be justification.
This, incidentally, is how the law would consider it. — Michael
Not that religious talk needs to make sense, and in fact it's better if it doesn't, but it sounded like you just said that attachment is part of non-attachment. — praxis
The nature of attachment is connection or binding, and there’s no escaping the fact that we’re all connected and bound, so reason demands that we accept this enslavement. — praxis
Why is this so hard for some of you to grasp? Did I miss something? — I like sushi
If the cowishly shaped cloth is a cow then there is a cow in my field, therefore if I can infer that the cowishly shaped cloth is a cow given the evidence then I can infer that there is a cow in my field given the evidence. — Michael
and stoicism taught me to hang on, — praxis
I suspect this is part of the reason why psychology as a science, has not made as much progress as other fields, the phenomena get too complex eventually. — Manuel
So take a scientists who believes in only what the evidence shows. The world is made of quantum fields. That's what the evidence says exists at bottom. It's a fluctuating space that vibrates. It's a physical thing that we'll never see, can only get at thorough (physical) mathematical equations and offers no hints that a rock, much less an organism would ever arise. — Manuel
Yes, but Popper's point was that no matter what came up, you could accomodate it or explain it, so Freudian psychoanalysis wasn't a predictive theory at all. — Wayfarer
The fact that metaphysical ideas are not testable does nothing to negate them, as ideas on that level can only be judged according to their philosophical merits. — Wayfarer
It can't be tested in the third person. — Wayfarer
As if the scientific criteria are the only criteria by which anything can be judged to be real. Which is as I've often said, pretty well an exact definition of positivism: — Wayfarer
But Popper's point was that all kinds of results could be accomodated by both theories, which is why he used them as examples of the kinds of theories that purport to be scientific or empirical, but actually are not, because they can't be falsified by observation. — Wayfarer
All true, but the point about falsifiability is to be able to differentiate scientific or empirical hypotheses from those that are not. Examples that he gave were psychoanalysis and communism which can't be falsified as they're so loosely defined they can accomodate all kinds of counter-factuals (ergo not really 'scientific' although that is hardly news by now.) But the fact that an idea is not 'falsifiable' doesn't mean it's automatically invalid, that anything that can't be empirically falsified is empty. That's very close to positivism or verificationism. — Wayfarer
Premises need not be descriptions of physical things, whose truth and falsity is judged according to empirical evidence. We can make premises which are descriptions of how logic works, and also premises concerning moral issues. The judgement of truth or falsity of these premises is not based in empirical evidence, so it isn't really correct to say that the truth of a premise can only be tested by empirical evidence. That itself would be a premise which cannot be tested, so the truth or falsity of it could not be judged. — Metaphysician Undercover
Oh god. Showing your true colors. — baker
Non-physical explanations are tested logically. That's what logic gives us, non-physical explanations — Metaphysician Undercover
you do know why Karl Popper introduced the criterion of testability? And that he himself was not a materialist? — Wayfarer
Maybe the eastern effort to harness it, through some kind of practice, is the equivalent of domesticating something wild: the result becomes us and we like it, but it's a watered-down version what we wanted when we saw it. It is not enough. — James Riley
"Enlightenment means a conscious annihilation of yourself. For most people, it will take a certain amount of time and maturing to understand that whatever you make yourself to be, in the end, it is frustrating and not enough. However wonderful you make yourself, still it is not enough. Only when you disappear, everything becomes wonderful."
Awkward language notwithstanding - Sadhuru is getting at something people haven't raised so far on this thread. The merits of enlightenment and the concomitant experience of everything becoming 'wonderful'. I wonder (sorry) what this means. It seems antithetical to self-annihilation however. Who exactly is the self experiencing the extinguished wonderfulness? Or is this what happens when mere words are used to describe the numinous? — Tom Storm
Why should enlightenment be the same for each of us? — Banno
