This is all very well, but can we identify something obviously transcendent, universal in any of this? Something which isn't accounted for in the materialist evolutionary account. — Punshhh
Perhaps, so what is all this religious and spiritual love? What purpose does it have, in terms of survival of the species?
I do know the answer to this question, but I am suggesting it is not required, perhaps it is a byproduct. — Punshhh
This is such a big problem, though. You mention 'love' and suddenly he is screaming and running away naked into the wilderness while you just stand there scratching your head thinking, wha? There is so much that can be discussed on the subject and I often have to consistently reiterate that I view love to be moral consciousness to avoid the continuous penetration of historical and emotional influences that challenge any rational discussion on the subject.Philosophers get in a mess when they write about love, in my opinion. — mcdoodle
Song of Solomon is not about divine love, not how it is often interpreted. It is highly erotic but nevertheless shows how her sexual attraction toward him did not defeat her into succumbing to his sexual advances and his games where he hid 'behind the trellis' from her; though she loved him, she wanted more. She is a virgin or 'a garden enclosed' who went through hardships by her siblings or 'mothers children' having had to work in the fields and unaware of her beauty, the intense sexuality between them made her realise that she was a 'wall and her breasts like towers' that is, self-love. She found peace in the end by saying that she hopes he is happy with his other women. It is hard to tell if his love is 'awakened' when he is ready coming out to her and where she crowns him king on his espousal that gladdens his heart (as in, they get married).Read the full Song of Solomon here ! (I know, King James' version, I'm a sucker for its rhythm) — mcdoodle
I didn't suggest it is about erotic love. I am refering to the mating/pairing between partners and the bonding process between family members etc, as the basis for the experience of love in humans(and other animals). — Punshhh
Weird shit happened to me in New Zealand too :DI bring this up because about 2 weeks ago, while travelling in New Zealand, I had an experience of something which I interpreted as a realisation of universal love and I seek to account for it philosophically. — Punshhh
Yes, we are left with personal anecdotal testimony. However I do think that philosophy can go further than this, given some preliminary assumptions. Such as the assumption that there is a spiritual reality and that the form it takes can in some way be accurately intuited by people. This then gives us a large amount of material to sift through and come up with some philosophical conclusions. Such assumptions are I suspect problematic to many philosophers, particularly those who haven't looked into it.The problem is, that is just what the materialist account obscures. It is found in traditional wisdom schools and other sources such as those you mention. It is real, but a 'first-person science' - the sacred science, it has been called - is required to realise it. The point is, there are ways to tap into that resource, like digging for gold, or diving for pearls. That's what spiritual paths are about.
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Perhaps the very existence of such beings, realising this capacity and questioning is evidence of something other than the gross physical reality we find around us. — Punshhh
Also I do think that there are many people who are philosophically minded, but who are not academically trained who do look into such ideas, or don't rule them out. — Punshhh
*i will reference the egoic plane(Alice Bailey) to be more precise. — Punshhh
It took you 23 years to realise you were in love with someone?The form that my weird shit took was a crisis of the heart brought about by a brief and fleeting recollection of a brief meeting with someone in India 23 years ago and the crushing realisation that this person was a soul mate, a candidate for true love, as you describe. And the pain of the acceptance that I failed to go with this person, but rather turn away for petty egotistical reasons and subsequently regret it ever since. — Punshhh
I was not questioning whether we experience love, but rather asking if from your perspective, it is solely within experience? I agree with the rest of your account about this and the ways people can become confused. — Punshhh
Regarding universal love, the way I am treating it in this conversation is in the sense of the principle, the reality and the experience of love and realities of which love might be a derivative, having some real and fundamental presence in the processes of existence itself, or the existence we find ourselves in. — Punshhh
For example our existence might be hosted by a demiurge through a process of creative love and life for that demiurge might be all within the realm of mind where intellectual compassion and love is as concrete as physical matter is for us. — Punshhh
Alice Bailey is a terrible reference. There are a plethora of philosophical arguments on the subject of soul, perhaps give McTaggart a shot or maybe even Schopenhauer if the subject of transcendence is appealing (though I disagree with both). The former is perhaps more in line with what you seek vis-a-vis 'universality of souls' and if this bond is genuine, perhaps love is an experience where time does not exist and that she too is waiting for you.I only mentioned Alice Bailey as a reference where a definition of the part of my experience, or being that I was referring to can be found. If you don't like the school of thought referenced, just read my meaning as of the soul, rather than the intellect. It's a simple but important distinction. Your summary of love, came across as a description of the intellectual processes involved in self realisation. I was pointing out with an example that it entails other levels of being. — Punshhh
