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Meaning of life
 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 22:46 [#00667522]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



have you read "the true believer" by erich hoffer (i think,
the memory is a little dusty)? anything combined with dogma
is dangerous. good intentions, anyone?


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 22:50 [#00667527]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



plaidze.

although undermining my point, i'd distinguish between truth
and Truth ... where i see truth as a maleable, playful
quasi-pragmatic account. it is within - Truth is some
external thing - it ignores that we who pose the question
ought to be included in the question. Or more accurately, we
who pose the question are included in the question,
and not accounting for this is misleading.

?

wasn't meaning to say that you believed int he chemical
thing .. but was wondering if the "manual" was some ethical
or moral guidebook, because it could be argued that cold
science (ie. biochemistry for instance), can not provide
ethics, or if it does, it already implicitly combines with
an ethical attitude.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 22:56 [#00667539]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



i will be honest with you, i have lost the ability to
question one, hmm i don't know what to call it. for
practical purposes, we can call it a belief. it is the
foundation for the simple laws i spoke of. personally, i
questioned this until i could not resist any longer, and i
was forced to surrender. i don't mean that i gave up;
something fundamental was demonstrated to me, and i could
not refute it any longer. i had discovered it, and then
questioned it, for seventeen years. so let it be said that
i was not hasty. nor did i believe beforehand that i needed
to believe it. one thing is certain: i have come into
being. i realize these words will paint many different
images for different people. there are a few individuals
for whom these words are specifically meant. you know who
you are.


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:07 [#00667552]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



cool.

not meaning to "assasinate" anyone _ just think the
inextricability of us in the world and inquiry is too often
"passed over" is all.

re: surrender. to see it this way, ie. not to surrender is
resistance imo is already based on this mysticism or
whatever. ie. one doesn't have to see it in this way.


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:10 [#00667560]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



agree to disagree that we disagree in agreeance.


 

offline mimi on 2003-04-24 23:15 [#00667568]
Points: 5721 Status: Regular | Followup to plaidzebra: #00667514



what were you doing in madison?


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-24 23:26 [#00667587]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to korben dallas: #00667527



the definition of a mystic that i found was, as i suggested,
one who seeks the personal union with the divine. the
definition of mysticim included "difficult to pinpoint
exactly, but..."

i think that it is important to keep in mind that all lines
of logic are based on faith in some axiom or axioms, whether
the "believer" is aware of this. hardcore atheist
scientists are people of faith in something that they do not
question. the atheist scientist has worked the axiom very
deep into their thick blanket of logic, where as a man of
the book makes his point of faith very clear.

and think that the mystic is often somebody who places their
faith in the experience rather than the abstract concept.
for this reason i feel more grounded, more "down to earth"
in ecstatic union with the divine than i do in mentally
processing science and philosophy when i know that i am
merely pushing my point of faith beyond sight when i do so.
what is truth other than what is felt/experienced? in that
sense, rationalizaition is an approximation of the truth.

if a mystic is unable to put their alleged wisdom into words
and they are legit, it is not because they are deliberately
hiding anything, or hiding from anything (whereas it is
common that a guru would hide things from their devotee;
illegit). it is because they know that what they would
truly like to communicate would be approximated to the point
of the attempt to communicate not being worthy. it is only
something that can be experienced, precisely because that is
what Truth is. giving into the moment.


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-24 23:29 [#00667593]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to plaidzebra: #00667514



plaidzebra,

no, my name is andy. do you / did you take class at the u
of m? probably not since you consider your presence in
minneapolis "shadowy." i imagine you're probably not the
person that came to mind, but it's worth a shot to inquire.


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-24 23:36 [#00667600]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to jupitah: #00667587



not to undermine logical rationalization, science or
philosophy by any means. clearly i'm going at it right
now.

and this is the precise reason that i believe understanding
limitations is important. rationale, being limited, must be
balanced with the intuition that one develops from
living/experiencing/acting, rather than thinking. to me,
unhealthy ethics stem from too much of one or the other,
thought or experience (emotion).


