The final secret
Question:
- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Ilya the Bat wrote: > The simplistic worldviews are easy to the mind, but wrong to the being. > The human body has 3 trillion cells, arranged in intricate patterns, > and simple-minded worldviews – whether of Protestant nature or of > "realist" nature – the likes of which have been inexplicably and > overbearingly equated with ethics and honor and good citizenship are > simply dishonest and untrue. There may be a simple cause, or a simple > outcome, at a higher level. But before its nature can be truly > glimpsed, it is incumbent to see the complexity of the manifestation, > or else one’s view be dishonest – and, as a result, barbaric and > malicious. > Every belief system that ever existed, from religious to secular, was > based on the concept of what is man. It appears that many of them were > part-right; that they were describing part of human beingness, and > their solutions were right to the extent that they were appropriate for > the person at hand at the time of life of that person. This is as much > true for capitalism as it is true for science, as it is true for > psychology, as it is true for religion and spirituality and other > paths. > The Buddhist approach of achieving enlightenment is achieving oneness > with the law of cause and effect, which is seen to be the true reality > beyond all mental and sensory fabrication. "The enlightened individual > is one with the law of cause and effect." From which position the > enlightened individual, from what I can see, is apparently driven by > the law of cause and effect to do deeds of compassion and good for > one’s fellow human beings, with the ultimate goal of getting them to > the same place. It appears likewise that the enlightened individual (as > well as an individual on path to enlightenment) is put into situations > where he has to rectify wrong done either in this or in previous > lifetime; to clear himself of karmic entanglements; and to free himself > for ultimate liberation, at which point he apparently has the choice > either to continue existing and go back to help other people or to > simply disappear into the light. The deeds done wrong at a higher state > of enlightenment carry more weight than the deeds done wrong at lower > states, and the constant presence of mind and spirit is requisite in > order not only to maintain that state of being, but likewise to do what > is in the interests of humanity – the interests that Buddhism believes > to be liberation and final merger. The joy and compassion and > ever-present energy that is associated with state of Buddhist > illumination are functions of man’s presence in the Buddhist truth – > the true cause-and-effect; the all-as-is – which is seen to be man’s > true and intended state, and which is as such experienced as a place of > joy that hath no bounds – joy that is as such absolute as being > absolute fulfilment of that which is man’s true Buddha nature. > It occurs to me that many other paths that seek enlightenment of one or > another kind, based on one or another concept of what is man’s truth > and man’s actual nature, offer paths that are of similar character. The > scientific path, that claims man’s true nature as being of intellect > whose purpose is acquisition of knowledge through scientific method in > one or another discipline, seeks to identify the mind with the canon of > knowledge that exists in the discipline and then use his own mind to > build on that canon. The mind is disciplined into the mindset of > scientific method; which mindset is trained to exclude all modes of > cognition that are inconsistent with scientific method and that must > present all new evidence in terms of evidence that already exists in > the field being studied. This is a different path toward what is seen > to be enlightenment, based on a different concept of what is man’s true > nature and leading to significantly different results. The joy of > discovery and the quest to continue – what is believed to be man’s true > nature as a being that seeks to apprehend the world through empirical > study – motivate man through many plodding hours of analysis and > examination; new ideas come up, build on each other, are discarded, and > then occasionally turn over the entire body of knowledge with an > explanation that completely uproots the previous way of thinking and > replaces it with something not thought of before. The joy seen here is > likewise seen to be a reflection of man’s true nature as the scientist > and discoverer; with the result being of course not only his own joy > but addition to man’s quest for knowledge as such. > In ideology-driven societies such as Communism, enlightenment was seen > to be identification with the ideology; which was supposed to produce > the man that Communism saw as being man’s true nature: That of service > to the proletariat and progress of mankind. This likewise was > advertised as man’s greatest joy based on the belief of what Communism > believed to be man: A part in a historical process leading inevitably > to a global Communist order in which all selflessly serve the common > good and are indiscriminately given what they need. Militaristic > ideologies, that believe man’s true nature to be that of warrior, > advertise man’s greatest joy as that of winning in battle – and that of > course works for some, but with consequences for others. In capitalism, > man’s true nature is seen to be that of consumer and of producer, whose > natural good is material acquisition and of doing whatever work or > business transaction is necessary to produce the goods necessary to > trade in the market for the good that one seeks. The joy advertised > here is that of having possessions; which is believed to be man’s > "rational self-interest" – and the exchange of which goods in the > market through mechanism of competition and improved efficiency is > claimed to lead to improvement in the "rational self-interest" of all. > This economic concept of man – as a being seeking to maximize utility – > is of course in direct contradiction to the concept of man as a > spiritual being whose goal is spiritual enlightenment; as a rational > being whose goal is knowledge; as a part of a historically inevitable > process; as a warrior; or anything similar. > The psychological concept of man depends upon the psychology. We have > everything from existential "self-actualization" to social-animal stuff > to various psychoanalytic traditions to the neo-Calvinism of Scott Peck > and Hillmann. The idea of what gives highest joy becomes a function of > what is seen to be the true nature of what is man. And of course in all > these cases, it plays better to people who operate on the level > described by the psychologist than they do on others – in the same way > as is the case for capitalism, science, Communism and other ideologies. > The concept of what is man drives the ideology. The fact of human > difference means that each of these is more appropriate for some than > for others; and each of these paths work better for one person than > they do for the next. > The Christian concept of man is that of embodied spirit invented for > service to God; and the highest joy is seen as that of surrender to > Holy Spirit and serving God and man. The highest function is seen as > being faith; which faith can be in either the right things or wrong > things, but is in all cases the truth of human being. Based on which > finding it has been possible for people to do all kinds of spinoff > traditions, from metaphysics to mysticism to New Age spirituality, in > which the person is placing his faith in one or another thing and is by > that faith brought to it and into it completely. > Finally there is the romantic path, that sees man’s nature as that of > the lover and finds man’s highest joy in passionate love and manifests > in inspiration and passion and emotional sharing and artistic output. > This path unites man’s spiritual nature – as being of spirit that lives > by intuition and inspiration; with man’s natural nature – as sexual > being; with man’s emotional nature – as being who seeks to share with > and be close to another person; with man’s rational nature – as being > that seeks to fathom the world through experience. And what I find, > having pursued that path, is that e.e. cummings’ "The final secret will > still be man" should be replaced with this: "The final secret is > woman." Given all the aforementioned concepts of what is man – all of > which are undeniably part of what is man, and all of which are more > natural to some men than to others and more natural to the same man at > different times in his life – we are left at the consummation of > spiritual, philosophical and passionate quest with this: A being that > combines all of these things, at the same, and in which being all these > are integrated and made manifest in their full resplendor. A being who > combines spirit, civilization and nature at once and makes of all of > them the highest fruition and highest embodiment; who is intricate and > delicate and warm and delightful; who is a masterpiece herself – a > masterpiece combining all forces that make human beingness – and out of > the wisdom that is embodied within her creates magnificent paintings, > photographs and calligraphy and reaches out to others seeking to show > them the paradise that she knows and that she is. > So my solution? IN FLORE VERITAS. In flower, truth. The logic of > consummation and continuity. The truth I found? Julia. > I hope you find the truth that works for you. > Ilya Shambat.
Those who speak don’t know. Those who know don’t speak. The Tao
Response:
Tower of Pisa. My middle name is Eileen. Ar Ar Ar. "marasu" <mar…@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:1130513629.255353.309920@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->> "PisaCake" <sherr…@adelphia.net> wrote… > Used2be wrote: >> pisa crumb cake? > leaning layers of pisa cake?
Response:
"Used2be" <used…@nowhere.com> wrote don’t you guys remember the rabbi "pisa cake" skits from saturday night live??? oh, dat’s a gonna be a pisa cake. <g> and then he did a little bit in the kids movie Casper (i LOVED that movie) where he was trying to convince the people that he could remove the ghosts from the haunted mansion and he says, "oh dat’s a gonna be a pisa cake…a pisa crumb cake." i love that guy…
Response:
Try to get your judgement and expectation out of the view screen you are looking at Ilya. The defense structure creates all that happens to you for your own entertainment. The defense structure seeks to heal you, your childhood, your family, your future, your nation and the world … the defense structure made you who you are today … a survivor … working recovery. So put love into where all the judgement and expectation you have inside and see it as all good … the defense structure is all good and what it does is good. This is why you love who you love and get in to the shit that you do with relationships … its all about love. Not the hate, the fear, the judgement expectation that makes criticism and shame. Love dont do those things. Good luck in changing the emotional bathwater and keeping the baby. Its a simple process that hurts like hell. sumbuddie on da watchtower in article 1130512204.156395.300…@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com, Ilya the Bat at ibshambat2…@hotmail.com wrote on 10/28/05 7:10 AM: – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> The simplistic worldviews are easy to the mind, but wrong to the being.
