easyrider wrote:obliguhl wrote:Quote:I agree with both of you! I always did feel we ought to have the Philosophy subforum separate and unencumbered by discussions of strictly spiritual/mystical ideas, even though the two can and DO overlap into each others turf.
No, they do not overlap. The seem to overlap, because many people do not really know what Philosophy actually is. It's a strongly rational school of thought, following a certain dialectic. It's not just asking "what it all means".
Sure, in the tradition of analytic philosophy, the approach resembles a rather scientific one. That does not mean the spirit is not discussed in various philosophical themes. It could be said that the spirit was more commonly intertwined with individual philosophies of antiquity and throughout modern philosophy, with an apparent decline into contemporary.
Now, now
obliguhl... that's a rather bold speculation, friend. Is it not the height of arrogance to dismiss philosophies which do not cull 100% of their contemplative insight through reason alone? By "reason alone", I strongly imply that rationale is but half of the human equation. A seamless balance of pragmatism and intuition is optimum for each of us. You, me.. all of us!
I also apply this line of thought to our more esoteric/devotional/inspired family members. For no dichotomous state of mind is perfect, as when we rely exclusively on but 50% of the whole or our encoded potentiality, our views and preferred vantage points are exercising but a fraction of what is truly possible to perceive. I've been trying to learn to see the other side of the proverbial coin, lo these many years. That's one of the greatest challenges of humankind and an emphatic call to awaken from our dream of mortal conceptual fixation.
While for some, a narrow interpretation of the philosophical process is both, honed by logical deduction and frankly, most intolerant of other angles of thought. Talk about a wall of rigid, dogmatic projections (and some of our esteemed fellows are worried about the spiritual folks inserting "dogma" into these discussions)...
A good read is Aldous Huxley's book:
The Perennial Philosophy: An Interpretation of the Great Mystics, East and West. I personally feel it is a fairly profound and poignant cross-reference of philosophical thought, throughout the world we inhabit, across the span of the ages. Obviously, there is much more to philosophy than ONLY rational, linear thought, there are the instinctual and transcendental, as well.
Would it not be wise to assimilate BOTH the potentiality of the left and right hemispheric functions of our cognition? Any extreme stance in the polarity of human consciousness is inherently flawed by it's blind dependence on just half of our perceptual potential. This goes for the pragmatic logicians and the mystically inclined. IMO, we need to unite our mind into a cohesive whole, one in which we are aware of both aspects of our perceptual paradigm... and seize the ecstatic opportunity to transcend our self-created boundaries in awareness and essentially... touch the eternal.
And to put a spin on what is arguably, "the crux of the biscuit" (the quintessential philosophy of Frank Zappa), by taking a closer look at the broader spectrum of what is "philosophical" and ultimately, a posture of inquiry and assessment... are we not most fully functioning, when we activate the whole of our intelligence? :idea:
Which includes a functioning synthesis of reason and intuition. It's plain to see, if one considers the full scope of what philosophy encompasses, that many of the worlds most brilliant philosophers spent a lifetime contemplating the nature of The Divine. To say that Socrates, Lao Tzu, Siddhartha Gautama, Patanjali, Krishnamurti, William James and Alan Watts were NOT exemplary philosophers, is most presumptuous indeed. I think I need to pinch myself, just in case I'm dreaming.
Just kidding, buddy, we're good. Just don't expect us to fall down and submit to your empirical decrees. We all need to take a chill pill, as we're all on the same team, given the rest of our species propensity for cruelty, manipulation and destruction. Let's pull together and agree that we all have a lot to learn from each other, eh?
There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.