syzygy said:
I don't understand the point of discussion if one has to disguise one's beliefs about other religious or philosophic paths.
You don't. Just word it so that it doesn't offend anyone.
I do not believe in Buddhist claims of "enlightenment" because the source of such claims is very dubious once the Buddhist brain scan information is taken into consideration
I stick by my assessment of Buddhism and yes, each and every medititational path to "bliss" or "enlightenment" or "higher consciousness" that is based on physically shutting down electrical activity in the brain's sense of self center. It makes little sense to use a single brain state as the standard for judging reality, especially a brain state that features a significant "hole" where awareness of one's self in relation to the world resides.
OK. I'm following you now. You think that our minds are perfect observational units, and that interfering with them is contrary to the concept of 'enlightenment'.
We need to look at some fundamental truths before going further. For instance. There is suffering. Why? We suffer because we are driven by our genes to survive. Why? Because if we weren't, then we wouldn't be here, so it must be so. We wouldn't be here if we didn't have to be. The meaning of life? The gene! There is no benevolence or malice in genes, this is just how they work, and we are the result of them. Our entire lives are devoted to, directly (sex) or indirectly (passing exams), the success of our genes.
But through evolution a new 'force' has arisen. It is that of sentience. A new type of entity which lives at the whim of the genes, just as the genes live at the whim of the environment. The genes try to win over the environment and survive. Sentience tries to win over it's genes, and be happy. That is what every man and women wants. To be happy, however that is accomplished.
When Buddhists meditate, we are overcoming our genes. We are overcoming our boundaries and abandoning our slave-nature to our desires. We want to be free of struggle and strife. How can we be happy if every moment of our day is spent serving a master who offers us no end to our entrapment. Every reward does not last, suffering is what this life is.
To transcend our circumstances, we must abandon our desires; this does not mean abandoning joy, it means abandoning the desire for joy. Joy will come whether we try for it or not. I child can be entertained by the simplest things. An adult is only happy with the most refined tastes. The adult has worked so hard, and yet he doesn't enjoy any more than the child, in fact, many argue, he enjoys less. Joy comes to both, but the adult no longer appreciates things. It has become conditioned to the world. Rigid and breakable. Where the young green stem can bend and is of no interest to the axe, the rigid wooden trunk is hard and it's death-bed is set.
As for your claims about self and the world being separate, it would help if you investigated the concept of emptiness. I'm not going to spoon feed it to you. The literature is vast and the concept difficult to grasp.
Suffice to say that in order for the genes to hold you in their scheme, they need to dupe you into thinking that you are separate and that you, the mind-body phenomena, requires special attention above the rest. You must admit, the whole show wouldn't work if you considered everyone your equal. This would not help your selfish genes' cause at all, (see Richard Dawkins, The Selfish Gene.)
once the "Void" philosophy is tossed aside that is only a projection put onto the screen of reality through the creation of the physical void inside meditating Buddhist minds.
Ah, but this reality is not just seen in meditation. It has been proven and accepted by Buddhists for 2500 years. Buddhist insight meditation is the removal of these projections. We all have filters through which we view the world. One should aim to see the world for what it really is.