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  #131 (permalink)  
Old 10th June 2007, 05:48 AM
Travis Clementsmith's Avatar
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Must be clear as mud. Let's see if we can apply this to a situatation here:

Cadero asks:

Quote:
If someone claimed to be a revelator for God and after understanding what they had offered, would you believe them or the bible? What would be your reason for this?

As is common, "God" is left undefined, in other words, according to Integral Post-Metaphysics, "God" here is pure metaphysics. Left without any Kosmic address, let's see how the thread plays out:

Madeline answers:

Quote:
I would believe the bible.

2 Timothy 3:16,17 - All scripture is given by inspiration of God...

Now, I'm going to take some liberty knowing what I know of the people on this forum. "God" here is (2-p, L/4).

Angeleyes replies:

Quote:
I would listen to anything, but wouldn't accept it or reject it unless/until it spoke to me, not mentally but through my spirit, and for that I would ask for help from God.

"God" here is (1-p, L/8)

vivamis123 adds:

Quote:
To believe blind, is not to know God on a personal level

"God" here is (1-p, L/9)

Then, evangelicalhumanist observes the different interpretations from their expressions. He then goes on to list several examples of more modern self-styled prophets. But he doesn't specify why he links certain people to certain definitions, and instead assumes because the revelation is personal, it is the same thing angeleyes and vivamis123 are talking about.

Most of his examples are of people who claim connection to the (2-p, L/4) God through a (1/p, L/4) personality. But EH is certainly correct that it is confusing, because nobody was able to specify what they meant by "God".

Artha then adds:

Quote:
but all the great Revelators have a common Source and reinforce and compliment each other spiritually

Here, "Source" is (2-p, L/6)

Rev Kelly adds:

Quote:
And since God/dess isn't sitting there telling us the whole story, we need to weed out what is Truth, and what is not.

Here, "God/dess" is (3-p, L/6)

Now later, EH adds:

Quote:
As a "humanist," I can't be satisfied imagining a god that has left everybody to either figure out this purportedly "most important truth" all by themselves, or not.

The "god" he is referencing is (2-p, L/5), and he has trouble reconciling this type of "god", but nobody to this point has mentioned this type of "god". He has, in essence, created a "god" he knows how to punch at. Which would be fine, except that nobody knows what anyone else is talking about, because nobody knows how to express it in a way that is relative.

Now, I could go on, but I think this demonstrates the problem in discussing "God" and "spirituality" among many different people. Without a reference, everyone brings their own metaphysical conception to the party, which will inevitably lead to an argument.

Not that I am against a good argument! Those can be quite fun. But if your goal is actually understanding someone else, then one needs to be able to reference what they are talking about. I understand charting out where certain objects re each time you type is a bit akward. But, if you want to see things in a slightly bigger and more encompassing perspective, you have to lern to get out of the one you feel comfortable in!

We'll end with the logical objection that we haven't encountered: How do you know there are these different "altitudes"?

-TC
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  #132 (permalink)  
Old 11th June 2007, 07:05 AM
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Lastly, we're going to talk about "injunctions". In any attempt to aquire "good knowledge" there are three strands one should go through:

Quote:
1. A practical injunction or exemplar. If you want to know whether it is raining or not, you must go to the window and look. The point is that "facts" are not lying around waiting for all and sundry to see. If you want to know this, you must do this--an experiment, an injunction, a pragmatic series of engagements, a social practice: these lie behind most forms of good science. This is actually the meaning of Kuhn's notion of "paradigm," which does not mean a super-theory but an exemplar or actual practice.

2. An apprehension, illumination, or experience. Once you perform the experiment or follow the injunction--once you pragmatically engage the world--then you will be introduced to a series of experiences or apprehensions that are brought forth by the injunction. These experiences are technically known as data. As William James pointed out, the real meaning of "datum" is immediate experience. [8] Thus, you can have physical experiences (or physical data), mental experiences (or mental data), and spiritual experiences (or spiritual data). All good science--whether narrow or broad--is anchored to some degree in data, or experiential evidence.

3. Communal checking (either rejection or confirmation). Once we engage the paradigm (or social practice) and bring forth a series of experiences and evidence (or data), it helps if we can check these experiences with others who have also completed the injunction and seen the evidence. A community of peers--or those who have adequately completed the first two strands (injunction and data)--is perhaps the best check possible, and all good science tends to turn to a community of the adequate for confirmation or rejection. This is where the principle of falsifiability is very useful. Although the fallibility criterion cannot stand on its own, as Sir Karl Popper believed, it is often an important ingredient in good science. The idea is simply that bad data can be rejected by a community of the adequate. If there is no way that your belief system can be challenged, then there is no way to dislodge it at all, even if it is patently incorrect--and therefore whatever else you have, your beliefs are not very scientific (they are instead what is called "dogma," or a truth-claim backed only by authoritative fiat). Of course, there are many realities that are not open to the fallibility test--for example, you cannot reject, or even doubt, your own consciousness, as Descartes knew. But this third criteria simply says that good science constantly attempts to confirm (or reject) its knowledge claims, and the fallibility criterion is often used as one part of this third strand of good science.