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 23:36 [#00667602]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



i agree that it is important to recognize that we cannot
exclude ourselves from the question. it is difficult to
entertain the immensity of that fact.

mysticism represents the hidden only inasmuch as it asserts
that a fundamental assumption of our existence here
represents denial of self and origin. it says, there is
something that has been forgotten, and it's very important.
we will rediscover what has been lost. it is hidden,
because it is worthless if imposed by dogma, or enforced by
ritual. it must be sought, and continuously rediscovered.
again, i recognize that there are many traditions, i'm just
giving the plaidzebra version.



 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 23:37 [#00667603]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



regarding the feeling that i was missing my user manual:
although this feeling was a genuine concern in that i did,
at the time, feel that i lacked some essential information,
i entertained the idea as possibility and not fact or
belief, and i was really attempting to find humor in the
scientific materialist "man as electrochemical machine"
model. i now see it as a profoundly self limiting belief.
but in a way, it was a necessary passage. i have no
regrets.

a very brief history: when i was a teenager, i realized
that religion was something people had created. i could not
see that god had any reality at all, and declared my
atheism. soon after, i had a personal experience which
ultimately led me to abandon atheism as a dogma of denial.
i remained an agnostic until i could no longer honestly
maintain agnosis. as i have said before, my goal is not to
impose my will or ideas, but suggest helpfully that there
are resources unused. i don't mean to tell you more than
you want to know, but i wanted to clearly acknowledge the
personal nature of my position.


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:37 [#00667604]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



totally agree that logic, atheism, science and western
philosophy to a large part operate on axioms as you put.

but a mystic places more faith in experience than abstract
concepts? for one, the experiences are already coloured by
the abstract concepts, and vice versa i guess ... but isn't
blind faith in god (just as an example), faith in an
abstract concept, than experience? you could perhaps
subjectively verify it to yourself, but then in the extreme
sense that would be betraying your faith. (though again,
perhaps necessarily so).


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 23:41 [#00667609]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



mimi- i traveled there to care for my nephew while my sister
was in the hospital giving birth to my new nephew.

jupitah, indeed i have not taken classes at the u of m.


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-24 23:42 [#00667612]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to plaidzebra: #00667602



though scientific concept is not useless in the remembrence
of self origin. many do not experience kinship with stars,
or experience being part of a single universal as a cell is
a part of our body, but the big bang theory makes the
kinship idea literally so and so.


 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-24 23:46 [#00667614]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker



fallacies fallacies fallacies.
if you think it's ultimately right, then you're ultimately
wrong. :)


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:48 [#00667619]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



the following statement is true


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:48 [#00667622]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



the previous statement is false


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 23:48 [#00667623]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



yes, a teacher in a mystical tradition will spare the
student the distortions of language. they may not answer
questions in that they may not speak, and yet they may
answer questions. again, the zen tradition of direct
pointing is an example. recognizing too that zen takes many
different forms.


 

offline mappatazee from ¨y¨z¨| (Burkina Faso) on 2003-04-24 23:50 [#00667626]
Points: 14294 Status: Lurker



The only study that operates purely on axiom is mathematics.
It is non conditional. 1+1=2 in any place in the universe,
as well as all other mathematical laws. And so the universe
is entirely composed of "values" (numbers) and hence
equations etc etc. Your consciousness exists in the
electric field generated by the neural pathways and synapses
firing in your brain, the result of chemical processes that
were put into action, going way back, to the moment your DNA
began replicating in your embryo, every result governed by
physical laws, sans any sort of "spiritual" or "mystical"
powers. Even the chemical properties inherent in the
molecules of your body result from the interaction of
electron fields in their consituent atoms comprised of
energy. There is no God to create you, nor is there need
for one. A good example of Occam's razor.
Science, philosophy, etc. yes are based on reality and
aim at a true representation thereof, but can only do so
through demonstration. Nothing in science is known 100% to
be true, otherwise it wouldn't be science, it always must
leave the door open for new insights. So science really
isn't based on axioms as such


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:51 [#00667627]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



distortions?

distorting what? the Truth? language is only a tool to get
by anyway ..


 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-24 23:51 [#00667628]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker



this whole 'eventually-leads-to-dualism' talk is never
agreed upon by its concerned debaters.

in short, dualism works if you believe in mysticism, but if
you agree towards mysticism then you also agree that there
are many things we cannot know right now, or do not know,
and cannot prove empirically - therefore, we can say
anything about everything and pretend it's true.. and that
is logically unsound.

thus, saying 'there is something there which we cannot know
and is beyond us' - well, here's a thought (and not a new
one at that) - if we can agree to the fact that we cannot
know it, then what's the point in talking about it as if it
is truth?


