| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
05-27-2008, 11:47 AM
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#241 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by juantoo3
When confronted with spirit, equally real to those who understand and intuit
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I think this to be the crucial to understand nub of the matter of faith. This word "intuit". You see intuit is a creation of the psyche that has no meaning or basis outside of precedent. I believe what you refer to as intuition to be conditioning. Genuine intuition of the type you imply does not exist. What you really draw on is an established way of thinking.
Tao
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05-27-2008, 11:59 AM
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#242 (permalink)
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Why do cows say MU?
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Pacific Ring of Fire
Posts: 3,712
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tao_Equus
I think this to be the crucial to understand nub of the matter of faith. This word "intuit". You see intuit is a creation of the psyche that has no meaning or basis outside of precedent. I believe what you refer to as intuition to be conditioning. Genuine intuition of the type you imply does not exist. What you really draw on is an established way of thinking.
Tao
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Hehehe! Shall I break out the koans to help you understand intuition?
The Zen stick {or fish  } can also teach intuition in the conditioning manner you mentioned, but it is not the only way to learn intuition and spontaneity. You have the opportunity to learn intuition every day. Back before civilization came along and put up all the warning labels/signs on the dangerous stuff, people had to rely on their intuition for their very survival. I think we have devolved greatly from our ancestors in that respect.
{Is there a link between this and the rise of atheism?}
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05-27-2008, 12:26 PM
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#243 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by seattlegal
Hehehe! Shall I break out the koans to help you understand intuition?
The Zen stick {or fish  } can also teach intuition in the conditioning manner you mentioned, but it is not the only way to learn intuition and spontaneity. You have the opportunity to learn intuition every day. Back before civilization came along and put up all the warning labels/signs on the dangerous stuff, people had to rely on their intuition for their very survival. I think we have devolved greatly from our ancestors in that respect.
{Is there a link between this and the rise of atheism?}
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But this was exactly my point. This is not 'genuine' intuition but behaviour learned from precedent. Genuine intuition would appear spontaneously without prior cause, it would not be learned. Anything that is learned is not intuited but taught and this is the case with intuited ideas of spirituality. Learning that 2 or 3 kinds of bitter red berries all give you gut ache teaches you that other bitter red berries might do the same. So when you find a new red berry thats bitter you are conditioned, you are not experiencing intuition. Juantoo expresses intuition of spirituality as though it were independent of learned behaviour. But it is not. In fact I would say because of the prevalence of spiritual thinking in all cultures/societies it would be impossible to make a claim of intuitive revelation. The notion is common knowledge at such a young age that remaining uninfluenced in order to receive a genuine intuition would be about as likely as suddenly talking in a brand new and comprehensive language that has no relationship to any other.
tao
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05-27-2008, 12:49 PM
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#244 (permalink)
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Why do cows say MU?
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Pacific Ring of Fire
Posts: 3,712
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tao_Equus
But this was exactly my point. This is not 'genuine' intuition but behaviour learned from precedent. Genuine intuition would appear spontaneously without prior cause, it would not be learned.
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I see your point. Perhaps a better term would be intuition can be cultivatated. It's something that you already have to one degree or another, but many don't recognize it or realize it. It can be cultivated to the point that your conscious mind can recognize it, rather than remaining mostly subconscious.
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Anything that is learned is not intuited but taught and this is the case with intuited ideas of spirituality.
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Does a child learn to walk, talk, or crawl when it reaches a certain stage of development, or is it a purely intuitive process, or a mixture of both? (Usually a mixture of both.)
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Learning that 2 or 3 kinds of bitter red berries all give you gut ache teaches you that other bitter red berries might do the same. So when you find a new red berry thats bitter you are conditioned, you are not experiencing intuition. Juantoo expresses intuition of spirituality as though it were independent of learned behaviour. But it is not.
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Perhaps not recognizing it is something we are conditioned into/taught? Cultivating it would then be a process of unlearning.
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In fact I would say because of the prevalence of spiritual thinking in all cultures/societies it would be impossible to make a claim of intuitive revelation.
