Bad comes, ok. Good comes, ok. Let each go. — synthesis
Supposedly, chopping wood and carrying water is entirely exempt of suffering. Is that your experience???
— praxis
I am not a Zen teacher so I have no "credentials" to be explaining this kind of thing — synthesis
Zen is simply every day life. Nothing more, nothing special. It is viewing life with clarity which gives rise to wisdom. That's all. Chopping wood, carry water is everyday life, nothing more. — synthesis
I was commenting on praxis question about the saying ‘chop wood, draw water’. As a bald statement, it means nothing much. Many of those kinds of aphorisms were taken by the popular Zen literature of the 60’s and 70’s and entered popular discourse. But outside the cultural context in which they were meaningful, they can easily be nonsensical.
In the context of Zen pedagogy, it has a specific meaning about the appropriate attitude to take towards Zen practice, i.e. not ‘idolising’ the idea of enlightenment but treating everyday activities as an expression of bodhi-mind. So the ‘context’ is not only the cultural context which makes such phrases meaningful, but also the context of the monastic life. — Wayfarer
... but the later holds something very different for those willing to do the work necessary to make it back to the beginning. — synthesis
About fifteen years ago, I took two years off and devoted myself to full-time meditation practice. I became a resident at a Zen center in Northern California (there were eight of us). Of the all the people who do this sort of thing (very, very few), a minuscule amount of the them are actually willing to do what it takes to go for it.
In my experience, most people just want to live a nice, simple, balanced life (and who can blame them) — synthesis
Before enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment, chop wood, carry water. — Zeny proverb
If the mythic is removed what is left of value in a story? — Jack Cummins
To find our own mythic structure of meaning seems worthwhile to me, but this might mean that we are in the minority of the extraordinary. — Jack Cummins

Your anti-materialism seems a little irrational at times.
— praxis
Our society presumes that materialism must be true. A lot of people don't know what the word means, and wouldn't be able to explain it if you asked them — Wayfarer
Well, they’r considered ‘bad guys’ by me, for the reasons I’ve given. — Wayfarer
I would disagree that you’re in the wrong place, unless what you’re looking for is agreement rather than philosophical discussion. I’ve been quietly going against the grain here for a couple of years now, and thoroughly enjoyed learning from the discussions I’ve had. I think it’s precisely when we disagree that the most fruitful discussions can be had. I’m not expecting anyone to agree with me here - I’m expecting to learn by striving to understand different philosophical positions in relation to my own.
I think your focus on materialism and neuroscience may be useful here - I’d certainly appreciate both in some of the discussions I’ve had. Are you familiar with Feldman Barrett’s work? I’m also interested in recent collaborations of science and philosophy, particularly the interaction of quantum theory with theories of consciousness. — Possibility
The primary reason to abolish political parties is because it a form of group-think. Political parties are no different than a religion. — Harry Hindu
By the way, there are some unanswered questions in my thread over there, what do you think about that? — Hrvoje

I didn't look that closely. — creativesoul

That's good advice though, regarding the stage in the game at which a castle would've been advantageous. — creativesoul