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:52 [#00667631]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



if we can agree to the fact that we cannot know it, then
what's the point in talking about it as if it is truth?


BINGO!


 

offline afxNUMB from So.Flo on 2003-04-24 23:53 [#00667633]
Points: 7099 Status: Regular



so the parties here huh?


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-24 23:54 [#00667635]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to korben dallas: #00667604



well, i do not put blind faith in god. im sure some mystics
are more of the blind faith type, but i don't think that
that is definitive of myticism. i am aware of a mysterious
possibility that there is this thing, god, and i've
experienced what i cinsider to be god, but i do not expect
that god is something that will take care of whatever i
choose not to... except that when i consider that i myself
am god, i suppose :) i take responsibility.

i'm sure that there have been many a mystic with too much
resting on the expience and not enough concept and analysis,
as well mystics who place too much value on the
coneptualization and and get caught up in dogma. but who is
to say what the balance is? it certainly is not a clear
line. this is how i have both conceptualized and
experienced the tao, as the vague balance that can not be
derived mathematically, logically. there is no way around
it, and the only option, for myself as someone who believes
in the importance of this balance, is to both intuit it as
well as analytically watch my life unfold. if all is well,
i know i am in the tao, balanced. if things are not well, i
need to find equilibrium by shifting my life around.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 23:56 [#00667638]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



i do believe that in the future, science and spirituality
will converge. i don't intend to deny the value of
scientific inquiry, or suggest that we deny ourselves any
experience, if it serves us. asceticism can be a form of
self indulgence, or an antidote for desire. the individual
has so many forms, of course, there must be many paths.


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:57 [#00667640]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



afxnumb .. damn straight :)

jupitah .. surely with blind faith you can't see god .. in
this sense i guess mystics don't have blind faith, because
they feel they can still see this beyond.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-24 23:58 [#00667642]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



re:distortions

lao tzu said, the tao which can be spoken is not the eternal
tao.


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-24 23:59 [#00667643]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



"i do believe that in the future, science and
spirituality will converge
"

The FUTURE is now ... join Scientology.



 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-24 23:59 [#00667644]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker



but seriously here, im sure some of you readers/writers have
hallucinated or felt 'non-typical' sensations somewhere in
your life. now, if you have, then do you think that happened
because there was some sort of ultimate mystical truth
causing that sensation to happen?

or could it be your brain causing a type of chemical
reaction? id rather think god had nothing to do with me and
my drugs - more likely that my body did.. :)


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:00 [#00667647]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to plaidzebra: #00667638



science and spirituality have already converged in my life.
there is no contradiction between the two. hopefully it
will spill over into the mass.

an absolutely unique path for every individual. potentially
infinite paths?


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-25 00:00 [#00667648]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



and the eternal tao is the true one?


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:02 [#00667652]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to jenf: #00667644



why would one deny the relationship between the mind and the
brain, between consiousness and physicality? there is no
separation. they are two ways in which we undertand one
thing.


 

offline mappatazee from ¨y¨z¨| (Burkina Faso) on 2003-04-25 00:03 [#00667653]
Points: 14294 Status: Lurker



A mystic experience is usually described as one that is
outside of physical experience, outside of reason, outside
of demonstration, outside of reality. Then what was it?
It's all in your head is what it is.


 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-25 00:03 [#00667654]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker



the eternal tao is eternally trapped in a paradigm, which
not everyone is part of. therefore, the eternal tao is not
universally eternal.

and to the guy who mentioned heidegger near the beginning of
this thread - existentialist phenomenology through
heideggerian methods is limited in itself. it's a trick!


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:03 [#00667655]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to korben dallas: #00667648



i don't know if lao tzu's tao is the balance i describe, but
much of taoism i've read fits the bill. and i suggested
that it is unique for every individual, so certainly not the
true "one"


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-25 00:03 [#00667656]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



"There is no God to create you, nor is there need
for one."

you are not recognizing that creation is not the generation
of form, not some decree to "let there be a body, NOW".

how does your materialist perspective incorporate imaginary
numbers into the universe? reality is not as cut and dried
as you would suppose.

as always, we agree to disagree.


