L
Lunitik
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Methinks Lunatik just enjoys slinging fecal matter. Personally, I prefer paintballs.![]()
If this is the best way you have found to write off what I say, so be it.
Methinks Lunatik just enjoys slinging fecal matter. Personally, I prefer paintballs.![]()
One must identify what to drop before one can drop it and how to properly dispose of it, no?Jung would simply discover the nature of the delusion and concentrate you on it, he knows nothing of getting people out of them. Maybe through the analysis you might change your perspective through different insights, but those insights are from mind as well so it is just a surface change - the issue remains, you just might look at it differently.
Indeed.Zen is about dropping dreams and illusions and finding the real, it is exactly the basis for saying Jung is describing an unenlightened man, because Zen teachings will actually help to overcome these things,
It can be useful in focusing in on exactly what you are clinging to, so you can understand the suffering you get from even subconsciously clinging onto something, and you can deal with it and let it go.nothing of Jung will do that.
Servetus said:I am not interested in arguing semantics, but I do not accept the first half of your statement. Agnosticism, as I understand, is a claim, or proposition, that one does not or cannot know. It therefore impresses me as nonsense, or as at best paradoxical, to say that “agnosticism is the only way to actually know.”
Lunitik said:You have began the semantic dispute, now you are saying you don't want to discuss it?
Lunitik said:Agnosticism means you don't know, it says nothing about not being able to know.
Lunitik said:Gnosticism is the opposite, it says you do know …
Lunitik said:Gnosticism is the opposite, it says you do know - this is plainly egoistic …
Lunitik said:, what do you know?
Servetus said:I thought you just said that agnosticism is the only way to actually know.
Lunitik said:I did, because it says you don't already, thus now you can discover it... if you have decided you already know, there is nothing to discover. That is what gnosticism says though, there is nothing more to discover.
Lunitik said:Well, in the apocrypha, Jesus is actually quoted as saying truth is no longer valid or necessary. Seems a contradiction, can you show where he has spoken in favor of truth for me?
One must identify what to drop before one can drop it and how to properly dispose of it, no?
It can be useful in focusing in on exactly what you are clinging to, so you can understand the suffering you get from even subconsciously clinging onto something, and you can deal with it and let it go.
The first two lines deal with the general, whereas the third and fourth lines deal with the specific. Jungian models can be useful in focusing on specifics.
If agnosticism means one doesn’t know, how is it the only way to actually know? The contradiction, semantic or otherwise, in the statement seems evident.
Of course it is egoistic. Who else, other than oneself, is claiming to not know, in the case of agnosticism, and to know in the case of gnosticism? Egos, after all, claim to be theists, atheists, agnostics and gnostics and, for that matter, discuss the differences between and among the terms.
This is circuitous. What is the “it” in this case to be discovered? Is it knowledge? If, according to your definition, an agnostic discovers “it,” and it is knowledge, does he or she become a gnostic, or one who knows, in the process of discovery? If so, is it true that gnostics say that there is nothing more to discover?
Gnostics in general, I would suggest, make no such claim. A child, for instance, who emerges from the womb of the world and remembers, that is to say, knows the experience does not claim to have nothing more to learn. Thus it is with a gnostic.
Maybe it is just an initial stutter-step we’ve started upon, which often happens in discussions of this sort, but we seem to be having a difficult enough time with the definition of agnostic. Perhaps, with your permission, and although I really only wanted you to identify the scripture to which you were referring in your above post, it would be best, for now, to abstain from discussions of scripture. They are, by their nature, potentially discursive, and I did not introduce them into this discussion.
Ahem:The Buddhist word oft-translated as desire more correctly means "discontent", this is the nature of insanity - you are remembering something you want to change or desiring something better in the future, all the time missing the present where happiness can happen.
The disease has been diagnosed and a cure established for 2500 years, but of course the West hasn't adopted it so we are left with the insanity of the Christian faith and its many problems, thinking them to be just normal things which happen to people. It is duality that creates problems in the mind - past and future being one dual notion, but the most fundamental for the West is good and bad. Now, good and bad are not real things, they are concepts, and they are interconnected. If you try to increase good, how will you do it without emphasizing bad? They are meaningless without the other, because they simply describe different levels of the same thing.
This is the whole problem, trying to separate reality when it is inseparable.
