This sounds very Taoist, like "the way that can be named is not the true way."If objective truth does exist, then it would only be made false the moment we tried to utter a single word for it, as we would be suggesting that this objective, impersonal truth can be comprehended by the subjective mind and bundled into an abstract, subjective statement or description.
juantoo3 said:Even so, there must be one reality that encompasses all. Perhaps it defies explanation, but it does compose the objective truth.
Yes! Seattlegal, I would have to say that this is precisely what happens ... IF we confound our discoveries and recognitions - however subtle and lofty - for that truth Itself (in deference to juantoo3 and jiii's Un-nameable Tao). [Watch, I'll do it in the remainder of this post ...] Highest Truth (the `Dharma') can never be captured, encapsulated, encoded or limited by words, by concepts, or even by Sound Itself (the ultimate Creative Power). For even the latter is but the Servant or Active Principle of any God or Gods that might exist ...seattlegal said:I find it really interesting that our drive to know the unknown/unknowable, or to describe the as yet undescribed is what drives us to keep searching, finding, investigating, and progressing. Does this mean that we stop progressing once we think we've found and described objective truth?
China Cat Sunflower said:I agree, but can we touch it or even approach it? Isn't everything colored by our senses of perception, the comparisons, extrapolations, and interpolations we make? Is that coloring really an impediment in personal sense, or is it only a limitation when we try to communicate and preserve knowlege?
I find the drive to understand interesting as well. I watched a rather interesting program last night on PBS, "How Art made the World." Coincidentally, I have been cruising through various Cave Art sites. Seems there is a bit more commonality among the various neolithic groups (generally speaking) than I had first given credit.seattlegal said:I find it really interesting that our drive to know the unknown/unknowable, or to describe the as yet undescribed is what drives us to keep searching, finding, investigating, and progressing. Does this mean that we stop progressing once we think we've found and described objective truth?
taijasi said:What then, exactly, is it, that we are Questing to find - driven so, that men would rather survive the horrors of concentration camps (in Nazi Germany), than offer themselves into the welcoming arms of death? Why the Loving Compassion of a Mother Teresa, or the will-to-live of the many, many thousands of Indians to whom she ministered? What is this `Enlightenment' which Buddhist monks pursue?
I think, for the typical person overwhelmed with day to day concerns, there is a comfort in "knowing," however mistaken that knowledge may be.If I had to sum it all up in one word, I think it would be - the Mystery of Identity. `Mystery' is almost superfluous, because it is redundant. The person who says, "oh, that's no mystery," has essentially sealed the door, and stopped progressing, as you indicate, Seattlegal. But that isn't always a bad thing, if the opposite extreme is an uncertainty and an unsettledness which saps or negates productivity. I've known both extremes, more often the latter ... but we can all relate to the former condition: "Ignorance is bliss," as the saying goes.
Perhaps. This is certainly one brand (style, or type) of teaching. Whether or not it is the way of understanding is as open to question as any other style or type of teaching. What of "vision quest?" And yet, even vision(s) is / are symbolic.`Objective Truth' can perhaps best be approached & known FROM the consciousness of that aspect of Being which eternally abides therein: the Crown Jewel, Dorjesempa, or `Vajrasattva.'
I don't know. I want to believe that objective truth is available to any who seek. I want to believe motivation counts for something, if not method. Otherwise, we are limited in our ability to perceive. Perhaps conveyance is limited by language, perhaps perception is limited by our "rose colored glasses." Yet, the opportunity if not ability, would seem to be available to all by the nature of the creature, that is, reality as objective truth.Who, but s/he who is a-sekha would truly understand this?
I agree, yet the mind is the tool we have available, subject to spirit and intellect. We can use a tool properly, or improperly, or in varying degrees. One cannot drive a nail with a screwdriver, yet one can drive a screw with a hammer."The mind is the great slayer of the Real."
juantoo3 said:Kindest Regards, China Cat!
Perhaps, I don't know. I am thinking our perceptions do color our understanding(s). This is the nature of relative / subjective truth. Perhaps objective truth can only realistically be experienced, if we have any connection to it at all.
I used to have a poster hanging on the wall: "I realize you heard what I said, but how can I know you understand what I really meant?"
Speculating on my part, perhaps this is why there are so many expressions of truth in the world, some even seemingly conflicting with others. Prehistoric humanity had a simple, "base" expression of truth as they understood it. With time, the colors of relative truth were in turn colored again and again, until what we have today are a host of competing truths, none of which are completely objective, but perhaps holding a grain of objective truth.