 

offline korben dallas from nz on 2003-04-25 00:04 [#00667658]
Points: 4605 Status: Regular



jenf ... but by the same token i don't think you can explain
everything in terms of biology. - not meaning to aspire to
no mystical thing here .. but undermining actions via.
biology (or any discipline for that matter) will be
incomplete.

jupitah .. science and spirituality (i'll rephrase it as
ethics) shouldn't contradict, because they have different
functions .. hence they can happily converge ..


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-25 00:05 [#00667660]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



very funny, korben. i am not advocating scientology! : )


 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-25 00:06 [#00667663]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker | Followup to jupitah: #00667652



... first you ask me why one would deny the relationship
between the two. therefore you are saying you believe in
dualism.

then you say that there is no separation.
therefore contradicting your first statement.

then you go back to your first statement, but try to
synthesize it with some sort of ambiguous end...

so where do you stand? :)


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:06 [#00667664]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to mappatazee: #00667653



have ever had one of these mystical experiecnes? why would
you think it necessitates being out of physical experience?
it certainly can be. and besides that, what is not in your
head? are you suggesting that experience of physical
reality is not in the head and mystical experience is in the
head?


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-25 00:06 [#00667665]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



"and the eternal tao is the true one?"

i'm sorry, korben, but you are missing the point, and i
cannot offer any more clarity that lao tzu has not already
provided.



 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-25 00:07 [#00667666]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker | Followup to korben dallas: #00667658



the point here is - sure there might be things that cannot
be explained right now through science.. BUT.. does that
mean you shouldn't try to? and work with what you have
explained? rather than talk about things you cannot back up?


 

offline mappatazee from ¨y¨z¨| (Burkina Faso) on 2003-04-25 00:09 [#00667668]
Points: 14294 Status: Lurker



Sure I've had experiences that would be mystical for some
people. But they are not mystical for me, because of my
understanding that this idea of 'spiritualism' doesn't
exist.


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:09 [#00667669]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to jenf: #00667663



you suggested they were two. the "two
i refer to are the "two" that you discussed. i believe the
"two" are two different conceptions of one thing. are you
playing games, or do you serious think i contradict myself?


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:10 [#00667673]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to mappatazee: #00667668



well, spirit for me is what i feel. my feelings certainly
exist. spirit does not have to be some esoteric hogwash. i
just except that what i feel is as real as what i can think.


 

offline jenf from Toronto (Canada) on 2003-04-25 00:13 [#00667675]
Points: 1062 Status: Lurker | Followup to jupitah: #00667669



ah, i think (reading back again through the comments), you
misunderstood what i said, then i mistook what you said :)
i basically stated that i didn't think they were two
different things - i oppose dualism.

but because you responded to me in a way which didn't seem
to agree with my statement, i interpreted your statements as
being confusing..

if you agree that consciousness is something that comes from
the physical, and that's that.. then we actually do agree.


 

offline Donna Simpson from morgantown (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:15 [#00667677]
Points: 286 Status: Lurker



enjoying it!


 

offline jupitah from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-04-25 00:15 [#00667678]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to jenf: #00667675



well, we might be on similar wavelengths, but i don't think
that consioueness "comes from" the physical any more than
the physical comes from consiousness.


 

offline mappatazee from ¨y¨z¨| (Burkina Faso) on 2003-04-25 00:19 [#00667684]
Points: 14294 Status: Lurker



then how can there be any interaction between your
cousciousness and the perception of the physical world?
there couldn't be.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2003-04-25 00:19 [#00667685]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



your body is an interface of feeling, but not the source of
all feeling. yes, your body allows you to feel the sun, but
your feeling of the sun is not the sun, is it? the body is
also an interface of consciousness, but not the source of
consciousness. creation means the extension of
consciousness, so that each thread generated has its own
identity, but the same source. each thread has the
responsibility for articulating its uniqueness. each thread
is responsible for maintaining and continuing this
extension. denial of the gift of creation that is given you
is denial of your self. i realize that you fervently
believe that your body gave rise to your consciousness, and
that i cannot persuade you otherwise. i insist, however,
that it is not so.

certainly you can appreciate that language imposes a
structure that makes some ideas very difficult to
communicate. especially in straightforward, non-technical
form.


 


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