Re: Does idealism lead to more compassion ?
Posted: Tue Nov 09, 2021 3:39 pm
Lou,Lou Gold wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:23 amLemme see if I can get beyond our "stuckness." A saint was once asked if everyone viewed him as holy. The saint said "No, a thief would see me as a thief." I'm making an effort here both to reveal how I am and to take care not to project that onto you, which is why I continuously ask you about your story. My story is there's a strong jurist in me as well as a creative child. My revelation that I am a Child of God plunged me into wanting to bring these aspects of my nature into balance, which turned out to be a lifelong work of grokking lots of previously unconscious stuff. It is in this context that makes the Jacob Collier song lyric "Sanctify don't Justify" very sensible to me. I try not to project this onto you by asking, "how it is for you?" You respond, "You assume that your approach is less intellectual, less cognitive, and more "direct experiencing" or "awareness" or appreciation of nature, and I say there is absolutely no warrant for that assumption." Where do you get that I am saying that I am more complete (or whatever) than you? I'm not offering a counterargument, I assume that I am in a great diversity within a glorious mysteriousness. That's as close to perfect as I can be. What about you?AshvinP wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 3:38 am
Well... I think "rationalize" was the right word for what you meant, but it's not the right word for what I am talking about. We have to communicate these things to each other in abstract concepts and, moreover, in plain typeface which eliminates a whole lot of the possibilities for meaning in speech. This is related to the phenomena of mechanism I have been writing about. Anyway, it is always going to sound like I am trying to "justify" some purely intellectual approach to you, just like it seems like you are trying to "justify" another intellectual approach to me. The main difference I see is that one way is a bit more self-aware of its "justifying" tendency than the other. You assume that your approach is less intellectual, less cognitive, and more "direct experiencing" or "awareness" or appreciation of nature, and I say there is absolutely no warrant for that assumption.
I appreciate your efforts to get beyond the stuckness, since I know it isn't your preferred approach.
But I don't think I am projecting onto you when you write the bold above, which is the CBF I am speaking of. CBF manifests in two main ways - 1) we assume we have already gained all the knowledge and wisdom we will ever need to know, 2) we assume a lot more knowledge and wisdom is beyond our cognitive reach in this lifetime. I say you are expressing #2 above, and generally throughout all of your comments here. Practically, the end result of #1 and #2 are the same - we stop asking questions with an expectation they can be answered.
When we say that we "want" to bring things into balance and grokk the previously unconscious stuff, we are obviously presupposing cognitive activity which provided the motivation for that desire. A "mystery" only confronts us when we understand that what we are perceiving and thinking about is incomplete. The most natural urge is to solve this mystery, but in the modern age that has been flipped, especially by the fact that all our material needs (but not soul-spiritual ones) can be provided for without solving it. So we say, why bother?
I know you are asking for a more personal account of what makes me tick, so to speak, and I am trying to relate that to you in terms of transpersonal knowledge of Nature. Because, in my view, what my particular individuality expresses at any given time is completely irrelevant for this topic. None of what I am writing should be related only to you personally or me personally. What is important is how the transpersonal and eternal manifests in any given individuality - as Goethe remarked, "Everything transient is but a parable". That six word sentence is what truly makes me tick right now.