Response:
"hell_is_others" <tmozzare…@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1130512675.489875.181980@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com… > Ilya the Bat wrote: > a whole lot of pretentious, bloviating bullshit that is as incoherent as > ever. > Those who speak don’t know. > Those who know don’t speak. > The Tao
See how easy that was?
Response:
hell_is_others wrote: > Those who speak don’t know. > Those who know don’t speak.
So what are you waiting for? Become a tree, and know!
Response:
"PisaCake" <sherr…@adelphia.net> wrote…
pisa crumb cake???
Response:
> "PisaCake" <sherr…@adelphia.net> wrote… Used2be wrote: > pisa crumb cake?
leaning layers of pisa cake?
Response:
"Used2be" <used…@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:Jtr8f.25142$Bf7.2604@tornado.texas.rr.com… > "PisaCake" <sherr…@adelphia.net> wrote… > pisa crumb cake???
pisa mangia cake
Response:
The simplistic worldviews are easy to the mind, but wrong to the being. The human body has 3 trillion cells, arranged in intricate patterns, and simple-minded worldviews – whether of Protestant nature or of "realist" nature – the likes of which have been inexplicably and overbearingly equated with ethics and honor and good citizenship are simply dishonest and untrue. There may be a simple cause, or a simple outcome, at a higher level. But before its nature can be truly glimpsed, it is incumbent to see the complexity of the manifestation, or else one’s view be dishonest – and, as a result, barbaric and malicious. Every belief system that ever existed, from religious to secular, was based on the concept of what is man. It appears that many of them were part-right; that they were describing part of human beingness, and their solutions were right to the extent that they were appropriate for the person at hand at the time of life of that person. This is as much true for capitalism as it is true for science, as it is true for psychology, as it is true for religion and spirituality and other paths. The Buddhist approach of achieving enlightenment is achieving oneness with the law of cause and effect, which is seen to be the true reality beyond all mental and sensory fabrication. "The enlightened individual is one with the law of cause and effect." From which position the enlightened individual, from what I can see, is apparently driven by the law of cause and effect to do deeds of compassion and good for one’s fellow human beings, with the ultimate goal of getting them to the same place. It appears likewise that the enlightened individual (as well as an individual on path to enlightenment) is put into situations where he has to rectify wrong done either in this or in previous lifetime; to clear himself of karmic entanglements; and to free himself for ultimate liberation, at which point he apparently has the choice either to continue existing and go back to help other people or to simply disappear into the light. The deeds done wrong at a higher state of enlightenment carry more weight than the deeds done wrong at lower states, and the constant presence of mind and spirit is requisite in order not only to maintain that state of being, but likewise to do what is in the interests of humanity – the interests that Buddhism believes to be liberation and final merger. The joy and compassion and ever-present energy that is associated with state of Buddhist illumination are functions of man’s presence in the Buddhist truth – the true cause-and-effect; the all-as-is – which is seen to be man’s true and intended state, and which is as such experienced as a place of joy that hath no bounds – joy that is as such absolute as being absolute fulfilment of that which is man’s true Buddha nature. It occurs to me that many other paths that seek enlightenment of one or another kind, based on one or another concept of what is man’s truth and man’s actual nature, offer paths that are of similar character. The scientific path, that claims man’s true nature as being of intellect whose purpose is acquisition of knowledge through scientific method in one or another discipline, seeks to identify the mind with the canon of knowledge that exists in the discipline and then use his own mind to build on that canon. The mind is disciplined into the mindset of scientific method; which mindset is trained to exclude all modes of cognition that are inconsistent with scientific method and that must present all new evidence in terms of evidence that already exists in the field being studied. This is a different path toward what is seen to be enlightenment, based on a different concept of what is man’s true nature and leading to significantly different results. The joy of discovery and the quest to continue – what is believed to be man’s true nature as a being that seeks to apprehend the world through empirical study – motivate man through many plodding hours of analysis and examination; new ideas come up, build on each other, are discarded, and then occasionally turn over the entire body of knowledge with an explanation that completely uproots the previous way of