What we want to focus on here is the injunction, the first step. We have seen 8 different methodologies available to us in aquiring knowledge. But not all evidence is easy to see, not all insights simple to comprehend. I might be able to do some simple math, that does not mean I am adequately trained to interpret integral calculus. To do that, I must engage the field to aquire the requisite amount of instruction to be able to proceed to the next two steps. Otherwise, I have to rely (believe) on what the group of peers asssures me is correct. I cannot falsify that information if I have not done the injunction.

If I am presented with four slides and told one is a deadly virus, if I haven't completed an injunction to be able to discern what I see, I cannot verify which one it is. Once again, I have to take up a field of study to be able to properly engage the domain.

This is true of any of the methodologies, including phenomenology. If you really want to know what those realities "look like", you have to engage it in a course of study. If you do not, it is no different than gazing for hours at slides of viruses or differential equations without any clue of how to proceed. I can see the colors and shapes, I can see the figures and numbers, but without the proper injunction, its all Greek to me. And just as there are different levels of interpreting the data, there are different levels of interpreting consciousness. Just because you see, doesn't necessarily make you aware. All fields of study are now on equal footing.

-TC
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  #133 (permalink)  
Old 11th June 2007, 07:09 AM
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This will end the discussion on Integral Spirituality. If you like, here are some questions for closing:

1. Did you like the book?

2. Did you find the subject matter too difficult?

3. Did the discussion help clarify what you read, if so, what part?

4. If you came in late, would you consider reading the book?

5. Do you think the proposals are practical, why or why not?

6. Feel free to add any parting comments....

Thanks to all those who participated. I'll announce a new book soon.

-TC
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  #134 (permalink)  
Old 11th June 2007, 02:55 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Travis Clementsmith
This will end the discussion on Integral Spirituality. If you like, here are some questions for closing:

1. Did you like the book?

Yes, very much!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Travis Clementsmith
2. Did you find the subject matter too difficult?

There were a few concepts that took a few reads to "get" but overall it wasn't too difficult.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Travis Clementsmith
3. Did the discussion help clarify what you read, if so, what part?

Yes, the overall review helped me to remember a few things that I had forgotten.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Travis Clementsmith
5. Do you think the proposals are practical, why or why not?

I still have a few problems with levels 8 and 9 in Wilber's "elevation" map (I think they belong on a different map of their own) but overall it makes a lot of sense to me.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Travis Clementsmith
Thanks to all those who participated. I'll announce a new book soon.

Thanks for taking the time to head the discussion and review.
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  #135 (permalink)  
Old 9th August 2007, 10:33 PM
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Looks like I missed a good discussion. Such is life.

Just for the record I'd like to leave a link that makes some interesting deep observations about something already complicated. But for those with a serious interest, it is good food for thought:

http://www.integralscience.org/wilber.html
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  #136 (permalink)  
Old 9th August 2007, 11:54 PM
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Unfortunately, the essay is out of date. Huge changes occurred in his latest book Integral Spirituality. Thanks for the link, though.

-TC
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  #137 (permalink)  
Old 17th August 2007, 01:48 PM
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Yes, Wilber's model is post-metaphysical, therefore it avoids ontological assertions that aren't empirically grounded.
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  #138 (permalink)  
Old 22nd September 2007, 04:45 AM
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Travis

I see I'll have to read this book. I don't believe it will change my mind and all I've been fortunate to learn from the brilliant minds of my path. But I appreciate reading other points of view.

Quote:
Reality is not a perception, but a conception, at least in part.

Which is not denying objective reality.

Quote:
Ontology, does not exist.

Ontology is the study of "being" and the definition of being is existence. This raises the obvious question of what is it that doesn't exist that imagines existence?

Quote:
Thus metaphysicsis the type of thinking that cannot figure this out, or, as the author likes to say, falls prey to "the myth of the given".

I can't figure it out so will stick with the "myth of the given."

Quote:
To restate the problem, most of the great spiritual traditions had some form of the Great Chain of Being (the Perrinial Philosophy) at their core, and this core was simply assumed to exist ontologically. They would then attempt to explain "reality" using this ontological referent. So the moderns and post-moderns said, "Wait a minute, you're assuming this "core" exists "a priori" (which is a fancy way of indicating that you are assuming the existence of something without examination or analysis, that it was formed or conceived beforehand. This is a big no-no for formal, modern, critical debate.)

