I also spent 18 years participating in Gurdjieff groups and practiced meditation every day. — Janus
Did you have any success entering lucid dreaming states? — Janus
At that moment, I had a sudden and inexplicable realisation of the foundational nature of the 'I'. Not myself, as a particular individual, but THE self, the 'I AM' for whom the world exists, without which there is no existence. It suddenly became clear to me that this 'I am' is foundational to reality. — Wayfarer
The argument against reincarnation seems applicable here - in what sense was the person in the Irish Cottage the same as jgill? If all they shared was 'I AM', how do we conclude that they are the same? — Banno
is the criteria for what is real to be that it feels real? — Banno
But it is interesting how many people will tell of such life-changing experiences if the opportunity arises. — Wayfarer
I'm pretty confident it isn't.I don't know if that's an answerable queston. — Wayfarer
As do I. offered a rational strategy, but was dismissed rather summarily. Feels seem to be what folk want, rather than thinks. That's fine, since the thinks will only lead to aporia, which feels unsettling.I think that's rather simplistic. — Wayfarer
I'm pretty confident it isn't. — Banno
Trouble is distinguishing what we know from what we just believe. The difference is truth. — Banno
Yeah. I wasn't gonna say that. Might be time for a check up for some. — Banno
Trouble with identity again. The argument against reincarnation seems applicable here - in what sense was the person in the Irish Cottage the same as jgill? If all they shared was 'I AM', how do we conclude that they are the same? — Banno
Although, the saying is: the difference between a mystic and a philosopher is that the philosopher tries to explain it. The mystic doesn't. — frank
When I was still at school, I had the peculiar idea that if I suddenly swapped consciousness with the person walking towards me, AND I also instantly was connected to his or her memories at that moment, then there'd be no way of knowing what had happened. Rather peculiar thing to think, I grant, but at the time it seemed significant. Something about the universality of the experience of 'I'. — Wayfarer
Notice the connection between aporia and epochē.
— Wayfarer
This is interesting. Can you say more about that? — J
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