If Pierre wants to contribute (rather than just vote the way you tell him to), he's totally free to do so. But from your incoherent description, you just make him sound like some sort of druggy, which is not what AiA is talking about here

Fuck off ignoring the votes of genuine new Members, box head.boxy wrote:Fuck off spamming threads with your mod complaints, Aussie.
Well, he is a reformed druggy, and the product of that is exactly what AiA is talking about.If Pierre wants to contribute (rather than just vote the way you tell him to), he's totally free to do so. But from your incoherent description, you just make him sound like some sort of druggy, which is not what AiA is talking about here
Ramana Maharshi comes to mind but need not go to India to find them.boxy wrote:Examples of the type of people you are talking about?AiA in Atlanta wrote:While memetics is useful for explaining much in our world, it is inadequate to explain the handful of individuals who have had a sudden and permanent breakthrough in consciousness.
Hopefully the term "larger worldview" here does not refer to the ad populum argument. A billion idiots believing a ridiculous story does not add a picogram of weight to the validity of the story. The fact that all spiritual teachers, aka religious frootloops, have zero evidence to support their claims supports the belief that they are all liars. Apart from......AiA in Atlanta wrote:"Are all great spiritual teachers of history liars, lunatics, or liaisons to an objectively real and attainable awakened state of human consciousness?"
Before you answer, consider this:
If you answer "they're all liars," what larger worldview is supported by this belief? Is there a grand conspiracy out there with shady individuals inventing false stories to gain social advantage of the naive?
....apart from the ones who are nuts. Or morons, cowards and/or egomaniacs.AiA in Atlanta wrote:If you think they are nuts, then are these glimpses into reality a psychotic episode, mental breakdowns? Answering "Yes!" here supports a worldview in which "sanity" is defined by adherence to the mental norm and the social status quo.
What if the tooth fairy is real? What if every fictional character in every fiction book ever written is real? Life is too short to waste time pondering what ifs. There are dim sims out there that need eating.AiA in Atlanta wrote:What if enlightenment is real? If you answered "Yes" then why make anything more important than awakening to enlightenment?
Just did a wiki search ( yeah I know, wikiAiA in Atlanta wrote:Ramana Maharshi comes to mind but need not go to India to find them.boxy wrote:Examples of the type of people you are talking about?AiA in Atlanta wrote:While memetics is useful for explaining much in our world, it is inadequate to explain the handful of individuals who have had a sudden and permanent breakthrough in consciousness.
It sort of begs the question... did he become more "conscious" after his revelation, or just find a different way of looking at the world... no more, or less valid than the one he held before. He seems to have been a perfectly fine individual before his "awakening", he just changed his mind about a few things. Nothing all that mystical about it. That's what philosophy and self reflection is about.AiA in Atlanta wrote:Ramana Maharshi comes to mind but need not go to India to find them.boxy wrote:Examples of the type of people you are talking about?AiA in Atlanta wrote:While memetics is useful for explaining much in our world, it is inadequate to explain the handful of individuals who have had a sudden and permanent breakthrough in consciousness.
Yes he did become more "conscious" after his revelation and yes he did just find a different way of looking at the world and no it wasn't more or less valid than the one he held before. The important thing that is learnt from such a revelation is that the "normal" consciousness is not absolute or the only one. Once this is understood experimentally a person is then open in a way which was not possible previously. This is what Aldous Huxley was alluding to in his "Doors of Perception". It is also true that reading or talking about these altered states of consciousness can not transmit its reality in the same way that a man born blind cannot have anything but a missunderstanding of what it is to see.sort of begs the question... did he become more "conscious" after his revelation, or just find a different way of looking at the world... no more, or less valid than the one he held before. He seems to have been a perfectly fine individual before his "awakening", he just changed his mind about a few things. Nothing all that mystical about it. That's what philosophy and self reflection is about.
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