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I disagree. I wasn't brought up in any religious paradigm, yet became spiritual without being conditioned into it. Looking back to my agnostic youth, I can recognize intuitive/spiritual thinking I had, but did not recognize at the time.
Quote:
The notion is common knowledge at such a young age that remaining uninfluenced in order to receive a genuine intuition would be about as likely as suddenly talking in a brand new and comprehensive language that has no relationship to any other.
tao
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Infants and children make up their own brand new and comprehensive languages all the time! It's really a quite common occurrance.
Like Paladin already mentioned, some of the things children say/think are really quite profound. It's the cultural constructs that makes children learn to not ask such questions and explore such ideas. It's culturally labelled "immature and childish," naive, and unsophisticated, so I would say that the culture is biased away from intuition. (The preponderance of warning labels is evidence for it, imo.)
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05-27-2008, 01:06 PM
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#245 (permalink)
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in essence
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Oxfordshire uk
Posts: 870
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Re: Santa V God
Tao,
How did you ever get to the point where you are now if it were not through your own intuition of what makes sense to Tao? Taken on whatever terms you wish to name it........
Remember you dishonour yourself when you dishonour the intelligence of others who have experienced outside your own understanding.
- c -
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05-27-2008, 02:29 PM
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#246 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by seattlegal
I see your point. Perhaps a better term would be intuition can be cultivatated. It's something that you already have to one degree or another, but many don't recognize it or realize it. It can be cultivated to the point that your conscious mind can recognize it, rather than remaining mostly subconscious.
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Cultivated is just a fancy word for conditioned.
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Does a child learn to walk, talk, or crawl when it reaches a certain stage of development, or is it a purely intuitive process, or a mixture of both? (Usually a mixture of both.)
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This is a hard wired genetic imperative. Nothing to do with the higher functions of the recently developed human brain.
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I disagree. I wasn't brought up in any religious paradigm, yet became spiritual without being conditioned into it. Looking back to my agnostic youth, I can recognize intuitive/spiritual thinking I had, but did not recognize at the time.
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For to grow up free from the influence of religious paradigms you would have to have been brought up in total isolation from the concept of God, is this the case?
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Infants and children make up their own brand new and comprehensive languages all the time! It's really a quite common occurrance.
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 Very funny but you know well that is gobbeldy gook.
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Like Paladin already mentioned, some of the things children say/think are really quite profound. It's the cultural constructs that makes children learn to not ask such questions and explore such ideas. It's culturally labelled "immature and childish," naive, and unsophisticated, so I would say that the culture is biased away from intuition. (The preponderance of warning labels is evidence for it, imo.)
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Children are often thinking about things for the first time and can come out with a simplicity that is touching. But that has nothing to do with intuition as discussed.
tao
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05-27-2008, 02:36 PM
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#247 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ciel
Tao,
How did you ever get to the point where you are now if it were not through your own intuition of what makes sense to Tao? Taken on whatever terms you wish to name it........
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By rational deduction from what I have learned.
Quote:
Remember you dishonour yourself when you dishonour the intelligence of others who have experienced outside your own understanding.
- c -
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Well if you think that then you would do well to remember that your are claiming this experience for the billions who hold a spiritual set of beliefs. So when I state, as I have, that I believe I have experienced what people call spiritual intuition and I believe it to be a part of the human psyche built by conditioning are you saying that I am somehow unique and incapable of the experience billions of others claim?
tao
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05-27-2008, 02:53 PM
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#248 (permalink)
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Executive Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 2,098
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Re: Santa V God
Cross-cultural research on primitive religions suggests that much of humankind's religious imagery involves enduring archetypes. There is a fair amount of discussion of that in The World's Religions by Huston C. Smith. The book is widely considered a classic in the field of comparative religion and is often required reading for introductory comparative religion classes at the undergraduate level.
To the extent that the same kinds of religious imagery has historically shown up in cultures that are far removed from each other, one might reasonably conclude that the underlying archetypes are functionally independent of social environment and logically orthogonal to cultural reinforcement, social norms and habits or doctrinal belief systems.
This obviously undercuts the cultural artifact theory that suggests that faith and religiosity are merely products of social learning.
