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Member (Idle past 3801 days) Posts: 70 From: Raleigh NC Joined: |
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Author | Topic: No One Sees God | |||||||||||||||||||
Stile Member (Idle past 296 days) Posts: 4295 From: Ontario, Canada Joined: |
Spiritual Anarchist writes: My goals is to get people to question their assumptions and understand that we are all delusional if we think we are in any way capable of reasoning our way to truth or getting to truth based on faith in dead religions. A very noble goal.You seem to speak a lot about what "Christians" and what "Atheists" believe. It should be noted that there are many Christians and Atheists that do not believe as you say they do... and that they do accept your goal already. Not everyone is a fundamentalist (Christian or Atheist). Once everything is completely absurd and you can not take any thought seriously you will be left with the bare essence of your soul. Maybe.Maybe not. Maybe this is something that only works for you. Maybe this is another delusion that you have simply fooled yourself into believing. Of course if you give up delusional thinking and everyone around you is delusional you will become like me and have to choose between not being able to really talk to anyone or ...you will have to dip a toe in the poisoned water in order to socialize and risk falling back in and drowning... every time you open your mouth to speak/write (communicate) with other people. How do you know that what you describe here isn't just yourself rationalizing the strangeness of your own delusion? It is, afterall, rather easy to say "give up delusional thinking."It's another to objectively know that you actually have done this. How do you tell the difference?Is it possible to tell the difference? Not everyone who is "not able to really talk to anyone" is in some sort of delusion-invincible state. In fact, many of them are in some of the deepest of delusions themselves. If you have, however, found some inner-peace for yourself. Do continue. Such a thing can be difficult to achieve and there would have to be a very high priority reason to abandon it.
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Stile Member (Idle past 296 days) Posts: 4295 From: Ontario, Canada Joined: |
Spiritual Anarchist writes: I am saying that the bare essence of your soul can only be felt completely when you let go of your ego. I understand what you're saying.My point is that there's no reason to believe that what you say is actually true. People can say a lot of things.So far you have said a lot of things. How much of it can you show to be valid? Perhaps you made a mistake. Maybe what you thought was "the bare essence of your soul" was just a delusional feeling.How can you tell you didn't make a mistake? I am not describing a belief I got to through reasoning or some kind of emotional epiphany but an actual experience through observation. This does nothing to show that what you say is actually true.What experiences? What observations? Did you record these observations? Can other people replicate your methods and observations and results? If no one else is capable of replicating your results... how can you tell the difference between you finding "the bare essence of your soul" and you just finding another delusion? Isn't that what a delusion is? Something that only you see?If you're the only one who sees "the bare essence of your soul"... how do you know this isn't a delusion itself? But thinking is not the key to understanding "I Am" . Awareness is the key. Maybe it is.Maybe it isn't. Again... you're just making claims. Can you support any of the claims you make?Can you explain how "awareness" is different from "thinking"? As for sharing inner peace my heart longs to do this. But it is "inner" peace so can not be easily shared directly. All I can do is "be" peace and hope like Thich Naht Hanh I inspire others to pursue the same. Exactly.
quote: This guy does stuff. Things that are different from people without his version of "inner peace."What do you do? At a minimum... you could use your intellect to imagine scenarios. Scenarios where you do something differently because of your inner-peace then what you see most other people doing.Then you could explain (in these certain scenarios) how acting your way provides different results that are "better" than what other people seem to get. Does understanding the essence of your soul allow you to act differently than other people?-if so... then you should be able to explain scenarios where this can be identified Does being "aware" instead of "thinking" allow you to act differently than other people?-if so... then you should be able to explain scenarios where this can be identified Does having your "inner peace" allow you to act differently than other people?-if so... then you should be able to explain scenarios where this can be identified If all the things you talk about do not allow you to act different from other people, even in imaginary scenarios... then I might suggest that you are actually under a delusion and that there is no real benefit to all the claims you make. If you are not under a delusion, and there actually is a difference... then once you identify it people can make up their own minds to see if it's something beneficial for them or not (like Nhat Hanh does).
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Stile Member (Idle past 296 days) Posts: 4295 From: Ontario, Canada Joined: |
Spiritual Anarchist writes: Can I show that thinking leads to delusion? Yes I can. In a way, sure.You can show that thinking may lead to delusion if you do it in the way you describe. This, in itself, is rather simple and obvious. Of course if you think in certain ways it can lead you to delusions. But what if you don't do it the way you describe? You have not shown that thinking must lead to delusion. And that's why Buddhism is not for everyone.
I have practiced these teachings and found that Buddhas observations on suffering and delusional thinking ring true based on my experience. Again, this is fantastic. And I think you should continue with following your Buddhist path. It seems to be working wonderful for you.
Is this only my own subjective experience? No. I am again in full agreement. Many others have found great success within the teachings of Buddha. They are very helpful teachings.