Regarding my "weird shit", you seem to have gone off on some tangent and projected lots of your own ideas onto it. There doesn't seem to be much point in trying to explain it further, other than to point out that your interpretation of the situation is wildly off the mark. That I am not in love with the person mentioned, and there isn't anything tragic going on. Have you not in your youth been a "fool", or regretted the one that got away? Come on be honest now? — Punshhh
Regarding my "weird shit", you seem to have gone off on some tangent and projected lots of your own ideas onto it. There doesn't seem to be much point in trying to explain it further, other than to point out that your interpretation of the situation is wildly off the mark. That I am not in love with the person mentioned, and there isn't anything tragic going on. Have you not in your youth been a "fool", or regretted the one that got away? Come on be honest now? — Punshhh
We've been tricked by our own abstraction. Universal love, in sense, takes the significance of being loved by someone and pretends it can be given by no-one, as if love was an infinite with didn't requires anyone else or anything of the world. It's myth which destroys our ability to describe those we love and those who love us.
Our understanding of love becomes a solipsistic pretence, where we think love is only about our own beliefs and feelings, about finding the universal, accessing the transcendent, attaining Nirvāṇa, getting the hottest wife, possessing the perfection of having a soul mate, etc., rather than any person we care about. The selfish desire to have a perfect idea or belief overpowers concern for the people and world around us. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Occultism has plagiarized from Hinduism to try and legitimize its position, so it is grossly incorrect to assume it derives from the eastern philosophical tradition. Esoteric interpretations of satan by Blavatsky in the Secret Doctrine ameliorates your limited awareness of the subject.Alice Bailey's work is an example of a western interpretation of Hinduism, as such it derives from the eastern philosophical tradition and is inline with my perspective on philosophy. — Punshhh
I don't see how the western philosophical tradition is addressing universal love other than in arriving at some logical positions from the starting point of an emergent(by evolution) intellect blind to the reality it finds itself in. As such western philosophy can't address any reality there may be in existence, because it is a-priori in ignorance. — Punshhh
Do you agree, in particular, with the distinction I made between one respect in which love is "in experience", and another respect in which love is "outside experience" in the bodies of the animals who love?
Yes, but I am asking if there is a greater love of which we and our experiences of love are pale reflections? This was spurred by a personal experience I had in which I sensed/intuited such a thing.My view is that it has a "real existence", in the bodies of those sentient animals and in the experience of those sentient animals.
But I do have reason to suppose this, however my reasons fall within the realms of theology.I suppose on my view, love is as concrete as physical matter. Or, a particular instance of love is as concrete as a particular instance of physical matter. But I see no reason to suppose that love is "fundamental", in the sense that it is a basic feature of anything said to exist. Tables and chairs, sunbeams and raindrops.
Yes, I agree we have no grounds from which to establish such knowledge of reality. (Well there is revelation etc, but putting that to one side for now). For me establishing the facts of such knowledge is not important, or relevant to me. However I do contemplate intuited forms of which such knowledge may take as an intellectual exercise.A story like the one you've told about a demiurge: We can imagine it so, and we can imagine it not so. We can imagine countless alternatives like this one, each as consistent with the balance of appearances as any of the others; each as unsupported by the balance of appearances as any of the others. On what grounds would we choose among all those possibilities?
I agree, I consider that there are other forms of love without sentience, but the kind of love we can conceive of is through experience reliant on sentience. This is in line with an idea I have about divinity being universally sentient.This particular story emphasizes a connection between love and sentience. That's an interesting dimension of our discussion: Can we conceive of love without sentience?
I would intuit it by analogy, I observe that the love in an animal is similar to that I experience personally, but less selfaware, integrated, sentient. So presume that the love in a demiurge is more selfaware, integrated and sentient than my own.Are the love and sentience of the demiurge, or of the demiurge's "realm of mind", similar to the love and sentience of our animal experience, or how are they different? How do we know the answer to such questions? On what grounds would we support an answer?
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