Guest guest Posted November 25, 2005 Report Share Posted November 25, 2005 This is the first of three essays by Bard Schmookler that is insightful and well worth reading. Suzanne Rulers Who Inhabit an Amoral World-- Part I: The Rejection of All Restraint To understand what kind of world our present rulers inhabit, we are compelled --because they are consistently dishonest with us-- to discover the truth from the pattern of their conduct. That pattern reveals that theirs is an amoral world. The first of a three-part series, the installment posted today examines one pattern-- that of their consistent rejection of restraint by any structure of good order. In the next two days, the other two installments will be posted. The second part will be called "When Loyalty is Not a Moral Virtue." And Part III will be "The Cloak of False Righteousness." Part I can be seen at www.nonesoblind.org/blog/?p=54If you want to help with the mission of NoneSoBlind.org, please consider sending this and other "blog-bite" messages out to others who might find the message, and the site in general, of interest. If you are not a subscriber to this "blog-bite" newsletter, but wish to sign up, that can be accomplished at www.nonesoblind.org/newsletter/subscribe.php NoneSoBlind.org ---------- If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, you can unsubscribe here. "To look w/the eyes n see w/the heart is the secret of the Philospher's stone" -Petrus Bonus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 It seems to me that many of the same people who debunk religion then go on decry a lack of universal morality. Makes me laugh, that does. If religion (as in that old time religion, not "esoteric" religion or spirituality) is not the ground of any public morality, then what is? (Please don't respond with a boast about how "enlightened" you are, without explanation - rather, enlighten us if you can). Hi Dan: I don't think Bard Schmookler is debunking religion; perhaps just the tendency of some to think their religious/spiritual experience is correct and others are wrong. I don't claim to be particularly enlightened and I find a unity in the essence of all religions and am quite interested in the variety of ways that people experience the ineffable...Me, personally, I try to be kind, mindful of my surroundings, open to others and grateful for this gift of life...to me it is all God/Goddess... Morality in my opinion is born of these things and doesn't require any formal religious doctrine at all. Dan said: There are reasons for grave doubt about any universal government, and in the opinion of many of us, that is what world courts, Kyoto protocols, and even the UN tend toward (decent universal federation tomorrow, ruthless, hopeless, world-wide technological tyranny a week from Thursday). Yet the author does not even allude to the argument that there are big dangers inherent in the move toward world government. * I don't think he is talking about world government; he is talking about the need for nations to cooperate; to have some international laws and agreements that are in everybody's best interest. We live in a world with a global economy, with both natural and man made disasters that don't necessarily stay within national borders...Certainly there is much that individual nations can cooperate on without losing their diversity or autonomy...I never did understand this fear of world government...I think the UN is our last best chance at learning to live cooperatively and sharing the limited resources on a shrinking planet...and I find the instinct to see oneself as a member of a global community and to cooperate woth others inherently decent and moral. Some of the wisest and most compassionate people I know work for NGO's and at the UN... Dan wrote:Underneath this blog post I think I smell a sort of Rousseauist, noble savage, "people are born good and civilization (or perhaps child abuse) makes 'em bad" opinion that is, because so grossly unrealistic, extremely dangerous. * Well, I'm sure you know Rousseau better than I do but I do believe that all people are born innately good and that our experience in the world certainly conditions our choices and behavior...I was profoundly moved by Bard Schmookler's book "Out of Weakness" when I was writing my dissertation on the psychological affects of the Holocaust on the second generation. He addresses the idea that people are violent and cruel to one another, even perpetrators of great evil, out of weakness not strength....seems to hold true for me. People who have achieved some degree of inner peace, who are content and appreciative of their lives have no need to be powerful or lord it over others. I try not to categorize people as bad or good but unhealed child abuse, or any personal experience of violence can certainly break your spirit and make it very hard to have compassion for yourself or others...So yes, without some