Gut feelings are not a reliable pathway to truth, and "the thinking mind" is the only mechanism we have to discern truth and falsehood.The intuitive mind is the pathway to the experience. But first the overactive thinking mind must be subdued.
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Gut feelings are not a reliable pathway to truth, and "the thinking mind" is the only mechanism we have to discern truth and falsehood.The intuitive mind is the pathway to the experience. But first the overactive thinking mind must be subdued.
Gut feelings are not a reliable pathway to truth, and "the thinking mind" is the only mechanism we have to discern truth and falsehood.
Well, not that I give it much weight, but my intuition doesn't think your approach is a good one, either.Oh? Who sez? The thinking mind?
I'm sorry - we may be dealing with a semantic issue here: my position is that *logical reasoning founded on evidence* is the reliable pathway to truth. I (probably as a bad assumption) figured that this would fall into what you were calling "the thinking mind".Wasn't it the thinking mind that Hitler used to rationalize the extermination of the Jews, and the Christians and Muslims to exterminate one another? And how about the Inquisition? Today, we use the thinking mind to justify two illegal wars in the Middle East, honoring those who fight in them as heroes, while ISIS uses it to justify mass murder. The thinking mind is used as a Trojan Horse called NAFTA to rip off South America of her resources. Science uses the thinking mind to convince us that the billions spent on space exploration is all in the name of good science, when the real agenda is the militarization of space. Monsanto uses science to hoard billions via patenting its modified seeds, and Big Pharma to churn out dangerous, expensive drugs. All trim and proper and legal even. No, the thinking mind is too easily a devious mind.
I said the intuitive mind is the pathway to the experience. It is the experience we are after.
How can that apply to the unknown and the unknowable as you claimed?All relative opposites are just two sides of the same coin. When the seeming duality is transcended, they are seen as they actually are: a singular reality. It is the ordinary conditioned mind that sees them as separate and dual. That is what the mystic realizes is illusion.
How can that apply to the unknown and the unknowable as you claimed?
We can not distinguish between the two - how are they opposites?
Sorry, no idea what that means.They're not. I keep telling you that.
In the post you just referenced, I am referring only to any set of relative opposites, which includes the known and the unknown, and which, when transcended, are then seen as a singular reality. Why? Because they are not separate as they appear to be; the transformed view gained in transcendence shows us that. It is this transformed view that is unknowable by the conditioned mind.
Well, not that I give it much weight, but my intuition doesn't think your approach is a good one, either.
I'm sorry - we may be dealing with a semantic issue here: my position is that *logical reasoning founded on evidence* is the reliable pathway to truth. I (probably as a bad assumption) figured that this would fall into what you were calling "the thinking mind".
Just so we're clear: it's *reason* I'm supporting, not whatever else you think is covered by the term "the thinking mind". Listing off a whole bunch of actions and decisions that I consideredunreasonable isn't going to somehow convince me that intuition is a good basis for decisions.
Gut feelings aren't reliable. The fact that you can list off other examples of poor thinking that you apparently believe weren't based on gut feelings doesn't somehow make gut feelings reliable.
Edit: my main objection was to your statement that "the thinking mind must be suspended." I consider reason to be part of "the thinking mind", so I take your statement to mean that reason must be suspended. Did I interpret what you said incorrectly?
Sorry, no idea what that means.
Yes, that is increasingly clear. Thankyou though.The transcendent view cannot be encapsulated via idea.
...my position is that *logical reasoning founded on evidence* is the reliable pathway to truth. I (probably as a bad assumption) figured that this would fall into what you were calling "the thinking mind".
Why should we expect physical substantiation of something not physical?
To me, the collective experiences of humans (mystical, paranormal, etc.) objectively analyzed is evidence (not proof) to be considered.
I have personally concluded ...
... that non-physical realms exist beyond reasonable doubt.
Nobody expects the mystical to be studied with the same rigorousness as physical experimentation.
Do you require substantiation to know that you are here, now?
Any such 'deepity' is only in your mind, but you have missed the point, which is not about the level of salinity, but about the universality of salinity. Sorry.
