I haven't read the dopamine book; I am prejudicially suspicious of any attempt to explain complex human motivations and behavior in terms of the effects a neurotransmitter. — Janus
secular version of enlightenment — Tom Storm
secular (adj.)
c. 1300, "living in the world, not belonging to a religious order," also "belonging to the state," from Old French seculer (Modern French séculier), from Late Latin saecularis "worldly, secular, pertaining to a generation or age," from Latin saecularis "of an age, occurring once in an age," from saeculum "age, span of time, lifetime, generation, breed."
The [New England] transcendentalists worked towards a unification of science, philosophy and ethics in a spiritual view that is quite close to Perennial Philosophy (Geldard, 2005). The view of the transcendentalists is close to the Advaita Vedantic non-dual ontology of the Indian yogic philosopher Adi Shankara and Buddhism of which Peirce was aware.
These views are all process philosophies embracing evolutionary theory, as discussed in Brier (2008). The view of Cosmogony and evolution of living systems that we are beginning to approach here is neither a Neo-Darwinian ‘blind watchmaker’ materialism nor a theistic creationist view. If these two cosmogonies are seen as Hegelian thesis and antithesis the non-dual evolutionary ontology may be called an aufhebung to a new level of synthesis.
:cool:I seem to remember a Leonard Cohen song with the lyric line something like "Do we have the strength to be alone together?" — Janus
:up:No mystery except what we hide from ourselves. — T Clark
"Enlightened" because they were martyrs?the enlightened individual e.g., the Buddha, Socrates...? — Tom Storm
I don't think so. In philosophy 'immanence and ecstatic habits' (i.e. reflective exercises) are more reliably(?) enlightening.Does enlightenment necessarily involve transcendence and higher consciousness as understood in spiritual traditions such as Hinduism and Buddhism?
"Some" would, I suppose, but I wouldn't based on the canonical Gospels.Would some include 'illuminated' figures from different traditions such as Jesus?
The enlightened unburden their lives in order to climb "higher" (e.g. Buddha, Laozi ... Witty) and at the summit the wise die laughing (e.g. Democritus, Pyrrho ... Zapffe)Is there a difference between wisdom/self-realization and enlightenment?
(Check the language game/s in which "enlightenment" is used.)Does the word enlightenment hold any real meaning, or is it just a poetic umbrella term for a fully integrated and intelligent person?
No. e.g. "What is Enlightenment?"Should the term enlightenment be reserved solely for use by spiritual traditions? — Tom Storm
I suppose so – 'by works and not by faith' – like so many disbelieving yet observant churchgoers and dutiful ministers.Can someone who believes that Jesus is a myth and thinks all stories of miracles and the New Testament stories are nonsense be called a Christian?
Yes.Is Nietzsche's self-overcoming a form of the enlightenment narrative? — Tom Storm
:100:Curiously perhaps, the scientific viewpoint is a depersonalised one, so that for example, my feelings and desires are no more significant than anyone else's; they are phenomena on an equal basis. Perhaps that is why the beginnings of the scientific project are known as 'The enlightenment'. Materialism is the foremost non-dualist philosophy. — unenlightened
:clap: :up: Thanks for giving this concept such succinct, clear expression! (Till now time-binding has been only an underdeveloped, guiding intuition to a more fleshed-out conception of moral concern (re: moral agency) consisting of 'tensed selfhood'.)Time-binding is what gives desire its bite. People get confused about this, and suppose that it is the sweetness of sugar that makes one desire it, but of course this cannot be, because the cause has to precede the effect. Rather it is the idea and memory of previous sweetness that is projected into the future and identified with that forms the desire. Fear is the negative of desire, and suffering is the negative of pleasure. These are all aspects of the time-binding of identification: - "I" will have pleasure/ will suffer.
:fire:I think you can find similar ideas to enlightenment-as-non-attachment in Spinoza, the Epicureans, the Skeptics, the Stoics and the Existentialists.