Suffice it to say that a comparative study of archetypes for various religious traditions is important if the idea is to get a picture of human culture.
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05-27-2008, 03:20 PM
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#249 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Netti-Netti
.... one might reasonably conclude that the underlying archetypes are functionally independent......
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Or are drawn from universal principles.
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05-27-2008, 03:25 PM
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#250 (permalink)
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in essence
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Oxfordshire uk
Posts: 870
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tao_Equus
So when I state, as I have, that I believe I have experienced what people call spiritual intuition and I believe it to be a part of the human psyche built by conditioning are you saying that I am somehow unique and incapable of the experience billions of others claim?
tao
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Indeed spiritual intuition is part of the human psyche, you see it on your own terms as conditioning. I see it through the eyes of divinity as love. There are many different levels of access to the spiritual. It is your view that is unique to yourself, and I thank God for the freedom to express my own uniqueness also. In freedom of expression all are equal. Would you have yours as the only voice that matters when I understand you put yourself forward as one who cares about human rights in this world.
peace - c -
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05-27-2008, 04:17 PM
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#251 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ciel
Indeed spiritual intuition is part of the human psyche, you see it on your own terms as conditioning. I see it through the eyes of divinity as love. There are many different levels of access to the spiritual. It is your view that is unique to yourself, and I thank God for the freedom to express my own uniqueness also. In freedom of expression all are equal. Would you have yours as the only voice that matters when I understand you put yourself forward as one who cares about human rights in this world.
peace - c -
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If your nose is running, you are coughing and sneezing it is fair of me to deduce from medical study that you have a cold or if there is a high pollen count that you suffer hay fever. You are free to believe that it is a pepper sprite that has possessed you. Likewise there are psychological causes that explain belief. I have at no point sought to attack any individual or their beliefs but to set out a non supernatural causation for the phenomenon of belief in human culture. I cannot help it that it may challenge your core beliefs but the only alternative to me setting them out is to not set them out at all. So what am I to do? My voice is far from the only one here, in fact I think it would be fair to say if anyone is really being challenged here, as well as outnumbered, it is me. I cannot help it that what I say is a powerful argument, it would be that with or without me expressing it. But I am not casting doubt on anybody's integrity merely trying to put forward a case for what I see. Nobody is forced to read nor respond.
tao
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05-27-2008, 04:26 PM
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#252 (permalink)
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I could while away...
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Colorado Springs, Colorado
Posts: 1,484
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Re: Santa V God
But Tao! If you pull the blanket off how shall I sleep?
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05-27-2008, 04:37 PM
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#253 (permalink)
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Rider on the storm...
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Edinburgh, scotland
Posts: 5,237
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paladin
But Tao! If you pull the blanket off how shall I sleep? 
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lol, perhaps I should start signing off with the name "gooseberry"?
tao
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05-27-2008, 05:02 PM
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#254 (permalink)
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here and now
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 3,848
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Re: Santa V God
Quote:
Originally Posted by seattlegal
Well, because you need both oil and vinegar to make a proper salad dressing. {Even if the vinegar has been made with sour grapes and the oil has been refined to the point of tastelessness. }
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Well, I wasn’t suggesting one or the other. I was suggesting one might usefully use both. And perhaps one can also have ciabatta and mozzarella. Each one is a legitimate ingredient. The more the viewpoints the more "solid" the hologram we linguistically label as “reality.” Pass the Barolo.
s.
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05-27-2008, 05:07 PM
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#255 (permalink)
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I could while away...
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Colorado Springs, Colorado
Posts: 1,484
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Re: Santa V God
Something that has been going round my head lately:
Unless we reside within a belief system, we cannot find the criteria for failure. A life without authority puts us in direct contact with the effect of our life, our actions, our thoughts and feelings. Without the screen of belief we have direct perception of the world in which we exist.
How do we live without belief? We live without the conflict of my ideas with your ideas. We live without the competition of self with other. We live without resistance to the movement of life.
In the moment we relinquish all authority, all conditioning, all projections of memory, both inner and outer, we are an empty vessel that is filled spontaneously with life itself.
Steven Harrison, This Shimmering World: Living Meditation
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