Paladin
Purchased Bewilderment
That is what makes it fun.
You know, the more I learn, the more I agree with you.
That is what makes it fun.
I agree.A valid point, however, remember when I said that we are inherently part of the landscape we survey? From that perspective there is still a certain sense of being, and being an integral part of what is happening.
I still agree, although i would perhaps argue that for something to be left is the product of being-in-relation. If a memory is left, something has to be there to receive and record the memory?What is left behind is the sense that " I am that" transcending into something akin to "thou art".
I still agree. That shift is, top me, one of relation. The continual return to the question 'who am I?' and 'who art thou?'To me, this becomes operationalized during a shift from ordinary consciousness which includes a conventional sense of self to being part of the immensity, so to speak.
Sorry, don't know Wilbur.Unless I'm mistaken this correlates with Wilber's pre/trans fallacy as well.
Agreed, but it would be, to me, a great sadness to say 'contemplation is happening' or 'being is happening' without wondering who or what contemplates ... or am I being too simple?Therefore, it is still contextually correct to say that "contemplation is happening". Or, so I would argue.
I'm not trying to be difficult here, but are we not over-complicating a simple idea. Hume's definition still requires an individual 'thing' to collect and store the 'contents', and the 'contents' collected and stored, no matter what their labels, are never quite like the thing that's collecting and storing them ... and intrinsic to that thing, prior to and in relation to the content received and stored, is a way of thinking or perceiving 'itself' which is unique, as it does not perceive anything else in quite the same way.See, I really do not percieve a "self". I like Hume's self as a-collection-of-remembered-sense-contents.
Surely one can? The way we perceive 'my' consciousness is unique in regard to the way we perceive the consciousness of every other human being we meet?Didtto with consciousness. Can I point to this self or this consciousness? No...
I agree (I think).Contemplation is happening where there are billions of neurons composed of billions of atoms (quarks or whatever), information is being fed, and actions are being taken, autonomously and knowingly, I would say, not in a void (if I knew what a void is).
Oh dear ... more research to do ... sorry I can't offer a more cognisant response.That is what Mahavira of the Jains said in 500 BC - Anekantavada (doctrine of non-exclusivity or multiple viewpoints).
Can't argue with that."Anekāntavāda is one of the most important and fundamental doctrines of Jainism. It refers to the principles of pluralism and multiplicity of viewpoints, the notion that truth and reality are perceived differently from diverse points of view, and that no single point of view is the complete truth."
Yes. But that point of view is, I would suggest, the key to the mystery.Self is true only from a particular view-point.
Agreed, but it would be, to me, a great sadness to say 'contemplation is happening' or 'being is happening' without wondering who or what contemplates ... or am I being too simple?
That is second of the Sankara's realities, 'Pragmatic' (Vyavaharika). Philosophers play with words (Murleau-Pontry, etc.) - 'Shabda Jāla' (Maze of words).Yes. But that point of view is, I would suggest, the key to the mystery.
Murleau-Ponty said: ..
Agreed.I think the conventional sense of subject and object are part of our life and part of our understanding.
Agreed. As I see it, that's part of the third definition of being, being-in-relation. In a 'Newtonian' way of thinking, the relation is always between two closed systems, what we're discussing here is, I suggest, an open system — a bit like the Quantum thingy about a particle and a wave.I also understand that in moments of meditation the line between subject and object can become blurred.
I would say 'becoming' and 'being' are to each other as wave is to particle?I am just saying reverse those assumptions and postulates ... "Becoming incompasses being" (Heraclitus and Whitehead).
Yes, I know, but it is the aspect of non-dualism and becoming that made me think specifically of Advaita. It seems that much of what you postulate is similar as far as the view of self is concerned. I recall lectures by Tony Parsons in which he argues that instead of "I am contemplating" it is more accurate to say that "contemplation is happening", thus removing the idea of a separate self, while maintaining the experience of consciousness/awareness.
Or am I missing your point altogether?
Can I say then, that 'being' and 'becoming' are simultaneous? I don't view 'being' as a static entity, but as a dynamic continuum.
No, what or where is this being? If it is in time, it changes… period. It is then not being, but becoming.
To refer somewhat unfairly to Parsons, to say 'contemplation is happening' doesn't really adequately answer the question. Contemplation doesn't happen in a void ... ?