thinking and replaces it with something not thought of before. The joy seen here is likewise seen to be a reflection of man’s true nature as the scientist and discoverer; with the result being of course not only his own joy but addition to man’s quest for knowledge as such. In ideology-driven societies such as Communism, enlightenment was seen to be identification with the ideology; which was supposed to produce the man that Communism saw as being man’s true nature: That of service to the proletariat and progress of mankind. This likewise was advertised as man’s greatest joy based on the belief of what Communism believed to be man: A part in a historical process leading inevitably to a global Communist order in which all selflessly serve the common good and are indiscriminately given what they need. Militaristic ideologies, that believe man’s true nature to be that of warrior, advertise man’s greatest joy as that of winning in battle – and that of course works for some, but with consequences for others. In capitalism, man’s true nature is seen to be that of consumer and of producer, whose natural good is material acquisition and of doing whatever work or business transaction is necessary to produce the goods necessary to trade in the market for the good that one seeks. The joy advertised here is that of having possessions; which is believed to be man’s "rational self-interest" – and the exchange of which goods in the market through mechanism of competition and improved efficiency is claimed to lead to improvement in the "rational self-interest" of all. This economic concept of man – as a being seeking to maximize utility – is of course in direct contradiction to the concept of man as a spiritual being whose goal is spiritual enlightenment; as a rational being whose goal is knowledge; as a part of a historically inevitable process; as a warrior; or anything similar. The psychological concept of man depends upon the psychology. We have everything from existential "self-actualization" to social-animal stuff to various psychoanalytic traditions to the neo-Calvinism of Scott Peck and Hillmann. The idea of what gives highest joy becomes a function of what is seen to be the true nature of what is man. And of course in all these cases, it plays better to people who operate on the level described by the psychologist than they do on others – in the same way as is the case for capitalism, science, Communism and other ideologies. The concept of what is man drives the ideology. The fact of human difference means that each of these is more appropriate for some than for others; and each of these paths work better for one person than they do for the next. The Christian concept of man is that of embodied spirit invented for service to God; and the highest joy is seen as that of surrender to Holy Spirit and serving God and man. The highest function is seen as being faith; which faith can be in either the right things or wrong things, but is in all cases the truth of human being. Based on which finding it has been possible for people to do all kinds of spinoff traditions, from metaphysics to mysticism to New Age spirituality, in which the person is placing his faith in one or another thing and is by that faith brought to it and into it completely. Finally there is the romantic path, that sees man’s nature as that of the lover and finds man’s highest joy in passionate love and manifests in inspiration and passion and emotional sharing and artistic output. This path unites man’s spiritual nature – as being of spirit that lives by intuition and inspiration; with man’s natural nature – as sexual being; with man’s emotional nature – as being who seeks to share with and be close to another person; with man’s rational nature – as being that seeks to fathom the world through experience. And what I find, having pursued that path, is that e.e. cummings’ "The final secret will still be man" should be replaced with this: "The final secret is woman." Given all the aforementioned concepts of what is man – all of which are undeniably part of what is man, and all of which are more natural to some men than to others and more natural to the same man at different times in his life – we are left at the consummation of spiritual, philosophical and passionate quest with this: A being that combines all of these things, at the same, and in which being all these are integrated and made manifest in their full resplendor. A being who combines spirit, civilization and nature at once and makes of all of them the highest fruition and highest embodiment; who is intricate and delicate and warm and delightful; who is a masterpiece herself – a masterpiece combining all forces that make human beingness – and out of the wisdom that is embodied within her creates magnificent paintings, photographs and calligraphy and reaches out to others seeking to show them the paradise that she knows and that she is. So my solution? IN FLORE VERITAS. In flower, truth. The logic of consummation and continuity. The truth I found? Julia. I hope you find the truth that works for you. Ilya Shambat.