There are those that need to debate and those that need to understand. Cosmology, or what you seem to be referring to as Perennial Philosophy is not something we can discover ourselves through normal analytical thought. Awareness of it comes from conscious help from above. I know this by experience. There is no way that I could have come to my understanding from my own efforts. The whole effort of self knowledge is to verify it within ones being.

Quote:
So, under the modern and post-modern system of analysis and interrogation, how do you think the Great Chain Stood up? Not very well, not very well at all. (This is the point where all the atheists and militant agnostics should say, "Told you so!") So, what's a poor modern/postmodern metaphysician to do? That is what is to follow......

From those I know and what I read, it is standing up rather well. It just cannot be approached in the usual fashion. IMO Jesus referred to this as needing new eyes and ears to grasp.

Quote:
1. If evolution occurs, how can Enlightenment have any meaning? Enlightenment is supposed to mean something like being one with everything, but if everything is evolving, and I get enlightened today, then won't my Enlightenment be partial when tomorrow arrives? Do I become unenlightened with the sun's dawn?

Enlightenment can only refer to the conscious witness of the processes of life as the interactions of universal laws. The direction of some laws have a conscious origin and others are pure mechanics depending upon their place within the vertical cosmological scale of being. A great wave breaking on the sea is not governed by consciousness but the laws that created the higher relationships that manifest as the opposition of elemental forces in a wave were the result of conscious intent. The laws of nature than have conscious intelligent design The myriad of results comprising the wave are just mechanical reactions.

Quote:
2. A typical response is to say that Enlightenment is being one with that which is Timeless and Eternal and Unborn, so I can be one with the Timeless and that shouldn't be affected by the world of time (and evolving form), and so that takes care of the problem. But all that does is create a massive duality in Spirit - the timeless and eternal versus the temporal and evolving - and so what I am really saying is that Enlightenmentis being one with half of Spirit.

Cosmology which is the lawful gradations of being make this easy to understand. Man on earth doesn't originate at the cosmological level of the Father but rather within creation itself at the level of the Son. The relationship between Father, Son, and Man and their relative levels of being is not a dual one by like everything else in the universe is based on a triune relationship.

As I said, I appreciate comparisons. Where it is easy for me to intellectually understand human meaning and purpose not to mention the purpose of organic life as a whole through what I've learned and worked with, I cannot see it in what you are writing about
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  #139 (permalink)  
Old 22nd September 2007, 06:32 AM
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Nick - I read the article you posted which I'll quote in part:
Quote:
This assertion is based on the assumption (contradicting the great chain of knowing/being) that the mind and soul can not take exteriors as their objects, that exteriors can only be known through bodily sensations alone. Of course, if we artificially restrict our knowledge of being to perception alone, we will only see the perceptual surfaces of objects. We are then blind to seeing any depth in the cosmos and we reduce the meaning of "exterior" to the physical alone, as Wilber has done.

Frankly, I'm not sure how "exterior" can mean anything other than the physical cosmos, so I'm not sure what the author is trying to say. In following my own path/understanding, any concept of something existing in time/space must necessarily involve separation. How do you see it?
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  #140 (permalink)  
Old 23rd September 2007, 02:00 AM
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Angeleyes

Forgive me if I stumble around but I'm not sure I understand your question so if I've missed it, please clarify.

I tend to believe from what I've read here on ACIM that cold could be an illusion. Heat is all there is so cold is only the illusion of the absence of heat. Assume for a moment that hot and cold can exist as limits along a line of vibrations. On the left side for example is hot and on the extreme right is cold. At the same time there are degrees of cold determined by the absence of heat. Any of these degrees along this line that spans the limits of heat and cold can be considered either hot or cold depending upon perspective of the quality of being experiencing it. The point here is that cold exists in relation to the quality of heat and that our bodies sense heat and cold as exteriors.

Now imagine that you've drawn this line of degrees between heat and cold on a paper and these degrees are separated by lawful determinants of vibration. 6o degrees differs from 80 in terms of vibration and experienced by us through our capacity for sensation.

At each of these points along the line say at 12 degrees, draw a vertical line at right angles to the horizontal line spanning heat and cold. 12 is actually an exterior of matter within matter. Cosmology asserts that our scientific limits are the limits of our sensory tools. However, vibrating matter exists within matter. So this exterior substance vibrating heat is actually also composed of matter too fine for us to detect.

If consciousness and emotion exists within us, why can it not exist in ways beyond our ability to experience as it relates to material density we are unable to experience. This is what Jacob Needleman refers to as the "Conscious Universe." Consciousness and emotion are a measure of objective "QUALITY" unnecessary for measurements along the exterior where only SUBJECTIVE determinants of quality are necessary.

My guess is that this gives you trouble because you believe that the material world is an illusion. If this question seriously interests you, I would suggest that you read Chapter One, "The Universe" of Jacob Needleman's "Sense of the Cosmos" Then you can try to compare all this which will really be a mind stretch.

http://www.rawpaint.com/library/intro.html
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