Could you or any one try these teachings to achieve the same results or realizations ? Yes. This is the part that's just not true.Can some people achieve the same results as you, or greater than yours? Yes, of course they could. But all people? No, some people are just not built in a way that is conducive to Buddha's teachings. It's the same with Christianity. Some people work extremely will with Christian teachings... it resonates with the way they are. For these people... the path of Christianity is the best way to go. The point is to be honest with ourselves and see if we can identify the way we are built. Then to find a path that works with those conclusions. For some, this will be Buddha's teachings. For others, it will be Christianity. For others, something else... People are different.People are too different for any single thing (like Buddhism) to work for everyone. When you are aware that you are sitting here reading what I have to write how can you know that you are not making a mistake? How do you know anything you are experiencing right now is real? How do you know you have a soul? How do you know if you are even aware? Perhaps that is a delusion? I don't know these things.
This is the path to Nihilism. No, it's not.You're making the same mistake here as you do in showing how thinking leads to delusion. Just because it can, doesn't mean it must. You can just as easily say "making up answers to these questions can be the path to delusion." Yes, it's quite possible that not knowing the answers to your questions can lead to Nihilism.There are a lot of things that can lead to Nihilism. The question isn't can this lead to Nihilism? But must this lead to Nihilism? And the answer to that is "no." If being aware of who I am is mistaken and delusional then perhaps that realization that I am delusional to think I know who I am is delusional? And perhaps that is delusional etc adinfinitum. To me this not clear reasoning. Reality has no requirement to be clear to you.
It seems to me that there are honest questions from those who want an actual true realization of reality as it is...and there are people that just question to question. Maybe there are answers, and maybe there aren't.Maybe you have access to those answers, and maybe you don't. Maybe you can share those answers with others, and maybe you can't. This is just reality, not nihilism. Be honest.
It is not a true philosopher that simply finds a way to put a question mark at the end of every sentence. It would be equally deceiving to place a period at the end of every sentence, don't you think? When there is a statement we can make... then we should make the statement.If there is a valid question... then we should ask the question. My point is that you are forcing a statement where you have no grounds to do so.Your defense seems to be that you don't like questions and therefore statements are better? Perhaps your defense would be stronger if you actually supported your statement... You will not assume that I am wrong on anything anymore then you would assume that I am right on anything. I will assume that you are wrong on anything that you cannot support.I will assume that you are right on all the things that you can support. Does that seem fair to you?
You would only ask questions that you actually want the answer to and only questions you have thought about without trying to win an argument or prove a point. You can win, if you'd like. I'm not overly interested in winning.I am, however, interested in claims you can support. You have made many claims so far such as: -awareness is better than thinking-stop thinking and you remove all delusions -strip away all delusions and what's left is your soul -Buddhism is a teaching that will work for everyone ...yet, you have not supported a single one of these claims.I then ask you to support them, or how you support them... and you then imply that asking questions is a waste of time. You sound like you're trying to hide the fact that you don't actually have any support for your ideas. That isn't peaceful.
You have stated that me simply saying things doesn't prove anything. And I will counter that simply asking questions doesn't prove anything either. I'm not trying to prove anything.I'm trying to ask you how you support your claims, to see if the information you're providing is worth looking into. The same can be said of delusional thinking. Most people do not meditate or dedicate their lives to being mindful. So most people are not at peace with themselves and find that applying compassion only plays a small part in their lives in the form of pity or trying to get sympathy or even results in apathy and Nihilistic thinking. Now that's some support!This is something I can verify, and yes... I do see this in my experiences as well. However, you have only shown that meditation and such is an answer for some people (like yourself). Not an answer for all people (as you're claiming).
I do not feel like I am a fool because I am so obviously wrong and you called me on it. Because this simply isn't true. You're right, that's not true.I haven't called you on "being obviously wrong." I don't think you are obviously wrong. I called you on "supporting your claims." That's not saying you're wrong... that's asking how you know that you're right. The two are different things. And, finally, you've started to make some statements that do actually support your claims. Now, do you have any more support? Or would you like to adjust some of your claims?
And although it is true certain aspects have in fact been documented and proven in Psychology Journals on both Meditation and Mindfulness I wasn't really trying to get into scientific evidence for how I see things as much as I was just commenting on human nature and aspects of delusional thinking. Although being documented and proven in Journals would be great support... this is not the only kind of support I care about.I care about any support you can offer for the things you say. Maybe it's just personal experience (in which case... it will be difficult to claim things for other people). Maybe it's group experience (in which case... it will be difficult to claim for all people). I would just like to know why you say the things you say... it allows me to decide how much I should accept your point of view. Perhaps I should go to the topic Book Nook The Righteous Mind" and get out all my ideas there and come back to this post later to see if anyone addresses Michael Novak or his book here. Because that is the OP of this thread. Not a class on Metaphysics versus Buddhist teachings on Delusional thinking. Very true. And almost entirely my fault. I'll stop posting to this thread with off-topic-ness now. Sorry for intruding. I did put a response together to your last post, though. And it's posted here. I've hidden it (because it is off-topic.). If you'd like to see it, use the "Peek" button in the bottom-right of my post, it will allow you to read everything I wrote.
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