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Oct 30, 2002 04:00 AM
by Mauri
Sorry, I accidentally sent this post to Theos-1 as well. This is in response to Leon's post: "re 'for themselves,'" which is at the end of this post. Having received permission from Gerald S. to post his comments here, this following from him seems relevant, in a sense, as I see it, to what might be seen as the role and potential of various forms of human or manasic thought, dicrimination, intuition, speculation as applied toward the topics of duality, maya, and non-duality. Quoting from Gerald: <<<The Zen Master would point to the moon, and then warn his students not to mistake the finger pointing to the moon for the moon itself. Our mental images and cnceptualizations are like pointing fingers. Have you ever tasted a peach? If so, you can probably write a verbal description of the taste of a peach that was pretty accurate. But what would your description mean to someone who had never tasted a peach? It would just be words. If someone else who had also tasted a peach read your description they might say, "Aha, he knows." This is because verbal descriptions of experiential knowledge make sense to those who have also had those experiences. But those folks who have not had the actual experience will make no sense of it. They will, at best, try to form mental conceptions of it, and will likely think that they understand perfectly. As with the taste of a peach, so spiritual experiences have to be experienced in order to be understood. We all experience duality, but nonduality remains a concept until it is experienced. We see a tree, for example, and we think that a real thing or object exists externally to and independent of us. Actually there is no such thing as a tree per se. What we really see are billions of parts arranged into a certain shape that we name, by convention, "tree." The very lack of "treeness," or "thingness" is what Buddhism calls emptiness. We posit that a "tree" exists based on the shape of those parts. But no tree as such exists. We can continue in this vein, for all objects whatsoever. None have any real "thingness" to them, but are simply collections of parts arranged into shapes and given names. All phenomena are empty of "thingness" or "suchness." This is also true of "persons." This dependent interconnecting network of parts and names forms our conditional reality. The fact that there is nothing "real" to anything at all forms our ultimate reality. If we look at Blavatsky's 7-plane model of the universe, conditional reality includes the lower four planes, and ultimate reality includes the upper three planes. Thus our entire universe is one where phenomena effortlessly rise up in dependence on causes and conditions, dance for awhile, and then recede back to their origin. And what is this origin? It is the Ground of all manifestation, the Source of both matter and spirit, of both conditional reality and ultimate reality. It is often called nonduality. Blavatsky called it Beness. This Beness is ineffable, as ineffable as the taste of a peach, or the beauty of sunset, or the emptiness of a tree. It can be experienced, but descriptions of it are simply conceptualizations that are meaningful to those who have already experienced it and meaningless to those who have not. Jerry S.>>>> ============end of quote As I see it, one cannot transcend mayavic reality by any amount of mayavic/dualistic reasoning. Thas is, while Theosophy may be seen to have value and wisdom, those are, after all, the dualistic/exoteric aspects or "versions" of reality/truth (not that such aspects are any less real within that context). As I see it, Leon, your models/values can optionally be seen as containing "correctness" in them (as per whatever current or traditional logical/interpretive tendency in dualistic terms), but, at the same time, in as much as such models/values are dualistic, they are also mayavic . . . As I see it, in order for Theosophists, or people in general, to acquire more and more meaningful intuitive or speculative or thoughtful means of "bridging towards" (at least) some kind of "esoteric (as opposed to exoteric/theoretical) sense" or appreciation, by way of whatever clues or means, (that might be apparent, real, logical, interpretive, speculative, experiential, etc) "about the bigger picture" (in terms of "logical Theosophy" or in whatever interpretive/intuitive terms), then, as I see it, such bridging might in some cases be somewhat facilitated by a certain kind of freedom of thought that (alternatively?) might be seen as related to speculation . . . But if one's basic freedom of thought and speculativeness are discouraged for whatever reason, how can one ascertain anything "more meaningfully" ("for better or worse") for oneself and more-directly address one's karma . . . I tend to see our speculations as karmic carry-overs of the kind that, if left unaddressed, will keep on festering, in a sense, like a sore. I tend to see Theosophy, for example, as expressive of both current and traditional karmic (carry-over) meaning of the kind that, if addressed with mere logic (dualisticity) will keep on festering, carrying over in the form of dualisticity, and so, in (some cases?), a somewhat more oblique or abstract or speculative method might, as I see it, be seen as having a "more relevant role," (within the confines of one's attempts to gain a certain helpful perspective toward duality, traditional logic, and maya), as compared to what might be seen as the use of a logic that's more linear, traditional, mainstream, "more apparently reliable," etc. I tend to see potential in certain kinds of speculations as a means by which one might gain a certain "alternative perpsective," say, towards maya and the straight jackets of traditional logic, worldviews, duality. But whether the "addressing of one's speculations" will yield much or little in the way of a helpful alternative perspective is, of course, a highly individual, or self-confrontational matter. If Theosohy is studied and believed in in its literal sense, on the other hand, that approach might, in many cases (?), seem more relevant than a speculativeness that might seem less realistic, hard to pin down, abstract, unreliable, illogical, etc. . . Speculatively, Mauri ======================================= Oct 29 Leon wrote: <<<Thinking for oneself about the validity of theosophical teachings has nothing to do with interpretation, nor is there anything speculative about theosophy. Its metaphysical teachings are a complete system, sui generis in itself, that either is or is not the way the universe must (by dependence on fundamental principles that are unassailable) have involved and evolved. In no way does this theory -- starting from the zero-point "spinergy" (absolute abstract motion), and progressing logically and mathematically according to fundamental laws of "electricity," cycles, and periodicity to its present state -- contradict any of the theories of reductive or empirical science (that are based solely on the final objective/physical phase of universal Cosmogenesis). In fact, beginning with relativity and quantum physics and extending to their final synthesis in Superstring/M-brane mathematics, theosophy has completely anticipated and presaged all these theories. Therefore, after careful thinking about their inherent reasonableness, one can either accept the theosophical metaphysical concepts as they are presented, or come up with another theory that is equally consistent based on those same principles or propositions. There is no other choice -- except skeptical denial based on false beliefs, ignorance or thoughtlessness. Since theosophy, through its metaphysical processes, has demonstrated the inherent unity of all beings in the universe, all further conclusions relating to the laws of karma, the eternality of consciousness and temporality of matter, along with the inherent justice that prevails with respect to the willful actions of conscious human beings that alter the harmony of universal causation, follows by logical deduction. To speculate at this level of understanding, is an exercise in futility that leads us nowhere (either from a subjective or objective point of view) toward a better understanding of the true nature of reality. Thinking for oneself, therefore, must follow logical progressions of cause and effect that lead to concrete conclusions and firm convictions. Otherwise one gets lost in a maelstrom of inconclusiveness and confusion. Absolutely, LHM>>>>> PS I tend to agree with you Leon, in a sense . . . But just "in a sense"