opportunity to heal, if we are treated mean we will be mean to others...The effects of trauma and abuse are passed down from generation to generation unless it is somehow interrupted. I find that true in my work as a psychotherapist and in psychosocial peacebuilding...and I find some of Schmookler's work important and inspiring..that's why I shared it. To each his own I guess. Best Regards, Suzanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Against my better judgment, I clicked on the link. I would have at least these questions/comments: If memory serves, Lincoln was taken to court, the Supreme Court ruled against him, and he went ahead anyway. Have I got that wrong? The Constitution is not a suicide pact. It seems to me that many of the same people who debunk religion then go on decry a lack of universal morality. Makes me laugh, that does. If religion (as in that old time religion, not "esoteric" religion or spirituality) is not the ground of any public morality, then what is? (Please don't respond with a boast about how "enlightened" you are, without explanation - rather, enlighten us if you can). There are reasons for grave doubt about any universal government, and in the opinion of many of us, that is what world courts, Kyoto protocols, and even the UN tend toward (decent universal federation tommorow, ruthless, hopeless, world-wide technological tyranny a week from Thursday). Yet the author does not even allude to the argument that there are big dangers inherent in the move toward world government.. Are the Athenians wrong? If so, how? Was it not ever thus? Underneath this blog post I think I smell a sort of Rousseauist, noble savage, "people are born good and civilization (or perhaps child abuse) makes 'em bad" opinion that is, because so grossly unrealistic, extremely dangerous. Best, Dan This is the first of three essays by Bard Schmookler that is insightful and well worth reading. Suzanne Rulers Who Inhabit an Amoral World-- Part I: The Rejection of All Restraint To understand what kind of world our present rulers inhabit, we are compelled --because they are consistently dishonest with us-- to discover the truth from the pattern of their conduct. That pattern reveals that theirs is an amoral world. The first of a three-part series, the installment posted today examines one pattern-- that of their consistent rejection of restraint by any structure of good order. In the next two days, the other two installments will be posted. The second part will be called "When Loyalty is Not a Moral Virtue." And Part III will be "The Cloak of False Righteousness." Part I can be seen at www.nonesoblind.org/blog/?p=54 If you want to help with the mission of NoneSoBlind.org, please consider sending this and other "blog-bite" messages out to others who might find the message, and the site in general, of interest. If you are not a subscriber to this "blog-bite" newsletter, but wish to sign up, that can be accomplished at www.nonesoblind.org/newsletter/subscribe.php NoneSoBlind.org ---------- If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, you can unsubscribe here. "To look w/the eyes n see w/the heart is the secret of the Philospher's stone" - Petrus Bonus Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 At 03:08 AM 11/27/2005, you wrote: >It seems to me that many of the same people who debunk religion then go on >decry a lack of universal morality. Makes me laugh, that does. If religion >(as in that old time religion, not " esoteric " religion or spirituality) is >not the ground of any public morality, then what is? (Please don't respond >with a boast about how " enlightened " you are, without explanation - >rather, enlighten us if you can). > >There are reasons for grave doubt about any universal government, and in >the opinion of many of us, that is what world courts, Kyoto protocols, and >even the UN tend toward (decent universal federation tommorow, ruthless, >hopeless, world-wide technological tyranny a week from Thursday). And of course good ole time religion will lead us fearlessly into a new world of peace, light and brotherhood? LOL. But you will get your wish my . I hope you can live with it. As for " public morality " - what you are talking about is that thin veneer of civility people wear when they are all members of the one sect, inclusive of that fear driven behaviour which is determined by whatever laws are politically correct for the time. Whether the law is set down by a religious regime, a democratic government or a tyranny makes no difference. Good psychology is the understanding of human behaviour from all its aspects. Such understanding reveals there is no blinding light on the road to Damascus; that our culture remains locked to an archetypal process which has existed for at least two thousand years. The core components of this process are political and religious representations which remain unchanged, and remain in opposition. Until this opposition is mediated and the representations of its dynamics shifted to another image, the circle will continue, endlessly repeating in different theatres of conflict the world over. This representation is now focusing at an individual level, focusing ideas and behaviour, creating sides and opinion and splitting consciousness from its broader roots. All that remains to be seen now is whether the millennium of so called " western civilization " is to end with a bang or a whimper. Ultimately the problem comes down to the social cost of energy, both economic and material. Man follows his biology, and excess leads ever to disaster. regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Dan, I don't believe restraint and morality are a product of religion. At best religion may be a collected works of the restraint of that cultural group. I have been touched by the sacred writings of different groups, but it is my connection to truth within myself that creates restraint, not the surrender of my person to the code of any religion. Surrender yes, but surrender to life. Religion is the history of restraint. It is the past. Neruda wrote a poem of such. Carl Past - Pablo Neruda We have to discard the past and, as one builds floor by floor, window by window, and the building rises, so do we go on throwing down first, broken tiles, then pompous doors, until out of the past dust rises as if to crash against the floor, smoke rises as if to catch fire, and each new day it gleams like an empty plate. There is nothing, there is always nothing. It has to be filled with a new, fruitful space, then downward tumbles yesterday as in a well falls yesterday's water, into the cistern of all still without voice or fire. It is difficult to teach bones to disappear, to teach eyes to close but we do it unrealizing. It was all alive, alive, alive, alive like a scarlet fish but time passed over its dark cloth and the flash of the fish drowned and disappeared. Water water water the past goes on falling still a tangle of bones and of roots; it has been, it has been, and now memories mean nothing. Now the heavy eyelid covers the light of the eye and what was once living now no longer lives; what we were, we are not. And with words, although the letters still have transparency and sound, they change, and the mouth changes; the same mouth is now another mouth; they change, lips, skin, circulation; another being has occupied our skeleton; what once was in us now is not. It has gone, but if the call, we reply; "I am here," knowing we are not, that what once was, was and is lost, is lost in the past, and now will not return. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Neruda on Restraint - again, I can't see the religion in his words, only the spirituality. Keeping Quiet - Pablo Neruda Now we will count to twelve and we will all keep still. This one time upon the earth, let's not speak any language, let's stop for one second, and not move our arms so much. It would be a delicious moment, without hurry, without locomotives, all of us would be together in a sudden uneasiness. The fishermen in the cold sea would do no harm to the whales and the peasant gathering salt would look at his torn hands. Those who prepare green wars, wars of gas, wars of fire, victories without survivors, would put on clean clothing and would walk alongside their brothers in the shade, without doing a thing. What I want shouldn't be confused with final inactivity: life alone is what matters, I want nothing to do with death. If we weren't unanimous about keeping our lives so much in motion, if we could do nothing for once, perhaps a great silence would interrupt this sadness, this never understanding ourselves and threatening ourselves with death, perhaps the earth is teaching us when everything seems to be dead and then everything is alive. Now I will count to twelve and you keep quiet and I'll go. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Brita44@... wrote: Dear Suzanne, In a message dated 11/26/2005 2:12:26 PM Eastern Standard Time, dwatkins9@... writes: It seems to me that many of the same people who debunk religion then go on decry a lack of universal morality. Makes me laugh, that does. If religion (as in that old time religion, not "esoteric" religion or spirituality) is not the ground of any public morality, then what is? (Please don't respond with a boast about how "enlightened" you are, without explanation - rather, enlighten us if you can). Hi Dan: I don't think Bard Schmookler is debunking religion; perhaps just the tendency of some to think their religious/spiritual experience is correct and others are wrong. But to think that is precisely one of the things, at least, that makes that old time religion that old time religion. Otherwise it's, Whatever, dude. I'm OK and yer OK. I don't claim to be particularly enlightened and I find a unity in the essence of all religions and am quite interested in the variety of ways that people experience the ineffable...Me, personally, I try to be kind, mindful of my surroundings, open to others and grateful for this gift of life...to me it is all God/Goddess... Morality in my opinion is born of these things and doesn't require any formal religious doctrine at all. Dan said: There are reasons for grave doubt about any universal government, and in the opinion of many of us, that is what world courts, Kyoto protocols, and even the UN tend toward (decent universal federation tomorrow, ruthless, hopeless, world-wide technological tyranny a week from Thursday). Yet the author does not even allude to the argument that there are big dangers inherent in the move toward world government. * I don't think he is talking about world government; he is talking about the need for nations to cooperate; to have some international laws and agreements that are in everybody's best interest. We live in a world with a global economy, with both natural and man made disasters that don't necessarily stay within national borders...Certainly there is much that individual nations can cooperate on without losing their diversity or autonomy... Yes, all right - but to give over one's sovereignty to a "world court"? In the case of Americans, to give it *back* to Europe? And not just to Europe, but to the Dutch and the Belgians, if you please. Such a bitter irony. I will never swallow it. I never did understand this fear of world government... Because you don't understand why it is fearsome, or because you don't think it can happen? I think the UN is our last best chance at learning to live cooperatively Why should I take for granted that one we should always "live cooperatively"? Perhaps the human plant grows best under conditions of particularity, and with enemies - or potential enemies - around . Could I wave my wand and bring about permanent and universal peace, prosperity, safety and entertainment, I would not do so - it would be less damaging to start a nuclear war. and sharing the limited resources on a shrinking planet... I can't prove it, but I have an idea that the planet can take care of herself - and can shrug off three or four billion of us any time that it is needful. It takes some chutzpah to think that (1) we can "save" the planet and (2) that it even needs saving by the likes of us. and I find the instinct to see oneself as a member of a global community There is no such instinct. Our instincts are savage. The desire to be "a member of a global community" (may all the gods spare me from such a fate) is, I think, rather a result of religion - Christianity in some cases, perhaps Buddhism in others - gone awry. I become more and more convinced that Judaism is the most sensible of the religions with which I am acquainted. Puritanical Christianity may be a distant second. and to cooperate woth others inherently decent and moral. I don't know what "inherently" means here. Some of the wisest and most compassionate These two are separate. One can, to say the least, be compassionate without being wise, and I shouldn't wonder if one can also be wise without being compassionate. The wise are few. The compassionate many, in my observation, do much more harm than good. What is more troublesome than a do-gooder on the march? people I know work for NGO's and at the UN... Dan wrote: Underneath this blog post I think I smell a sort of Rousseauist, noble savage, "people are born good and civilization (or perhaps child abuse) makes 'em bad" opinion that is, because so grossly unrealistic, extremely dangerous. * Well, I'm sure you know Rousseau better than I do but I do believe that all people are born innately good and that our experience in the world certainly conditions our choices and behavior...I was profoundly moved by Bard Schmookler's book "Out of Weakness" when I was writing my dissertation on the psychological affects of the Holocaust on the second generation. He addresses the idea that people are violent and cruel to one another, even perpetrators of great evil, out of weakness not strength Who said that human beings were born anything but weak? Strength is acquired, weakness the default. .....seems to hold true for me. People who have achieved some degree of inner peace, who are content and appreciative of their lives have no need to be powerful or lord it over others. They may not need to lord it over others, but they certainly do need to be powerful - unless they wish to lose their liberties and their peaceful lives to others, to those who would conquer and enslave them. For a nation or a people, is better to be feared than loved, if one must choose. I think 'ole Nic was right about that. I try not to categorize people as bad or good but unhealed child abuse, or any personal experience of violence can certainly break your spirit and make it very hard to have compassion for yourself or others...So yes, without some opportunity to heal, if we are treated mean we will be mean to others...The effects of trauma and abuse are passed down from generation to generation unless it is somehow interrupted. I find that true in my work as a psychotherapist and in psychosocial peacebuilding...and I find some of Schmookler's work important and inspiring..that's why I shared it. To each his own I guess. In its original sense, this last means something like "to each what is fitting for him." But now it has, I think, come to mean something like, "Whatever floats your boat." Best, Dan "The wolf is always at the door." The Eagles Best Regards, Suzanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Heise wrote: Dear Carl, You claim, then, a mind of peculiar structure? It may be so. Who am I to say? Best, Dan Dan, I don't believe restraint and morality are a product of religion. At best religion may be a collected works of the restraint of that cultural group. I have been touched by the sacred writings of different groups, but it is my connection to truth within myself that creates restraint, not the surrender of my person to the code of any religion. Surrender yes, but surrender to life. Religion is the history of restraint. It is the past. Neruda wrote a poem of such. Carl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Heise wrote: Dear Carl, Neruda on Restraint - again, I can't see the religion in his words, only the spirituality. Nor I - but who is he, and why should I accept him as an authority? I'm suspicious of poets at the best of times. Best, Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Dan, Correct. Carl From: JUNG-FIRE [mailto:JUNG-FIRE ] On Behalf Of Dan and WatkinsSent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 4:22 PMTo: JUNG-FIRE Subject: Re: Re: The Rejection of All Restraint Heise wrote:Dear Carl,You claim, then, a mind of peculiar structure? It may be so. Who am I to say?Best,Dan Dan, I don't believe restraint and morality are a product of religion. At best religion may be a collected works of the restraint of that cultural group. I have been touched by the sacred writings of different groups, but it is my connection to truth within myself that creates restraint, not the surrender of my person to the code of any religion. Surrender yes, but surrender to life. Religion is the history of restraint. It is the past. Neruda wrote a poem of such. Carl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Dan, You don't need to. I don't need you to. It is what it is. And now it is also in this place. Your suspicion is of value to you, clearly, as you retain it. I don't need it to be otherwise, and don't expect you to care. As to the value I see in poetry, I feel the great minds have always seen poetry in its place - see Plato et al. Carl From: JUNG-FIRE [mailto:JUNG-FIRE ] On Behalf Of Dan and WatkinsSent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 4:23 PMTo: JUNG-FIRE Subject: Re: Re: The Rejection of All Restraint Heise wrote:Dear Carl, Neruda on Restraint - again, I can't see the religion in his words, only thespirituality.Nor I - but who is he, and why should I accept him as an authority? I'm suspicious of poets at the best of times.Best,Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Heise wrote: Dear Carl, I thought - and still think - that Plato was suspicious of the poets as enemies of philosophy (look at the job Aristophanes did on Socrates) who might be insturmental in driving philosophy from the cities. Even as he was, himself, a poet of sorts. Fighting fire with a somewhat different kind of fire, i guess. best, Dan Dan, You don't need to. I don't need you to. It is what it is. And now it is also in this place. Your suspicion is of value to you, clearly, as you retain it. I don't need it to be otherwise, and don't expect you to care. As to the value I see in poetry, I feel the great minds have always seen poetry in its place - see Plato et al. Carl From: JUNG-FIRE [mailto:JUNG-FIRE ] On Behalf Of Dan and Watkins Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 4:23 PM To: JUNG-FIRE Subject: Re: Re: The Rejection of All Restraint Heise wrote: Dear Carl, Neruda on Restraint - again, I can't see the religion in his words, only the spirituality. Nor I - but who is he, and why should I accept him as an authority? I'm suspicious of poets at the best of times. Best, Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2005 Report Share Posted November 26, 2005 Dear Dan, Suspicion as a product of socratic questioning is to be admire I guess. I wonder, though, if there are some realities that must be experience before they can be understood, and even then may not be. I feel poetry can be one of these. There is truth I can't understand, but can still touch. That touch still has value. Carl From: JUNG-FIRE [mailto:JUNG-FIRE ] On Behalf Of Dan and WatkinsSent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 5:35 PMTo: JUNG-FIRE Subject: Re: Re: The Rejection of All Restraint Heise wrote:Dear Carl,I thought - and still think - that Plato was suspicious of the poets as enemies of philosophy (look at the job Aristophanes did on Socrates) who might be insturmental in driving philosophy from the cities. Even as he was, himself, a poet of sorts. Fighting fire with a somewhat different kind of fire, i guess.best,Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 There is truth I can't understand, but can still touch. That touch still has value. Perhaps. But if one cannot understand something, can it be said to be certainly true? Maybe poetry is the attempt to express something that can be touched/felt and even understood but that can't be expressed in a conventional manner. IMO, Truth is not always factual data. Blissings, Sam If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking. -- Denis WaitleyIt is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. -- AristotleThe goal of an argument should be progress, not victory. -- Author unknownAccept complete responsibility both for understanding and for being understood. -- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 If I don't understand it is it true? Just because I believe something doesn't make it true. Just because I don't believe something doesn't make it untrue. *G* (quoting myself from my thesis) Blissings, Sam Don't believe everything you think. ~ Bumper StickerMany of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our point of view. ~ Obi-Wan Kenobi Choose your illusion carefully. ~ UnknownWho looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes. ~ C.G. Jung Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 Dear Carl, Heise wrote: Dear Dan, Suspicion as a product of socratic questioning is to be admire I guess. I wonder, though, if there are some realities that must be experience before they can be understood, I think so. I think that was one of the things that Plato was trying to teach through his own form of "poetry." If by "suspicion" you mean skepticism, I agree. and even then may not be. I feel poetry can be one of these. There is truth I can't understand, but can still touch. That touch still has value. Perhaps. But if one cannot understand something, can it be said to be certainly true? Best, Dan Carl From: JUNG-FIRE [mailto:JUNG-FIRE ] On Behalf Of Dan and Watkins Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 5:35 PM To: JUNG-FIRE Subject: Re: Re: The Rejection of All Restraint Heise wrote: Dear Carl, I thought - and still think - that Plato was suspicious of the poets as enemies of philosophy (look at the job Aristophanes did on Socrates) who might be insturmental in driving philosophy from the cities. Even as he was, himself, a poet of sorts. Fighting fire with a somewhat different kind of fire, i guess. best, Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 Once again, right on! Dan. Are we going to start agreeing on things???? On the question of the latest subject and its correspondence I have the following personal understanding. I question the statement: " Religion is the history of restraint. It is the past. The one thing in the history of the world, religion has not been is retrained. I hope I do not have to quote chapter or verse, but the Crusades? the Inquisition? the current Islamic terrorists for starters? That's a beginning on that refutation. And religion? in the past? Where? We are at present discussing evolution against "intelligent design" put forth by religionists. We salute the flag in a crisis of the words "under G-d" here in the US. We suffer from the product of the Islamic madrasas where they teach children to hate in the name of G-d and religion.And the Sunni vs Shiites?, Muslims against Hindus?.... And Carl, was it you? a question...what do you mean by "surrender to life?" How is that done? And is this a spiritual aim? a religious aim? or a moral aim? I guess we would all answer that differently, don't you think. How do you see it? I have been accused of misunderstanding...so i am asking,OK? If you write to the list, is it not because you think something worth discussing? Suggesting that something "needs" to be so for someone who disagrees takes this to extremes. No one actually knows what "needs" to be so for someone else, as was suggested in the last post or am I wrong? "It is what is" is seen differently by different people, and cannot ipso facto be the same reality. Anyway No, not in my reality is religion in the past. Myths die very slowly and hang around for centuries. They are alive and well today. Someone else said:( Suzanne?) " I don't claim to be particularly enlightened and I find a unity in the essence of all religions and am quite interested in the variety of ways that people experience the ineffable...Me, personally, I try to be kind, mindful of my surroundings, open to others and grateful for this gift of life...to me it is all God/Goddess... Morality in my opinion is born of these things and doesn't require any formal religious doctrine at all. " People who are born into a Western culture are still surrounded by the traditional beliefs of that culture.. We were all educated in this culture and we drink in its values without even thought.. The Ineffable, has, i think nothing whatsoever to do with the religious constraints that time and custom have had on our society. We are talking "religion" not spirituality. Religion is thrust on us without any formal training or even dependence on doctrine. We osmos the general", be kind" and "be grateful" from our culture not from a specific doctrine of religion to which we must adhere. One can be kind and grateful without any religious connection at all that is visible, but that does not mean that originally those values did not come from religious teaching. This civilization still speaks of the 10 commandments, the need for love, the rights of others...all that was originally religious belief. I did not address this post to anyone person, because I had questions and opinions on the subject covered in general. All these expressed ideas are my own thinking, I present them only as "my" opinion on the subject of the word "religion" I understand we all have different ways of interpreting that word. This is mine. It is interesting to compare views. Toni Re: Re: The Rejection of All Restraint Heise wrote:Dear Carl, Neruda on Restraint - again, I can't see the religion in his words, only thespirituality.Nor I - but who is he, and why should I accept him as an authority? I'm suspicious of poets at the best of times.Best,Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 Surrender to life? G-d is life. G-d is not religion. Surrender to life. Myths and religion are not the same. Living myths and living religions may be the same. Carl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 Dan, If a tree falls in the forest... If I don't understand it is it true? Carl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 Experience the 'True'... Words can never convey the beauty of a tree; to 'understand' it, you must see it with your own eyes. Language cannot capture the melody of a song; to 'understand' it, you must hear it with your own ears. So it is with the 'Eternal Way': the only way to 'understand' it is to 'directly experience' it. The subtle 'truth of the universe' is 'unsayable' and 'unthinkable' Therefore the highest teachings are 'wordless.' My own words are not the 'medicine', but a prescription;not the 'destination', but a map to help you 'reach' it. When you 'get there' quiet your mind and close your mouth. Don't 'analyze' the 'Eternal Way' Strive instead to live it: silently, undividedly, with your whole harmonious being. ~ Hua Hu Ching 30 ~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 27, 2005 Report Share Posted November 27, 2005 Toni, Two things. 1) Misunderstanding is a product of being alive. If you aren't misunderstanding something, you are not alive. 2) There is no "if you write, it must be for this reason" rule or code. Some here write to be heard, some write to discuss, some write to provoke, some write to disagree. I don't think we have ever agreed on the reasons a person must have to write. It is an interesting question though "Why do I write?" and deserves to be asked. I agree with the point you make about how wrong it is to suggest to someone else that something needs be so. It would be a more valuable process, for me, if I asked Why do I need this to be so? Carl I have been accused of misunderstanding...so i am asking,OK? If you write to the list, is it not because you think something worth discussing? Suggesting that something "needs" to be so for someone who disagrees takes this to extremes. No one actually knows what "needs" to be so for someone else, as was suggested in the last post or am I wrong? "It is what is" is seen differently by different people, and cannot ipso facto be the same reality. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 28, 2005 Report Share Posted November 28, 2005 >I think that poetry typically *is* the voice of convention. I think that's one of the reasons the >philosophers look squiggly-eyed at it. I'm not sure my poetry is, though I have to admit I haven't seen any squiggly-eyed philosophers giving it the once over. Blissings, Sam He's a blockhead who wants a proof of what he can't perceive; And he's a fool who tries to make such a blockhead believe. -- BlakeIf everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking. -- Denis WaitleyIt is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. -- AristotleThe goal of an argument should be progress, not victory. -- Author unknownAccept complete responsibility both for understanding and for being understood. -- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 28, 2005 Report Share Posted November 28, 2005 In a message dated 11/28/05 3:42:03 PM, JUNG-FIRE writes: In a message dated 11/28/2005 11:17:24 A.M. Central Standard Time, dwatkins9@... writes: >I think that poetry typically *is* the voice of convention. I think that's one of the reasons the >philosophers look squiggly-eyed at it. Goodness, I don't know what poetry you're reading ... there are revolutions all over the place in poetry. phoebe ********************* www.phoebewray.net ********************* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 29, 2005 Report Share Posted November 29, 2005 I agree. To whom are you addressing your patronising remark? Carl From: JUNG-FIRE [mailto:JUNG-FIRE ] On Behalf Of zozie@...Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 11:27 AMTo: JUNG-FIRE Subject: The Rejection of all Restraint In a message dated 11/28/05 12:18:02 PM, JUNG-FIRE writes: Dan,If a tree falls in the forest...If I don't understand it is it true?CarlAnd in the forest was an ego ...And thus only that which I understand is true. I don't think that's true at all. Because ... we are constantly learning things, and then understand that which we didn't understand before we learned this latest thing. I hope there is a Heaven and Jung is reading this list. The Old Man must be having a laugh or two.Smiling,phoebe*********************www.phoebewray.net********************* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 29, 2005 Report Share Posted November 29, 2005 Carl, I'm a lurker here and haven't had much chance to catch up with all the threads - but I just wanted to express my appreciation of the poetry you (and many others) post. The Neruda poems in particular ... There is at least one philosopher who changed the course of his life to study poetry or rather the poetic image: Gaston Bachelard. I've just started reading him and well, I think he didn't recognize the poet in his own soul perhaps. Anyway thought this might be of interest from his last book (unfinished) _Fragments of a Poetics of Fire_: " Existentialist philosophers seem to me too easily convinced of the permanence of being in all of its manifestations. Being for them encompasses even the billowing edges of the existential fog. Hardly out of the cradle, they exist; and the reality of the world offers them an immediate guarantee of their existence in that world. Beginning from premises such as these, spoken expression can be but an echo of the natural sounds of existence--their own existence. These existentialist philosophers discuss the world and themselves in the same terms, and always the existence of someone or something is the guarantee of Language. But existence in Language is only one form of existence. Language is never truly autonomous. It is ever and always an instrument, at best a civilized rendition of the scream. Language in its essence always hints at an existence prior to its own existence. Language is expression, and expression is essentially a substitute for or modality of the speaking being. In truth, inflamed speech, poetic imagery kindled at the hearth of language, responds to proponents of the theory of linguistic stability explosively, out of its own inner dynamism. If I am able to demonstrate here that in poetic imagery there burns an excess of life, an excess of language, I will be able to discover point by point the sense there is in speaking of the heat of language--that great hearth of undisciplined expression which, afire with existence, in the almost mad ambition to spark some existence beyond, something beyond existence comes into being... " aloha! L. > > Dear Sam, > > I think that poetry typically *is* the voice of convention. I think that's > one of the reasons the philosophers look squiggly-eyed at it. > > Best, > > Dan > > > > In a message dated 11/27/2005 1:29:16 P.M. Central Standard Time, > dwatkins9@c... writes: > > > > There is truth I can't understand, but can still touch. That touch still has > value. > > > > Perhaps. But if one cannot understand something, can it be said to be > certainly true? > > > > > Maybe poetry is the attempt to express something that can be touched/felt > and even understood but that can't be expressed in a conventional manner. > IMO, Truth is not always factual data. > > Blissings, > Sam > > If everyone is thinking alike, then someone isn't thinking. -- Denis Waitley > It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without > accepting it. -- Aristotle > The goal of an argument should be progress, not victory. -- Author unknown > Accept complete responsibility both for understanding and for being > understood. -- > > > > > > " Our highest duty as human beings is to search out a means whereby beings > may be freed from all kinds of unsatisfactory experience and suffering. " > > H.H. Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th. Dalai Lama > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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