Nothing is let go by giving it more attention, that is just stupidity. This is exactly what Buddha is saying, drop these thoughts completely, just do not give them any energy. If you let them die, then they will leave of their own accord. One of the fundamental Buddhist meditations is simply to watch your thoughts and acknowledge them, permit them to be but do not attach. In the West, we go on repressing these things though, then Jung has to come and dig them out and we praise him. Once it is brought out though, simply acknowledge, otherwise you will make the matter worse because you are again giving the thought wings.
I imagine this is why his student committed suicide, Jung probably tried to hypothetically treat him and actually dug up some past damage and caused the student to obsess about it. The psychologists love him, of course, because if you never cure your business will be very profitable - just keep letting people give energy to their problems and you are set for life. In reality the whole problem is fabricated...
There are no specifics that are important when dealing with mind, else it will take millions of years to undo the damage society goes on doing. These hangups of feeling you have been wronged or whatever, these things which have caused the mind to become stuck in the insane, they needn't be emphasized at all. Certainly, they need to be brought to the forefront, but now all that is necessary is to acknowledge and permit. It is repression which causes the problems, loose the problem from its dark corner and let it float away - it was you all along keeping it trapped, trying to control it!
Concentration comes first, knowledge and understanding next, then disenchantment, dispassion and release.
You have to pay attention first in order to skillfully release.
If you say Buddha says one thing, and the actual texts say another, it would be useful to compare your claim to the texts.Buddha has been perhaps the greatest master to ever live, but I must say it is very frustrating that you keep quoting him as if to instruct me...
It is a set of tools.Mind enjoys this set timetable though, it can compare against a list and know it must be advancing through its work. Know that Buddha has set about these things to appease your mind, eventually you have to understand the absurdity of even his words.
Indeed.That is his whole purpose though, in that recognition you can be released from discontent. He is playing on your mind deeply to help you realize its stupidity.
Please post a Buddhist source to back up your claims regarding Buddhism, thanks. No more strawmen, please.His whole teaching can be summed up easily: no-mind.
More generally, all Eastern thought can be summed up easily too: witness
Mind is not the witness, find the witness!
If you say Buddha says one thing, and the actual texts say another, it would be useful to compare your claim to the texts.
Please post a Buddhist source to back up your claims regarding Buddhism, thanks. No more strawmen, please.
You misunderstood my post (having lot's of practice obviously), my slander comment wasn't directed at the patient suicide aspect.It is funny though, you start out defending Jung because my statement of patient suicide is "slander", now you say it is perfectly normal for patients to commit suicide - I merely point out that the guy has not helped anyone.
Being that your clueless about psychology, this tirade is excusable.He goes back to analyze the past which CANNOT be changed. Every patient of his can be cured simply by saying "do not worry about the past, it is dead, let it rest" but no, he goes on analyzing the patients very issue. The issue is not the real problem at all, it is the CLINGING to the issue that is the problem.
The Jungian system has at it’s core the concept of an unconscious aspect to the human psyche. This consists of the personal unconscious - relating to ones own life history - and a collective unconscious - comprising symbols shared by all humanity. These symbols - or archetypes - allow humans to perceive and relate to the world in species-specific ways. This occurs both within the individuals’ life and between individuals separated in time and space. It is the conscious mind’s choice to ignore these archetypal behaviour patterns that cause psychological problems. The task of Jungian
therapy is therefore to redress the balance by helping people to understand the influence of specific archetypes in their lives.
The Jungian process of Individuation is meant to clear all the past baggage so to speak in order that the person will be balanced. This is very Eastern in philosophy, I don't understand where or why you're comprehending otherwise.The actual situation is that it has influence because they cannot let it go - it's as simple as that. We create guilt in everyone as a society, and now they have repressed something. This grows and grows until they are completely obsessed... in reality, Jung is merely teaching people how to live after amputation, but is still letting people sit with their legs hanging over the platform at a train station.
I do not need a psychology degree, I have mastered my own mind! I have already shown Jung has not even managed this, yet you justify what he has said about others?
The Jungian process of Individuation is meant to clear all the past baggage so to speak in order that the person will be balanced. This is very Eastern in philosophy, I don't understand where or why you're comprehending otherwise.
That's about giving up clinging and attachments.They don't say anything different at all, you are just looking at the boat where I am saying that the river is so shallow you can walk it.
It is described as Buddha-nature... it is the whole purpose of the texts and you are questioning whether they are genuine? This really emphasizes how much you miss of Buddha...
No-mind is used most in Zen, but Buddha makes many references as well, including:
Anger and pride should one forsake,
all fetters cast aside,
dukkha’s none where no desire,
no binding to body or mind
- dhammapada v221