Waves don't think. — Heracloitus
Fortunately it is only the imagined self that dies. — unenlightened
Or, perhaps it is the imagining self that dies. — Fooloso4
:fire:I am part, thinks the wave, of a vast, ancient ocean. I am not ocean but ocean is me. — Art48
Watching the breakers slide back into the eternally recurring surf I have no doubt what ultimately happens to ocean waves.Some say that at beach we merge with ocean. I suppose I’ll have to wait and see. But If I merge, I won’t be there to see. Hm. Que sera, sera.
sparks, fire ...
light rays, sun ...
waves, ocean ...
ten thousand things, dao ...
natura naturata, natura naturans ...
Tat Tvam Asi — 180 Proof
Also, pedantic note: "the universe" =/= "existence" ... analogously, the latter is like a field and the former a dissipating structure with respect to that field (i.e. ocean and waves, respectively; or continuum and sets). — 180 Proof
Read Laozi & Zhuangzi.
Read Epicurus-Lucretius & Seneca-Epictetus.
Read Spinoza & Nietzsche.
Read P. Foot & M. Nussbaum.
Like waves on the ocean, humans belong to nature – for better and worse. Yeah, we "stand out" but not so much that we are separate from or rise above nature anymore than ocean waves are separate from or rise above the ocean. — 180 Proof
'Is there something greater than me?' asked a wave on the ocean beneath the bright, silent Milky Way. — 180 Proof
'The everyday world' - nature natured 'sub specie durationis' - is like a wave on the surface of the deep, or an effect, caused by the oceanic Substance - nature naturing 'sub specie aeternitatis'; illustrating, though this analogy is absurdly limited, the perdurance of ephemeral surface waves relative to the long lasting ocean (i.e. Modes of Attributes relative to Substance) and that thereby, however relatively ephemeral surface waves seem, they are not non-existent in the sense S conceives of the difference between existing and the real. — 180 Proof
Imagine a conscious ocean wave. The wave sees itself as separate from other waves…
Sitting in meditation, I’ll try to cultivate a still peaceful mental state. In mentally giving up thoughts, emotions, and physical movement, I abstract myself from my own limited personal identity and try to feel myself as ocean, vast and unlimited. — Art48
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