A valid point, however, remember when I said that we are inherently part of the landscape we survey? From that perspective there is still a certain sense of being, and being an integral part of what is happening. What is left behind is the sense that " I am that" transcending into something akin to "thou art". To me, this becomes operationalized during a shift from ordinary consciousness which includes a conventional sense of self to being part of the immensity, so to speak. Unless I'm mistaken this correlates with Wilber's pre/trans fallacy as well. Therefore, it is still contextually correct to say that "contemplation is happening". Or, so I would argue.
What is void and what is not? What is substance and what is not? This is a tricky question, and IMHO, science does not yet have the answer.
That is the point. Science does not have the answer. Void is that outside the Universe (so beyond science). Substance exists, but not as a hard and fast and point-to-able entity. But as a kind of electrical field (remember it is not nuclear by atomic forces, electro-magnetism, that allow us to experience solids) we hypothesize into a thing (substance or being).
Contemplation is happening where there are billions of neurons composed of billions of atoms (quarks or whatever), information is being fed, and actions are being taken, autonomously and knowingly, I would say, not in a void (if I knew what a void is).
That is what Mahavira of the Jains said in 500 BC - Anekantavada (doctrine of non-exclusivity or multiple viewpoints ).
"Anekāntavāda is one of the most important and fundamental doctrines of Jainism. It refers to the principles of pluralism and multiplicity of viewpoints, the notion that truth and reality are perceived differently from diverse points of view, and that no single point of view is the complete truth."
Like the Dine (Navajo) word “daat’si” which means “yes and no”, “yes or no, but not both”, “yes”, “no”, “perhaps”, “possibly”.
See, reality is not a defined, pre-existing thing one can go out and pick up certainty or truth in. It (like quantum physics) is just a superposition of probabilities or possibilities that may come to pass, may be passing, or may have passed. This view-point does not admit “self” or “being” or “property”. Rather, it admits now and this moment and this experience which is up to us to make sense of in terms of the larger Anekāntavāda.
Self is true only from a particular view-point.
Originally Posted by Paladin
A valid point, however, remember when I said that we are inherently part of the landscape we survey? From that perspective there is still a certain sense of being, and being an integral part of what is happening.
I agree.
'Being' in my somewhat Thomist metaphysic is tripartite:
Being in itself: there is intrinsically something, something 'is', the Scholastics used the latin term esse to signify the is-ness of something.
“Esse” does nto really mean “being (or thing) in itself”. That phrase came much later. It means the character, the is-ness. Not the Is-ness of something. For instance, a child is hurtled from a car and impacts the truck that hit the car, to become goop and die. There is no something here (during this period). There is only dread (before), horror (during) and sadness (afterwards). Now we will all have different experiences of this set of events I describe, and different memories and different pre-hensions. So there is no “thing” in spacetime to apply “esse” to. There is only “esse”.
Aside: I also adhere to the Eriugenian distinction that things are, or are not, depending upon whether they are perceptible to the intellect (which for Eriugena organises the data from the senses).
Nope. Your or my death caused by a .45 to the brain is not perceptible to our intellect. Yet it exists, because we are dead. Sense-data is not enough (that has always been the shortcoming of Empiricists). We have “intellectual data” where we can “see” an atom or the Milky Way (as pictured in a grand axial view) without “seeing” it. And “sense data” is raw… there are thousands of inputs per second, we selectively pick and choose which we consciously experience and which we store away. And the “intellect” can store true data, which can later be corrupted by intellect.
Being as itself: Almost synonymous with the above. The scholastics would say a being (esse) is, according to its act (actus). Being and act are inseparable, as the first act of the being is to be.
Nope, the act and the perception-experience of the act is all there is. To be is not a requirement for acting. G!d is beyond spacetime… hence not a being (if a being does not have to be in spacetime it is not part of the Universe and this entire line of discussion is rediculous). G!d acts without being or be or acting.
On the other hand the action of a virtual particle (which we can measure as the Casimir force) is a function of the quantum of action, planck’s constant. There is no being there.
So if to “be” means being located within spacetime, there are actions without being even under your rules (G!d and the quantum).
As far as I have gotten so far. Still have half of Thomas' #42 and a couple of Paladin's follow ons to get to (tomorrow maybe?)