dave_a_mbs
Super Member
Offline
Afterlife Knowledge Member
Posts: 1655
central california
Gender:
|
Hi George- I get my willow bark in a bottle labeled Aspirin. Bets likes it as tea? Works fine for me.
Vajra has more or less hit the problem on the nose - We have an institution that claims superiority, the Golden Cow of Science to be worshipped in place of spirituality. The problem is that in its place, the scientific method is about as good as we can get, methodologically. However, there are hints slowly leaking through the cracks that other methods of knowing may also be important.
This is rather like asking what "knowing" actually is. Aside from "knowing how" and "knowing what", and related side trips, it seems that we have adopted a materialistic definition that accords with science. The flaw in this can be seen in the rise, and subsequent decline, of naive behavioral psychology. According to B F Skinner, and his followers, everything is merely a "behavior", and all behaviors can be trained through conditioning. Aside from behavior, we are dealing with the Unknown, so the nature of people who are doing the behaving is unimportant, reducing the mind to a mysterious Black Box" with unfathomable contents. While this is not untrue, there seems to be a great deal of "personhood" left out of Skinner's equation. So it is with the Scientific Method.
Virtually everyone on this forum seems to tinker with meditative states in some manner. Bruce's introduction leads us into the world of spirits where we discover people stuck in the kinks and twists of their beliefs and karmic reactions. We all have these and related experiences, each in a different way, yet all the same. I work on the opposite side of the life-death interface, yet have the same experiences. Lack of objectivity disqualifies these experiences from science, while adherance to objective science disqualifies people from seeing into their own spiritual nature.
This is not because of a lack of data, but a lack of insight into how to deal with it. The path of avatars, Moses, Jesus, Mohammed, Ramana Maharshi and the other teachers of note, is still advisory, rather than explicatory. The Ten Commandments tells us nothing about the ultimate nature of our own spirit, but merely tells us how to stay out of trouble. Carried to extremes we simply have an Inquisition.
My personal feeling is that we will eventually start to develop methodologies to deal with subjective states, personal experiences and the like. We still have well developed ideas about "intrapsychic psychology", meaning the states inside the mind that we feel, as opposed to the states that are measured with prods and probes. And having passed unchanged through the digestive tract of behaviorists, many of these ideas have turned out to be remarkably durable.
As a simple example, in meditation we access areas of experience that are non-objective, yet which are consistent with other meditators, and which are mutable, in the sense that we can mold them into forms compatible with others' thoughts. There seems to be more going on inside the Black Box than outside it.
My personal research has been to study these "hidden data" lurking in the fringes of experience, all the way back to its beginnings. It is possible to do this in a rigorous and methodical manner, using very clearly defined symbolic techniques. And although my poor contributions to the world consist mostly of training materials for regression therapists, I, and those like me, are symptoms of a growing tendency toward looking in the dark recesses of the soul for reality. For that matter, Bruce, and all the rest of us here, signify a tendency toward awakening to a new perspective.
Perhaps that's why Siddhartha made no claims of a supernatural kind, but simply said that he had awakened (bodhi).
d
|