AshvinP wrote: ↑Mon Jun 03, 2024 8:11 pm
Federica wrote: ↑Mon Jun 03, 2024 7:04 pm
PS: Ashvin, btw, next time you object to the "wasteland of perception" I will appeal to ML's illusory world that never existed at any times, other than as Lucifer's lie
Max, however, isn't referring to the qualia of sensory experience, like the stones, plants, animals, and humans we perceive around us, but the theoretical abstractions that were conjured up as 'explanations' and reified, like atoms, particles, forces, energy fields, and so forth. Clearly, the latter are illusory insofar as they are taken as independent realities that are working 'behind' the phenomenal appearances. I think he would say the latter are symbols revealing spiritual reality in direct proportion to the life and strength of cognition that approaches them. Or as I stated in the essay:
In that sense, the perceptual modifications are only ‘illusions’ when the spirit fails to continue retracing the effect to other facts, including the fact of its own inner activity, but instead confuses the perceptual experience with some ‘final state’ of reality. Simply put, no phenomenon is something other than what it appears to be, neither is it only what it appears to be.
Neither was I, when speaking of wasteland of perception (by the way, is a stone or a plant a quale of sensory experience? These are concepts to which many qualia can be related). Rather, I was speaking of the perceptual-memory picture, which is a wasteland in the sense that it's the past picture of cosmic interconnected gestures.
In anycase, let me point to something
Steiner stated, which has 'fortuitously' come to my help today. Perhaps it will settle the question of the appropriateness of the concept of "waste" for the perceptual-memory tableau. Interestingly, I’ve clicked on the Youtube suggestion to listen to this lecture for entirely separate reasons. Namely, RS Press Audio titled the video rendering of the lecture: “Stars as colonies of spiritual beings”, and that's why I've pressed play, since the colonies of star beings is the topic of my latest question on the other thread. Regardless, it says:
Steiner wrote:We human beings, too, were in the warmth of ancient Saturn.
Then evolution went forward. Out of the warmth, air was precipitated, water was precipitated, and at length the solid element. All these are remnants, precipitated, cast out by humanity in order that it might attain its further evolution. The whole solid mineral world belongs to us. It is but a relic that has remained behind. So, too, the watery and airy elements. Thus the real essence of our Earth is not what we have in the kingdoms of Nature, and not even what we carry in our bones and muscles (for these too are composed of what we have thus cast out and afterwards absorbed again). Our own souls are the real essence, and everything else is in reality more or less a semblance, a remnant, a
waste product, or the like.
Karmic Relationships IV Lecture VII,
PS: Regarding what ML is referring to in the essay, I will obviously not attempt to guess what he
would say (of course you can, because of your friendship) however, from what is written in the essay, the following can be gathered:
What ML is speaking of is a formed “
representation of him [another person I relate to],
as a model cast from a mould, or like the imprint of a seal in wax”, that is a conceptualized, intellectualized thought-perception. It's in this
general sense, that the word “model” is used. Of course, scientific models such as atoms, particles, etcetera are sub-categories and, if you will, elaborations of the intellectual “
model cast from a mould”. However, I don't gather that ML is referring exclusively and specifically to atoms, particles and other scientific abstractions. In the essay, “
this model of abstract representations that I project as husks of my perceptual encounters” is pointed to independent of and upstream of the reference to the work of "physicists and astronomers".
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek