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enlightenment?Nicole said Dec 15, 2006, 8:53 AM: |
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Hi everyone, |
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Re: enlightenment?Liz said Dec 15, 2006, 10:35 AM: |
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Thanks for jumping in, Nicole! I would add that I really prefer the phrase “realizing one’s enlightenment” to some sort of arbitrary definition of what it is, since it is, as you’ve noted, a complete waste of time anyway. My ego (and my mind) doesn’t understand this phrase yet, but we’re all “always already” enlightened. I’d love to skip the whole definition entirely. What the hell do “I” know? Pi, anyone? ;o) Liz |
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Re: enlightenment?Mascha said Dec 15, 2006, 4:27 PM: |
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Oh, I wanted to start a thread asking the same question for some time. Hi Nicole, you already said much of what I wanted to mention about this “question” of enlightenment. What the hell is it? As far as I can see, there are as many definitions as there are people who’ve heard the word and then assigned some meaning to it. That’s a lot of different definitions, and each person seems to change their definition as soon as they achieve some of the criteria they’ve set for themselves. So ‘enlightenment’ might be seen as an endlessly moving target - the carrot a donkey will never reach.
Intellectually, as a temporary insight, I glimpsed that in my early twenties - and even before. But the striving, this burning, primordial thrust of ambition to “attain the ultimate state and stay there”– for that it took someone I completely trusted, who could come over physically, grab me by the shoulders and shake the idea that ‘I am not already That’ out of me, and with the full force of his being transmit an energy that I could not resist. Since then, enlightenment, buddahood, and who’s who in Mr. and Mrs. Soandso’s hierarchy seems like a board game for adults. Amusing from time to time. Right now I get this image of wanting a pair of shoes (I used to covet shoes), desperately thirsting for an exquisitely expensive pair of shoes far out of reach, until somehow it dawns on you that you’re a fish in oceans of suchness, and the last thing you need is some damn shoes. M |
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Re: enlightenment?Gman said Dec 15, 2006, 8:19 PM: |
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In my opinion….. (stated before, but I’ll reiterate it here…) If you have to declare it for yourself, it’s not
These things….they are what they are. If you have to tell me you are such and such…. Zero, nada, null….doesn’t register. Just my 2 cents. -Greg |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Dec 18, 2006, 8:25 AM: |
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I'll try to put this in terms that agree with Wilber's work and what I understand of various teachings, including the only direct teaching I have experienced from my teacher, Brian Nager. I have read works of other teachers (many from various lineages and traditions) that seem to agree with the following, at least to the extent that I understand it. |
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Re: enlightenment?Nicole said Dec 18, 2006, 8:39 AM: |
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thanks Keith :) and others… these are very helpful reflections… |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 19, 2006, 11:26 PM: |
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yeah! |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Dec 20, 2006, 7:17 AM: |
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I'd like to do a more in-depth response to Julian's insightful comments. In case I don't get the time or inspiration to do it proper service, here are a few comments that are poking out from my interior. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 20, 2006, 7:41 AM: |
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Hi Julian, |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 10:50 AM: |
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kieth and ma rig pa |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 20, 2006, 11:13 AM: |
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Some schools contest the idea that enlightenment is a state. Or rather, they contest the idea that the ground of enlightenment – choiceless awareness, buddhanature, etc – is a particular state. The Buddha's aim was to push beyond the state-focus of his teachers, since all states are dependent upon causes and conditions for their existence and therefore cannot be considered absolute.
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Dec 20, 2006, 11:26 AM: |
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Julian has certainly given this a lot of thought. I don't really have a problem with any of the arguments made. In that sense, we might be agreeing that enlightenment is not that. It is not all those things that Julian thoughtfully claims is not to be. However, just because it is not that, doesn't mean that it is not at all. Does it? |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 12:09 PM: |
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great questions balder and kieth. i look forward to hearing more from you and responses from others… |
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Re: enlightenment?maryw said Dec 20, 2006, 1:01 PM: |
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Julian wrote: of course this is based in the misperception that two-dimensional pure archetypes are more powerful or valuable than mutlidimensional but imperfect human beings. this is again the disowning of divinity and the forgetting that the whole idea comes from one place only - the human psyche… |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 1:25 PM: |
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good point mary. |
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Re: enlightenment?maryw said Dec 21, 2006, 12:17 PM: |
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i think it is ok to be certain of things as not existing until they are proven otherwise - the burden of proof is always on the side of something existing - not on something not existing. |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 21, 2006, 1:27 PM: |
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hey mary - full agreement - i am in no way suggesting that the physical universe is socially or psychologically constructed in a literal sense…. |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 21, 2006, 1:41 PM: |
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ok so mary - going back to see why i said what you quoted about the burden of proof. |
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Re: enlightenment?maryw said Dec 21, 2006, 2:29 PM: |
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I understand what you mean about the importance of not confusing the subjective with the objective, the phenomenal with the empirical. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 21, 2006, 4:24 PM: |
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Lovely lyrical response, Mary. That Mystery is palpable sometimes. |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 20, 2006, 1:46 PM: |
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Hi, Julian,
Balder |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 3:31 PM: |
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brief response to your great question balder. then i have to prepare for a client… |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 3:41 PM: |
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also i should add that i love to visit those states of consciousness whenever possible and that they have been a) a guiding light inmy own journey of integration, healing and stagewise development and |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 20, 2006, 4:27 PM: |
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Hi, Julian, |
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Re: enlightenment?Nicole said Dec 20, 2006, 5:50 PM: |
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Wow, Julian, this is getting wild and wonderful! Many thanks - you are giving me much food for thought. |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 6:06 PM: |
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agreed on all fronts mary. i love the dialog too and your points are great. |
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Re: enlightenment?maryw said Dec 20, 2006, 9:08 PM: |
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Julian – I think you meant to address this to Nicole and not to me (Mary) – but that's okay. 'Tis a compliment (at least from my pov) to be mistaken for Nicole! |
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Re: enlightenment?Nicole said Dec 21, 2006, 5:07 AM: |
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Dear Mary, |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 21, 2006, 9:09 AM: |
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oops - sorry nicole. and mary - though i mistook you for her, the general sentiment is transferrable! :O) |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 5:57 PM: |
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hey balder - digging the questions *and* would love to hear you expound a little so i have some context on where you are coming from… :O) i sense a lot behind what you are aslking ansd would love to hear your perspective! |
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Re: enlightenment?Nicole said Dec 21, 2006, 5:11 AM: |
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i am actually much more interested in 3 things which i am currently writing about: |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 21, 2006, 9:11 AM: |
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cool nicole - thanks for the chat! mo' later… |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 20, 2006, 8:56 PM: |
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ps - what do you mean by unconditioned and how does it differ from the augustinian unmoved mover…? |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Dec 21, 2006, 6:45 AM: |
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Come on, y'all! I have a job and this is way more interesting, and my job is pretty interesting. How am I supposed to get anything done with such provocative thoughts running around the mind? |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 21, 2006, 9:26 AM: |
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Keith, I just love ya!! |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 21, 2006, 10:44 AM: |
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beautiful flow ma rig pa. yum. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 21, 2006, 4:08 PM: |
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I've really appreciated your contributions, Julian. |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 21, 2006, 8:58 PM: |
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Hi, Julian,
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 22, 2006, 7:55 AM: |
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Hi Balder, “Does Dzogchen preserve patterns of metaphysical, premodern thought? In many of its teachings and stories, yes, I believe it does. This is one reason why I have moved from Dzogchen into the practice of TSK, since the latter preserves the deepest insights of Dzogchen, in my opinion, but situates them in a vehicle which I believe is more suitable for the postmodern world – more sensitive to the myth of the given and the insights of (post)modern West.” I am not for one minute suggesting that anything I say below is or might be something you're not already fully aware of, but it may be useful for others in this wonderful we-space. Context is everything, as they say. When talking about, evaluating or making a judgement about “Dzogchen” I think it's important to distinguish between 'Dzogchen' and 'the Dzogchen teaching'. So, for example, when you ask: ”Does Dzogchen preserve patterns of metaphysical, premodern thought?” you could have asked “Does the Dzogchen teaching (as it's been presented to date) preserve patterns of metaphysical, premodern thought?” The Dzogchen teaching gives a context for and a way of conceptually relating to something, commonly known as Dzogchen, that is beyond concept. It also provides an opportunity and a way for an individual (let's for the sake of argument stay with us humans!!) to be introduced directly, and without any vestige of doubt remaining, to their real, authentic condition ('real condition' may need to be qualified in some way - other terms used are 'primordial state', 'primordial nature', 'natural state' and 'nature of mind' ) ….. for them to discover this in themelves. It also provides a vehicle, offering innumerable methods, for the individual to re-discover their 'real condition' in all circumstances, within each and every experience of body, voice/energy and mind, and a context for them to integrate all circumstances, experiences, life itself, into ….. dzogchen, the 'self-perfected' state. And we're not doing states and stages here. The Tibetan term or name is 'dzogpa chenpo' — 'dzogpa' is often translated as 'perfection' but more accurately means 'completion' or 'completedness' (as in the state of being whole and complete), and 'chenpo' means 'great' but also 'total' — so we often hear of 'The Great Perfection', but perhaps more accurately it could be rendered 'Total Completedness'. Another epithet is 'Total Tigle' (pronounced tiglay). A tigle is represented figuratively as a sphere, so here we're given a symbol for something that is inconceivable ….. a holon that contains the totality of everything. Of course the 'myth of the given' could rear its ugly or not-so-ugly head here, but maybe we could politely ask it “could you hold that question just for now?”. Dzogpa chenpo, the self-perfected state, is qualified in three ways or by three things: Its Essence is primordial purity (Tib. kadag), referring to its empty / unconditioned nature (shunyata). Its Nature is self-perfected clarity (Tib. lhundrub) – clarity here, apart from its conventional meaning, also refers to the infinite apparent objects of the six sense consciousnesses. Its Energy is that it continues without interruption — both outside of and inside of what we conventionally accept as space and time (quiet, m.o.t.g., down boy!). 'Inseparability' (Tib. yermed) is a key word in the teaching of Dzogchen. The Ground, which is primordially pure (kadag), is inseparable from the infinite potentiality of and for manifestation (lhundrub) that it 'contains'. So we have 'Total Tigle'. Does the Dzogchen teaching “preserve patterns of metaphysical, premodern thought”? I would agree it does contain its fair share of metaphysical ideas in teachings and parables, but I would also suggest that a careful analysis would need to be made to determine which, if any, are truly premodern (does that also necessarily imply magical/mythic?) as opposed to transpersonal, whilst in any case bearing in mind their function …… and in the same breath I would say it isn't hide-bound by those that it does contain ….. and dzogpa chenpo itself is not conditioned by them. Finally, I think it's useful to bring 'faith' into the frame. Mary certainly has recently, and imho, most deservedly. When you say: “This is one reason why I have moved from Dzogchen into the practice of TSK, since the latter preserves the deepest insights of Dzogchen, in my opinion, but situates them in a vehicle which I believe is more suitable for the postmodern world – more sensitive to the myth of the given and the insights of (post)modern West.” this could be construed as implying that the Dzogchen teaching, particularly in the way of it being taught / presented that I'm familiar with, isn't really suited to the Western mind (whether it be modern, post-modern or post-post modern), and if this were to be what you're suggesting I would have to heartily disagree. I actually think that Dzogchen / the Dzogchen teaching is extremely well suited to/for today's world ….. but that's just me. And ….. as someone practising Dzogchen, I'm extremely interested in TSK (if I can get my head around it!), post-metaphysics (ditto) and exploring the myth of the given. (Can someone start a thread on that, by the way?) I can perfectly understand any rational person balking at the idea of maybe having to suspend disbelief and 'accept' non-human beings such as Nagas, or hostile spirits, or even wrathful 'deities' and the like …… and, I'm not going to assume or presume that this was the case as far as you were concerned, Balder …… however, again I would ask that person to see things in their proper context and give due regard to the function they serve, if that's all it comes down to. And this is where faith comes into it. If I take myself as an example, and posit that I've been given a practice where I'm asked to visualise outside of myself an aspect of the enlightened state (whatever that may or may not be!) in the form of a Wisdom Dakini, a female Wisdom Being (I'm being respectful now and using capitals), this has its function (it also offers an opportunity to give 'due reverence' to the 2nd person Thou) and the context here is that this Jnanadakini is nothing other than and inseparable from my own primordial state — as is the case when later in the practice I generate as this Jnanadakini. The 'self-generated' manifestation could be viewed as a reflection in my mind ….. in any case it is really lhundrub inseparable from kadag. Just thought I'd use the opportunity presented to 'state the case for Dzogchen' as it were. As for your post in general, I'm right there with you. All best, Lol |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 22, 2006, 8:53 AM: |
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Hi, Lol,
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 22, 2006, 2:23 PM: |
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so much for enlightenment … :O) |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 22, 2006, 3:10 PM: |
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Hi, Julian, I know you're joking, but my suggestion to start a new thread was to keep from interfering from the cool stuff happening on this one! |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Dec 23, 2006, 6:48 PM: |
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I don't recall if anyone has brought this up in previous posts (it's been a few days since I read the thread), but I thought I'd share a definition of enlightenment that Wilber offers in Integral Spirituality. I think the definition could be debated somewhat, but it does appear to be one useful way of retaining the word in a post-metaphysical context. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 23, 2006, 6:57 PM: |
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Hi B. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 30, 2006, 4:00 PM: |
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Did I say tomorrow? Oh well …
You said: “I think the definition could be debated somewhat …” and I agree “… but it does appear to be one useful way of retaining the word in a post-metaphysical context.” … and I again would agree, in so far as my rudimentary understanding of post-metaphysics allows me to! What I find intriguing is that there seem to be certain givens implied in Wilber’s definition. For example, when he says: “Enlightenment is the realization of oneness with all states and all structures that are in existence in any given time” this would seem to imply that it’s not possible for an individual, at any time in history up until the present day, to have realised and internalised developmental structures of the highest possible level (whatever they are) simply because consciousness to date is not considered to have evolved any higher than integral. So it seems to me that the ‘given’ here is that any individual’s so called ‘full Enlightenment’ is limited by and tied to whatever stage of evolution of consciousness has been arrived at (at that point). However, in the Dzogchen teaching ‘total realisation’ is said to be beyond any kind of limitation. Similarly him saying: “… the world of Form evolves, not according to a predetermined plan, but as an evolutionarily creative process” seems to me to be holding the “creative” aspect of this “evolutionarily .. process” as a metaphysical given. Looking more closely at Wilber’s definition, he starts by saying: “[T]he generic definition of Enlightenment is the full realization of, or being one with, Emptiness and all Form”. What is meant here by “all Form” needs to be qualified, because it could easily be interpreted as something like ‘all Form that has ever existed to this point in time’ and therefore necessarily finite … and so again seeming to imply that it’s a limited kind of Enlightenment …which to my mind is barking up the wrong tree …what’s more pertinent, surely, is the infinite capacity of the primordial state to manifest any single form or an infinite number of forms without being affected, altered, conditioned by any of them. If one uses the reflective capacity of the mirror as a symbol of the primordial state’s capacity to manifest infinite potentiality, (an infinite number of ‘events’?), then just as a mirror has the capacity to reflect any object in front of it, including at some future time a never-before-created object, without its capacity being conditioned in any way, so too the primordial state as primordially pure (Emptiness) isn’t conditioned by any of the infinite potentiality of manifestation that arises within it. Wiilber then adapts what he has posited as the generic definition to suggest: “Enlightenment is the realization of oneness with all states and all structures that are in existence in any given time”, and again it’s his making ‘Enlightenment’ dependent on a finite quantity of structures that to me is missing the point. But I’m getting ahead of myself a little. To get back to “Emptiness and all Form”, I’m taking it that he’s alluding to the famous “Form is Emptiness, Emptiness is Form” of the Heart Sutra. [“ …form is emptiness and the very emptiness is form ; emptiness does not differ from form, form does not differ from emptiness, whatever is emptiness, that is form, the same is true of feelings, perceptions, impulses, and consciousness.” ( from The Heart Sutra, translated by E. Conze)] Emptiness (Voidness / Sunyata) here is nothing other than the lack of inherent / independent / substantial existence of ‘things’ / dharmas / phenomena – including the self, and the concept ‘emptiness’ itself. So in this context nothing is or can be a given. What Wilber really means by “causal Emptiness” I’m not sure. If he’s referring to the Dharmakaya, then he would need to qualify from which perspective he was referencing the term, Sutrayana or Vajrayana. Sutrayana deals with the ‘Two Truths’, Absolute and Relative, Absolute Truth being Emptiness, and in this context Dharmakaya is the Buddha’s Wisdom Mind of Emptiness. In Vajrayana, however, there cannot be Dharmakaya without the two types of Rupakaya (Rupa meaning Form) i.e. Sambhogakaya (infinite ‘pure vision’ manifestation) and Nirmanakaya (both the material dimension and the form of an ‘enlightened being’ (e.g. the historical Buddha) that can be perceived conventionally). Incidentally, if Wilber is still equating Nirmanakaya with Gross, Sambhogakaya with Subtle and Dharmakaya with Causal, as three separate stages, then this from a Buddhist perspective is completely inaccurate. If we look at the Three Kayas from the point of view of Dzogchen, which is held to be the essence (and in that way the most essential) of all Buddhas’ teaching, then there is consideration given to the Three Kayas of the Ground, the Three Kayas of the Path and the Three Kayas of the Fruit. The Three Kayas of the Ground (which may equate with what Wilber calls “the timeless Urgrund” [On the Nature of a Post-Metaphysical Spirituality: Part 1] relate to: Essence : Primordial Purity (kadag) / Emptiness (Dharmakaya) Nature : Clarity / (the manifestation of) Infinite Potentiality (lhundrub) (Sambhogakaya) Energy : the inseparability (yermed) of the above two ‘without interruption’ (Nirmanakaya) All of these as concepts are ‘givens’. However, a concept is one thing and being in ‘instant presence’, the primordial state, the non-dual state is another thing — it is going beyond concept. If evolution occurs within relative, linear time (which, even though it can be measured by a chronometer, itself can fall prey to ‘the myth of the given’) then “the timeless Urgrund” points to something outside of, or beyond, conventional time. In the Dzogchen teaching this is referred to as ‘The Fourth Time’ (to distinguish it from ‘the Three Times’ of past, present and future) and in this way is seen to qualify the Ground (the inseparability of kadag and lhundrub). In this context kadag is Emptiness and lhundrub is Form. Wiber says “the world of Form evolves” and here he would seem to be implying an essentially ongoing limitation to the world of Form vis a vis possible future forms in a future, further-evolved world — whereas from the perspective of Dzogchen lhundrub is the infinite potentiality of manifestation of Form, inseparable from Emptiness. As expressed earlier, as concepts these are ‘givens’ (I do, however, look forward to seeing how they might be presented from the point of view of a post-metaphysical model or vision) but according to the ‘timeless’ Dzogchen teaching, the Fruit, aka ‘total realisation’, is no different from the Ground, and as such is direct, never-interrupted, non-dual awareness never-separate-from lhundrub — further qualified as having an ‘infinite quantity and quality of Wisdom’. As such it is a very different definition of Enlightenment. Of course all of this could be dismissed by some, perhaps, as mythic make-believe. How might one ever determine what really is the case? Essentially, by accepting and testing the various injunctions and seeing if they hold true, and this is the Path. It may be a process, but it is not considered to be an everlasting process. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 30, 2006, 4:18 PM: |
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Damned thing repeatedly insisted on not uploading the last paragraph, so here it is: |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 30, 2006, 5:34 PM: |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Dec 31, 2006, 2:34 AM: |
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Hi Julian |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 31, 2006, 8:46 AM: |
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OH NO! YOU FEEL LIKE I'M SHOUTING AT YOU! :O) |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Dec 31, 2006, 8:52 AM: |
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shit - wrong thread…… |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Jan 2, 2007, 11:02 AM: |
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Regardless of how one might define “Enlightenment,” there does seem to be no way out of the myth of the given when attempting to “prove” it. |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Jan 2, 2007, 11:56 AM: |
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hmmmm keith this is very fishy. :O) ya not pissing me off… |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Jan 2, 2007, 12:35 PM: |
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Julian, |
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Re: enlightenment?Balder said Jan 2, 2007, 9:49 AM: |
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Ma Rig Pa, although this is somewhat of a trivial observation, one objection I've had to Wilber's claims about enlightenment consisting of realizing “oneness with the highest level in the Kosmos to have emerged at any given time” is that it limits the perspective to the development of consciousness on Earth. Of course, we do not know anything about consciousness on other planets, but it is certainly possible that there are higher forms of consciousness out there in our enormous universe. Wilber does not answer whether the attainment of higher levels at any location within the Kosmos opens the window, evolutionarily, for a similar emergence on other worlds. Perhaps he is relying on Sheldrake's theory of morphic resonance, and therefore doesn't think we would resonate with alien forms of consciousness – but then it doesn't make sense to speak in terms of “realizing oneness with everything in existence in the Kosmos.”
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Jan 2, 2007, 1:15 PM: |
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Hi Balder, |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Jan 2, 2007, 1:04 PM: |
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false dichotomy. |
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Re: enlightenment?marigpa said Jan 2, 2007, 1:32 PM: |
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Hi Julian |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Jan 2, 2007, 4:40 PM: |
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I have read this entire thread and been engaged in it from the start, so I think I know what the gist of the arguments are. Respectfully, yes, I read the links before my previous post, though I already know what circular logic is. Then, I wrote what I wrote in my previous post (which I still think is a valid argument and not at all like the Poseiden myth or the lawyer question). Then I read your reply. Then I wrote a bunch of stuff in this reply but deleted it all. Fun stuff, indeed.;-) |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Jan 2, 2007, 5:06 PM: |
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oh ok keith - i will go back and see what i missed! |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Jan 2, 2007, 7:28 PM: |
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well i think what i missed keith was the goood natured humor in your last two posts. this time around i enjoyed that! thanks. |
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Re: enlightenment?Keith said Jan 4, 2007, 7:15 AM: |
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Thanks for the reply, Julian. I think we probably agree more than not. I get a bit frustrated (having fun with it mostly, but a little frustration does arise) at the medium of forum posting. Most of the time when there appears to be disagreement it can be easily sorted out by some dialogue. My guess is that if we could explain ourselves in a more freeform way (unconditioned??? how appropriate) we would be in a much better position to get our points across. Maybe not. I don't know;-) |
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Re: enlightenment?Jane said Jan 4, 2007, 7:35 AM: |
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Julian wrote: “i like the fact that your teacher doesnt claim nor define enlightenment - a good sign imo. |
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Jan 4, 2007, 1:31 PM: |
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intertesting reflections jane. yeah, i actually know jana from a different forum. she has some good stuff… |
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Re: enlightenment?transient said Jan 4, 2007, 2:36 PM: |
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Jane: “if enlightenment was a gallstone attack, there would be signsand symptoms identified, an easily recognizable pattern of events, some simple tests to confirm…and then there would be some research done wondering why did this particular person get THIS….maybe there would be some straight forward answers maybe not….but still there would not be this big deal about it.” Grof: According to traditional psychiatry, all these people would be seen as psychotics or people suffering from some other serious psychiatric condition. We actually have many psychiatric articles and books that discuss which psychiatric diagnosis would be most appropriate for the founders of various religions, their prophets, and saints. Franz Alexander, a famous psychoanalyst and founder of psychosomatic medicine, even wrote a paper entitled Buddhist Meditation as an Artificial Catatonia, putting spiritual practice into a pathological context.
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Re: enlightenment?Julian said Jan 4, 2007, 3:29 PM: |
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ahhhhh we need a lot more from you in the pre/trans thread transient! | |||

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