It's not clear whether the idea is justified that enlightenment is somehow an objective phenomenon, quite independent of religions, and that different religions just have different takes on it.
— baker
At last! You say something connected to what I've written. Took some doing. It is, nevertheless, a thesis I find both defensible and appealing, because it points to a genuine 'higher truth' over and above the individual manifestations that have appeared in different times and cultures. — Wayfarer
Do tell how you distinguish between
on the one hand, religious/spiritual/philosophically deep/profound experiences or insights,
and
on the other hand, the feel good feeling you get after a good meal, or the experience of hypoxia, or what comes up when under the influence of intoxicants — baker
Such "stepping out of texts" is, for all ordinary practical intents and purposes, impossible.
What you're doing is just ditching standard religious texts, and firmly embedding yourself in other texts. — baker
I've managed well through life without your gratuitious advice, so you can keep it.
/.../
That is really not a fair criticism, but then maybe you’re trolling, which you seem to be doing in many of your comments. — Wayfarer
How do you distinguish the influence between the good feels in general? — Constance
One simply does.
How would Thích Quảng Đức.the Buddist monk who immolated himself in 1963 be pathologically assessed? The answer? Very easily.
I push kriya yoga to its limit. Pays off. It's only a pathology if you are on the outside looking in.
You may be averse to unorthodox approaches,
but you should know where orthodoxy itself has it end. It is like this: Try any interpretative reduction that is possible, any at all, and you will end up in the contingency of language, aka, deconstruction. Deconstruction is all pervasive, because language itself is its own indeterminacy.
This is what Buddhism is all about, I would argue: for language has its "grip" deep into the conditioned psyche; a lifetime of socializing that began in infancy.
No, it's more systematic than that. Can't you tell? — baker
Killing oneself in a public place for a political reason is not a sign of a noble attainment. — baker
So it is with shooting heroin up your veins. — baker
I'm averse to hocus pocus and to shallowness being masqueraded as depth. — baker
If after all this time, you still think that ... then go fuck yourself. — baker
Does the term "religion" refer to nothing? — Banno
It's just a bland term that encompasses all the dogmas and rules that an intellectual minority superimposes on a civilization in order to remain in power indefinitely. — Gus Lamarch
SO neoliberalism is a religion. — Banno
No, it's more systematic than that. Can't you tell?
— baker
Just the obvious point that one tells the different between experiences according to their, well, differences. Clear as a bell; so clear one wonders why the question is raised at all. Surely you know the difference between being in love and lasagna. You're grasping at straws. Curious. — Constance
Buddhism is certainly NOT about a "noble attainment" in the usual sense, the term 'noble' being a social and ethical concept.
Again, a bit obvious. Oddest yet: no respect for someone who almost without argument did the most extraordinary thing one could do.
So it is with shooting heroin up your veins.
— baker
A little juvenile.
Couldn't help but notice. Hope things improve with whatever is troubling you.
Too bad that in my question you don't recognize Joseph Campbell's question. He wondered how it is that one can tell whether one has indeed had a religious/spiritual experience, or whether the feel good feeling one has is simply due to having had a good meal. — baker
Some "spiritual practices", "tips & tricks", consumption of intoxicants, altered states of mind due to physical exertion readily produce in one's mind a feeling, feeling x. This, however, doesn't yet mean that one is x. — baker
For example, one can read some productivity literature, hype oneself up, put some of the advice into practice, and then one feels more productive. But whether one is actually more productive or not is something that yet needs to be measured. — baker
One can make oneself "feel the presence of the Holy Spirit", through prayer, going to a church, using intoxicants. But that alone doesn't yet mean the Holy Spirit is indeed present.
There is a difference between feeling safe, and being safe.
There is a difference between feeling that one has overcome egoic thinking, and actually overcoming egoic thinking.
And so on.
Feelings are easy enough to conjure up. Facts that can be measured, not so readily. — baker
Strange that the Buddhists say the Noble Eightfold Path and the Four Noble Truths. — baker
Too bad that in my question you don't recognize Joseph Campbell's question. He wondered how it is that one can tell whether one has indeed had a religious/spiritual experience, or whether the feel good feeling one has is simply due to having had a good meal.
— baker
But this just begs the question: what does having a good mel have to do with the qualitative nature of experience? Certainly there can be a causal relation between the two, but this says nothing about WHAT the experience IS. Looks as if you are looking some kind of reduction of experience to physical brains states, such that a brain chemistry's analysis can yield up what an experience IS. This is obviously not true; the worst kind of question begging: how does one know what brain chemistry is? Why, through brain chemistry!? — Constance
One thing Witt did was he took value off the table for discussion by claiming to be transcendental and unspeakable. This gave analytic philosophers the license to ignore THE most salient feature of our existence: affectivity. The meaning of life is not about facts; it is about the depth and breadth of affectivity.
/.../
Heuristics! That is all this is. Sitting under that fig tree is not at all about the four noble truths.
Does the term "religion" refer to nothing? — Banno
You could say that Communism, Socialism, Fascism, even some modern social movements are "religion-like" too. — Gus Lamarch
religion isn't ideology. — SpaceDweller
Chronological order: — Agent Smith
Logical order: — Agent Smith
You are right that Buddhism uses animals as symbolism in their metaphors. Even the elephant is a cult animal in India.
Inside Christianity it is often used the phrase lambs of God. The metaphor is related to the followers of the average priest representing the Christian values. Nevertheless, I see it as an insult because it seems to be a relation to follow some standards without questioning the circumstances — javi2541997
In other words, it would be unfair to compare Abrahamic religions to Buddhism.
It could be interpreted as an ideology since the moment when it is based on "faithful" who follow a leader/prophet just for religious ideas or beliefs — javi2541997
My goodness. — whollyrolling
https://www.differencebetween.com/difference-between-religion-and-vs-ideologyreligion is the branch of knowledge that deals with the methodology of worship and the praise of God.
On the other hand ideology deals with the system of ideas at the basis of an economic or political theory.
Religion consists in the belief in a superhuman controlling power especially in a personal God or gods entitled to worship ( Defined by The Concise Oxford Dictionary). In other words religion is the branch of knowledge that deals with the methodology of worship and the praise of God.
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