Can you say more? Do you mean to say that unattachment is a less pejorative manifestation of apathy? — Tom Storm
But, genuinely not really caring or maintaining an importance around this or that. I don't know what it really is; but that's how I translate it. — Cheshire
It is hard to separate how the enlightened might appear versus speculating about the internal state. I'd suppose for contrast an unenlightened person being very anxious and insistent regarding their state of enlightenment.Ok. I don't think it's uncommon for notions like unattachment and detachment and apathy to merge into a maelstrom of studied indifference in mainstream Western eyes. — Tom Storm
I don't think it's uncommon for notions like unattachment and detachment and apathy to merge into a maelstrom of studied indifference in mainstream Western eyes. — Tom Storm
I know very little about enlightenment but I wonder if being any kind of teacher is already a sign of significant attachments. — Tom Storm
I think it comes from ignorance and an inability to understand or imagine how someone might think differently about the world than they do. — T Clark
It seems that in Nietzsche's view, there should exist a series of selves; one overcoming the other.
Whereas in some ideologies, enlightenment has to do with stopping the process of selfing altogether. — baker
Enlightenment is basically getting the dosage right. — TheMadFool
ϕ=1.618... [proportio divina] — TheMadFool
Most health care professionals, especially nurses, know the “five rights” of medication use: the right patient, the right drug, the right time, the right dose, and the right route—all of which are generally regarded as a standard for safe medication practices. — NCBI
Nishitami deeply admires Nietzsche's attempt but claims that it actually perpetuates the nihilistic predicament by not letting go of the grasping mind that lies at the souce of both objectivism and nihlism. — Joshs
Objectivism = ‘it really exists’. Nihilism = ‘It doesn’t exist’. The two extreme views according to Buddhism. — Wayfarer
Nishitani's diagnosis is even more radical than Nietzsche's, for he claims that the real problem with Western nihilism is that it is halfhearted: it does not consistently follow through its own inner logic and motivation and so stops short of transforming its partial realization of groundlessness into the philosophical and experiential possiblities of sunyata. — Joshs
I think to be enlightened is the realization that there are things that you don't know that you don't know. — James Riley
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