Hello all, I hadn't entirely been keeping up with this thread, but I just re-read through the last 4 or 5 pages and I wanted to comment on a couple things:
About the value of philosophy and reflection on experience
As for helping others, what is the primary obstacle to such experience? It's thought. Not incorrect thoughts. Any thoughts.
What to do about the explanations? Just skip them, they do more harm than good. The value is in the experience.
I think that Windwalker (echoed by beenherebeforeagain) has already given the kind of response to this that I would give, i.e here:
Beliefs and ideas, philosophies and sciences, models and maps, are all useful when understood as structural supports. Structural supports are in fact necessary in order to be able to integrate what one is exposed to in Spirit.
You have to integrate what you are exposed to in these luminous moments encountered in silence! You aren't living outside of the world, but within it. You have to have a some frameworks of understanding of the world in order to translate these experiences.
Why examine it? Why seek clarity? Why seek knowledge? Why seek thoughts? Because I am human. These are things that humans do.
What I want to add is that I think there are reasons
why it is that integration of experience is a problem which, in the context of modern western culture, requires a certain amount of intellectual reflection. So, Typist, I think everyone who has responded agrees with you at least in part, about the value of silence, or that ultimately the interpretation and conceptualization of experience is of less value than experience.
But the counter-argument is that in order to recognize the value of silence you have to have some view of the world which allows it to have value. You have obviously already found it, and so you have no further need of philosophical reflection. You don't question the value of the experience because it is already part of your background worldview, is already taken as unquestionable, so to speak.
But the last few hundred years of western civilization could be described pretty accurately, I think, as a process of
demythicization, the deconstruction of the traditional views of the world. The modern western worldview does not easily grant that mystical experience has value. See for example:
this post and thread
So over against the philosophical developments of the last few hundred years, the enlightenment, rationalism, the progress of science and a naturalistic worldview, it does seem to me that there is value in philosophical reflection on how mysticism can be integrated with the other ways of seeing the world which we mostly take for granted. In some sense, I think that is the original topic of this thread.
What you are saying is that everyone should just take for granted all the things you take for granted, but I don't think that's how human questioning works. Inasmuch as beenherebeforeagain says he seeks because he is human, so is it also human to question, and once something is questioned, it is not as simple as pretending the question didn't arise. We can't honestly pretend not to question. Perhaps we must also find a silence of the question, and in a sense that is the
wisdom of the Buddha, but if you believe the world would be better if more people discovered the value of this experience or of mysticism, then it is also necessary that people be able to integrate that experience into the rest of their experiences of the world. Even if, at the end, the effort that goes into such philosophizing is a
raft that should be left behind, once the other shore is reached.
About "new age" egotism and the need for sages
If the problem we are discussing does not arise from the content of thought, then there is no way for you to play the role of sage, expert, guru etc, which is perhaps an unacceptable outcome.
I hosted a forum for years full to the rafters with folks who were building their personal "me" story stronger and stronger and stronger via these "I'm transcending my ego" type stories.
Don't take my word for it dear reader, go to any New Age type forum or thread, and observe for yourself that it's all about "me, me, me, me", my status, my situation, my progress, my advancement, my enlightenment or whatever other phoney baloney phrase might be popular at the moment.
I have observed cases where I think people fall into the kind of trap you are talking about here. In fact, I would say it's the most common pitfall of the kind of spiritual path that is associated with mysticism. You said earlier in the thread that there is no danger in spirituality, but I think here you are highlighting one.
However, I think it's a mistake to associate the danger of "spiritual" egotism with any attempt to integrate experience with intellectual life, or with any attempt to usefully describe these things to others, or to "teach" or provide a witness to the experience. Almost every spiritual tradition on earth will say that spiritual masters are necessary, that teachers are needed. There is a danger of pride and egotism involved with thinking too much of ourselves, or of wanting to be a "guru" for the sake of being a guru, but I think you're being unfair to cast Windwalker or others here in that light, simply because they seek to understand their experiences and communicate them. As Windwalker said, silence is humility, and every word we speak should flow out of that silence and back into it. But I think your mistake is to reject the real reasons why the breaking of silence is valuable. Why it is also that we speak.