Not so simplistic or demonstrable. Show me this 'it' that rains.
Then show me the 'whirlpool' that whirls
the 'river' that flows
and the 'wave' that waves.
No such animals.
These are nothing more than figures of speech we have accustomed to, thinking them to be real
things, which they're not; they're actions.
Descartes was wrong. There is no such 'I' that thinks. There is only thinking itself ...
The Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard provided a critical response to the cogito. Kierkegaard argues that the cogito already presupposes the existence of "I", and therefore concluding with existence is logically trivial.
Kierkegaard's argument can be made clearer if one extracts the premise "I think" into two further premises:
"x" thinks
I am that "x"
Therefore I think
Therefore I am
Where "x" is used as a placeholder in order to disambiguate the "I" from the thinking thing.
... the fairest answer is "I don't know".
I do not think that a belief is an experience. I think we have an experience of believing our beliefs ...
We believe, knowing that we believe. That "knowing" is an experience of belief, but the content of a given belief is not itself an experience. First there is experience, then there is memory, interpretation, belief. Coincidental with interpretation and belief is the experience of believing, a separate experience from the original one.
Yes, I am implying that reality is partly hidden from empirical and rational knowledge.
The experience of the hidden is mystical experience.
There can be such a thing as a mystical experience even of a reality with no supreme being in the Abrahamic sense. Consider various forms of Buddhism.
This gets back to the insistence all along that "the mystical" isn't a belief.
The goal is not to assert a proposition and gain your assent through a process of reasoning.
The goal is to point to the experience
and suggest that it is possible
and that the demonstration of its possibility is in the having of the experience.
In many traditions, the proper method is a purification and initiation of one's own life and consciousness, and this is so precisely because the experience is subjective.
So after the semantic tap-dancing has subsided, I fail to see how we're any further way from disproving the notion that belief is an experience. At best, haven't we merely arrived at the conclusion that believing is an experience? Doesn't believing have content?
But isn't "mysticism" a belief?
Oops. I'd mistaken most of what you've offered thus far as the product of a process of reasoning.
Could it be that experiences themselves are universally similar and that they're only imbued with imaginary (read: "mystical") qualities after the fact?
They offer their personal experiences for us to consider. They are not proselytizing but relating experiences. For someone like you, nothing but physical evidence is meaningful; that's fine for you but I think you will be impoverished by not considering that others may experience more than our surface reality.Why don't we set mere physical substantiation aside for the moment and grope about wildly for any sort of substantiation? What can the mongers of mysticism offer aside from allegations and subjective testimony?
Why can we not analyze a body of human experiences that, by their nature, leave no physical trail. I think we are impoverished to ignore without objective consideration.A statement like that is already awash in flim-flammery. Isn't it rather ridiculous to claim that the mystical and the paranormal can be objectively analyzed if they cannot be demonstrated to actually exist?
So, I'm not establishing truth for anyone but myself. I will offer my observations and opinions to others as input for their own establishment of truth. In the end, without proof or disproof, all anyone has is their own opinion which holds sway only over their jurisdiction of one person..So what? Personal conclusions don't establish truth.
As I said to well named, I don't think that every phenomenon necessarily has a naturalistic explanation, but I do think that all the valid explanations to be had are naturalistic.
No, I don't.Well, if you believe that there is any phenomenon that does not have a naturalistic explanation (not even in theory), then you must believe it has a nonnatralistic or mystical explanation by default.
That's what I'm getting at. And no, this doesn't mean that I've assumed some non-naturalistic explanation for the stuff in the second category. There is no explanation for these things; that's what "we don't know" implies.
Only things that have been explained have explanations. Many things have not been explained, so the answer to your question is no.Previously you stated,:"I don't think that every phenomenon necessarily has a naturalistic explanation, but I do think that all the valid explanations to be had are naturalistic."
Question:
Do you believe every phenomenon has a naturalistic explanation or not?
I don't expect that humanity will ever learn all there is to learn, simply because it seems that "all there is to learn" is infinite.If not, then do you believe there are some phenomena that cannot be explained naturally (not even in theory)?