Nietzsche, as I read him, advocated a radical independence of spirit ... — Janus
Another significant source was the ideas of the 'New England Transcendentalists', best known of whom were Emerson and Thoreau, and through whom the Indian conception of enlightenment also percolated. These had considerable influence on successors such as Pierce, James, Royce, and others, down to Abraham Maslow and other transpersonal psychologists. — Wayfarer
All that said, I think there's an inherent tension between the European and Indian ideals of enlightenment. The former is an essentially individualist, pragmatic and scientific whilst the latter is based on a radically different, non-individualist conception of the nature of the self and the meaning of existence. However, culture being what it is, these two somewhat conflicting attitudes are now meeting and combining in a dialectic to produce an entirely new synthesis, encompassing many disciplines including phenomenology, biosemiotics, systems theory and the 'new physics' — Wayfarer
No. e.g. "What is Enlightenment?" — 180 Proof
I think you can find similar ideas to enlightenment-as-non-attachment in Spinoza, the Epicureans, the Skeptics, the Stoics and the Existentialists.
Nietzsche, as I read him, advocated a radical independence of spirit ... — Janus — 180 Proof
I have no argument with dopamine being a part of the story, and only a part, even in the biological, neurological context. — Janus
From the experiential perspective it doesn't exist at all — Janus
Not sure what you could mean by that. — praxis
It is far more real than this 'non-attachment' concept that you appear to put so much stock in. — praxis
The mind of him who stands detached is of such nobility that whatever he sees is true and whatever he desires he obtains and whatever he commands must be obeyed. And this you must know for sure: when the free mind is quite detached, it constrains God to itself and if it were able to stand formless and free of all accidentals, it would assume God’s proper nature … The man who stands thus in utter detachment is rapt into eternity in such a way that nothing transient can move him …
Now you may ask what this detachment is, that is so noble in itself. You should know that true detachment is nothing else but a mind that stands unmoved by all accidents of joy or sorrow, honour, shame or disgrace, as a mountain of lead stands unmoved by a breath of wind1. This immovable detachment brings a man into the greatest likeness to God. For the reason why God is God is because of His immovable detachment and from this detachment, He has His purity, His simplicity and His immutability. Therefore, if a man is to be like God, as far as a creature can have likeness with God, this must come from detachment. This draws a man into purity, and from purity into simplicity, and from simplicity into immutability, and these things make a likeness between God and that man …
You should know that the outer man can be active while the inner man is completely free of this activity and unmoved … Here is an analogy: a door swings open and shuts on its hinge. I would compare the outer woodwork of the door to the outer man and the hinge to the inner man. When the door opens and shuts, the boards move back and forth but the hinge stays in the same place and is never moved thereby. It is the same in this case if you understand it rightly.
Now I ask: What is the object of pure detachment? My answer is that the object of pure detachment is neither this nor that 2. It rests on absolutely nothing and I will tell you why: pure detachment rests on the highest and he is at his highest, in whom God can work all His will … And so, if the heart is ready to receive the highest, it must rest on absolutely nothing and in that lies the greatest potentiality which can exist …
Again I ask: What is the prayer of a detached heart? My answer is that detachment and purity cannot pray, for whoever prays wants God to grant him something or else wants God to take something from him. But a detached heart desires nothing at all, nor has it anything it wants to get rid of. Therefore it is free of all prayers or its prayer consists of nothing but being uniform with God. That is all its prayer …
Therefore it is totally subject to God, and therefore it is in the highest degree of uniformity with God and is also the most receptive to divine influence …
Now take note, all who are wise! No man is happier than he who has the greatest detachment. — Meister Eckhardt On Detachment
Thanks. Do you associate enlightenment with the acquisition of virtue (sorry about that phrase) or is virtue an entirely separate domain? — Tom Storm
theia mania. — TheMadFool
theia mania.
— TheMadFool
Is that what we should expect from an enlightened mad fool instead of mundane madness? — Janus
But then the unpredictable is expected, so to be truly unpredictable the madman should sometimes be predictable, because that would be unexpected — Janus
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