Federica wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08, 2024 4:51 pm
Regarding the phenomenological question - it’s been discussed hundred times. One can understand why the typical friend doesn’t get it, because we’ve all been there.
Whenever such a thought as the above occurs, I would recommend trying to summon these two quotes from Steiner for helpful orientation:
(1) Genuine spiritual perceptions act differently—they are living entities and must continually be created anew. One must go through the process repeatedly for already the following day uncertainty arises, especially about the loftiest experiences, and one must win certainty all over again. One must relate to spiritual knowledge as one relates in the physical world to what is reality and not image. A real process in the physical world is the need to eat: not many of you would refrain from eating today because you had a good meal a week ago. You would not say that the meal of a week ago is still in you nourishing you, so that there is no need to eat today. By contrast a soul content arrived at via the body remains and can be recalled unchanged in many respects. That is not the case with a spiritual soul content; this does not just fade; its very certainty is repeatedly shaken and must be regained ever again.
...
(2) One can never look at the truths about the higher worlds from too many aspects. One should realize that from any one aspect it is possible to give only the poorest sketch. And when one looks at the same thing from the most diverse aspects, the impressions one receives in this way only gradually complement each other to form an ever more animated picture. Only such pictures, not dry, schematic concepts, can help the man who wants to penetrate into the higher worlds. The more animated and colorful the pictures, the more can one hope to approach the higher reality.
Understanding, at the second-order (esoteric) level, doesn't come from 'being there' once or twice or from having all the concepts in place to explain away the perceptual content at issue (such as our friend 'not getting it'). It is a
living cognitive process, just like digestion. These aren't mere metaphors but realities and we should (should, if we desire to explore the second-order movements) learn to gradually move our thinking like we move our bodily will when trying to get a sense of the form of a large structure, for ex., i.e. actively and repetitively from all different sides. Unlike the bodily will, we can also imbue that movement of thinking with imagination and explore perspectives and angles that are unavailable to the senses. We can try to
intuitively feel the soul gestures and patterns of thinking at work, akin to floating up in the air and getting a bird's eye view on the landscape below. As I remarked to Guney, this is not simply for the benefit of others we are 'explaining' these things to but also, and primarily, for our own benefit of inner sensitivity to superconscious movements.
Now, if you show them any optical illusion, or a bistable figure, and they still say they are not gathering anything from the side of thinking to complement the bare percept, then the issue may be other than cognitive. These are percepts usefully connected with far apart concepts. Far apart in a sense, yet overlapping in another. Since these percepts prompt thinking to flow into two clearly separate conceptual slots, it’s hard to unsee the thinking movement. The separation of the flow works like increasing the contrast in a super blurry picture, with a photo editor. The contrast makes the reconciliation operated by thinking, apparent. Even if one is only aware of the final, reconciled products at first, the duck and the rabbit, the vases and the faces, none can argue they did no active reconciliation of concept and percept. And while anyone new to these foundations - and motivated by the inquiry - needs plenty of time and dialogue to familiarize oneself with these things, I doubt that some very seasoned debater of Steiner such as FB should be allowed to twist people around his little finger for too long. There, the issue may be other than cognitive.
That is another good example and I agree it is helpful for people to work with. You outlined some of the reasons well and they make sense.
I can't speak to FB's motives, and of course, I have also speculated on them, but I try hard to adopt the inner stance that someone is well-intentioned and genuine for as long as possible. I have learned not to underestimate the depths of
self-deception in these areas, such that the person feels like they are 100% faithful to experience and everyone who pushes back is plagued by the very prejudicial problems they are unconsciously dealing with. That will always involve ignoring some communications, selectively paying attention to others, coloring the language used to fit preconceptions, resiting in-depth, patient, and humble phenomenal exploration, and similar things.
At the same time, when interacting with FB, I try to provide others with enough of the inner facts, quotes, illustrations, and reasoning so that they won't be only relying on his characterization.