Kenota said:I think there is a degree to which we are all one. Fundamentally we are all manifest from one essential substance. On an important level, we are networked, too, like neurons in a brain. Unity through interconnection. I'm not sure on the possibility that we are all literally one, I don't see how we would go about seeing it.
Right...but even though it may be a useful starting point or premise (especially for scientific observation)...there's no evidence it is objectively "true" or "real"...that it exists without a subjective observer.Kenota said:Also, to Gibran, on the issue of atheists not providing evidence for a independent observable universe. It's an axiom. Without assuming this, you cannot build models and end up lapsing into a kind of solipsistic or nihilistic model which is in no way beneficial. Most people play by these rules, and if there was no such axiom, even the meaning of evidence is gone.
According to Avicenna, the universe consists of a chain of actual beings, each giving existence to the one below it and responsible for the existence of the rest of the chain below. Because an actual infinite is deemed impossible by Avicenna, this chain as a whole must terminate in a being that is wholly simple and one, whose essence is its very existence, and therefore is self-sufficient and not in need of something else to give it existence. Because its existence is not contingent on or necessitated by something else but is necessary and eternal in itself, it satisfies the condition of being the necessitating cause of the entire chain that constitutes the eternal world of contingent existing things.[31] Thus his ontological system rests on the conception of God as the Wajib al-Wujud (necessary existent). There is a gradual multiplication of beings through a timeless emanation from God as a result of his self-knowledge.[34][35]
gibran2 said:Ultimately, it’s how my experiences affect me that’s most important. Whether or not they’re real (whatever “real” means) is less important.
:thumb_up:Citta said:gibran2 said:Ultimately, it’s how my experiences affect me that’s most important. Whether or not they’re real (whatever “real” means) is less important.
THIS struck a thundering chord in me, gibran2. I will smoke DMT to that, friend. We've had our disagreements, but this is a common ground for both of us, and what it all boils down to indeed.
Best regards from some phycisists in Oslo and your old sparring partner Citta =)
primordium said:I don't have much to add here.
However, I just want to encourage physicalists (i.e., materialists) to explore "spiritualized" versions of their ontology--philosophies like Stoicism are both materialistic but deeply spiritual. For a more recent defense of "spirited" materialism, read Nancey Murphy's Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies?.
Tattvamasi said:gibran2 said:There are many on this site who claim/believe that we are all one. If that’s the case, then it seems to follow that there is only One experiencer.
Indeed..
Thank you. I firmly believe we are all capable of building ideas on the nature of reality without knowledge of any -isms at all. By all means research, read, listen – but at the end of the day this is highly personal and the thoughts of others are just that, the thoughts of others.The Neural said:primordium said:I don't have much to add here.
However, I just want to encourage physicalists (i.e., materialists) to explore "spiritualized" versions of their ontology--philosophies like Stoicism are both materialistic but deeply spiritual. For a more recent defense of "spirited" materialism, read Nancey Murphy's Bodies and Souls, or Spirited Bodies?.
Let us focus more on what brings us together, and less on what seperates us. Enough with the labelling of personal choices on beliefs, and enough with following specific "movements".
Movements are for those who do not have the time or will to create their own interpretation of the nature of the world we're living in; we are all competent enough to shed labels and devote ourselves to more important issues.
The Electric Hippy said:But I'm just not willing to accept that my convictions while under the effects of what is arguably the most powerful drug on Earth constitutes reality. Yes, I've merged with the Godhead. And yes, it was just as amazing and divine and wonderful and insane as any trip report given here. But I'm still not convinced.
hixidom said:My past atheism was all about experience and evidence, and I had never had either to support spirituality. Psychedelics changed that, and then atheism was no longer a viable/rational belief for me.
BirdmanDMT said:...Okay, I have read the majority of these posts. I am very interested in this thread!
The Electric Hippy said:But I'm just not willing to accept that my convictions while under the effects of what is arguably the most powerful drug on Earth constitutes reality. Yes, I've merged with the Godhead. And yes, it was just as amazing and divine and wonderful and insane as any trip report given here. But I'm still not convinced.
I singled out Electric Hippy's comment because his is what I expected to see reflected in a majority of posts relating to this topic. However, many simply went back to their standard-issue textbook Atheist dialogue: "Axioms" - "off-white powder" - "no such thing as objective reality" - "material brain" - "subjective experiences of external phenomena" - "Science" -
"Empirical evidence"
...And then we have hixidom's comment (which represents the minority of views):
hixidom said:My past atheism was all about experience and evidence, and I had never had either to support spirituality. Psychedelics changed that, and then atheism was no longer a viable/rational belief for me.
I am technically a Theist, but not in the orthodox sense. I found that my profound experiences when using psychedelic drugs (LSD - Shrooms) did not represent an actual "Encounter with God" but they were profound enough to reinforce my belief that life does not stop at the point of physical death. I fully understand an Atheist not "caving in" to any spiritualism or belief in God based on the use of a drug, but I would think that DMT should have had a profound enough impact on your non-belief ideology to strip away much of the Atheist dogma?
I would have guessed that a DMT experience for an Atheist would be enough to sever any pre-conceived notion such as "When we die, that's it and you're gone - the end!" and render it at the very least... suspect?
For me (as a Theist) I knew what I was experiencing wasn't actually God, but it was similar to "peeking through the window." into what God might be like. I would have figured a DMT experience to represent more of a middle ground for both views -- where Atheists question their non-belief and Theists are disappointed to discover their belief has not been confirmed.
Is it possible that once you return from your DMT experience that the "loss of information" that everyone seems to experience results in one's returning to old habits, dogmas and beliefs? (i.e. "back to square one" )
Can you honestly state that when you are at the peak of your DMT experience that you have not discovered something wonderful in "life" that says there's a lot more going on about "life" than we really know? -- and that there's possibly more to come once we die?
-Birdman
Yeah....but you do realise that when you talk about 'taking action in the world', you speak about the material world, don't you?ÅikyǬ said:Because uncertainty is one side of the moon. The dark one. In the shadows, everything is the same: uncertain. In the light, all is diverse, still all live together. Root bark, tree trunk and branches kind of order. Darkness, chaos, is dissimulating order and order is dissimulating chaos, disorder. One is in a state of becoming, ascent, the other in a state becoming, descending. All movement.
There is truth and it takes many forms because all is subject to movement. If you go to very deep meditation state and experience unity, it will impossible for you to explain and you might explain it in two very different ways on different days or to different people.
There is still some definite truth to what we experience and how we experience it. But the realm of thought likes to get complicated unnecessarily and preview things, jump back on things on and on, rationalist thoughts at least, and its better form might be playful as a child. If you get beyond thoughts to the realm of physics, as in felt experience, you are and will always be in truth while experiencing diversity. It is a creative state of being, being in flow.
In darkness, things rest. Uncertainty can be calming. But you need to take action in the world, and that suppose certainty. Or your heart is not into what you are doing and you will construct nothing that lasts. The great tribes of our ancestors have passed on us knowledge that was an expression of their certainty, and it is why it lasted so long and was passed down to us from eons so far. But you cannot express certainty in words, they are tricky and lying. Only in being you will know true certainty. Yet the mind will come and try rip it off you, make you doubt. But once you have been, once you are, uncertainty stop existing.
But it does not mean rigidness, certainty is a state of flow, supremely creative, and opens up infinite becomings. It is the mind perfectly calm and facing any changes. All movement ... And the day turns into night.