Atheist questions

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This is nonsensical. Me at one year old was different from me at ten years old. Difference-in-time is fundamental to the difference between the two different versions of me.
Two different versions of you imply that there is one person. Otherwise what does “you” refer to?
Since I reject Substance, just as Buddhism rejects souls, then all I am is Accident. We can, I think, both agree that Accident changes from day to day.
If all you are is Accident then you cannot have any control over yourself or choice in what you do. You are just a cog in a vast machine…

Nor does it make sense to refer to self-improvement if there is no self…
 
Two different versions of you imply that there is one person. Otherwise what does “you” refer to?

If all you are is Accident then you cannot have any control over yourself or choice in what you do. You are just a cog in a vast machine…

Nor does it make sense to refer to self-improvement if there is no self…
To Rossum: If there is no substance then all language is equivocal and there is no common referent in communication. Ergo, everything Rossum has said is meaningless to those towards whom he speaks.
 
I did not say “part of”, I said “How can the Creator be independent of His creation?” If there is no creation then obviously there is no creator since any supposed creator would not have created anything. A lion tamer cannot be a lion tamer unless he has actually tamed a lion or two. Any creator is dependent on their creation in order to be a creator.
Only in his capacity as a creator; he would still have his own being, he simply would not have created anything so “creator” would not apply. Except in the case of the Christian God, who is the cause of his own Being because he is Being—saying he is the cause of his own being is actually redundant (our God being the primal unity theorized by Buddhists, all predicative language is inherently inaccurate in attempting to describe him).
If two events are simultaneous then neither can cause the other. Causation requires that one event (the cause) exists before the other event (the effect). If they are simultaneous then we cannot determine which is cause and which is effect.
Not necessarily; the Additive Identity property is the cause of the fact that N+0=N, but, in fact,both are timeless, since math is not a physical event.
I know that God’s creation of me is not timeless. When I was conceived I was a single cell with no brain, no bones, no limbs etc. Today I have a brain, bones limbs etc. I have changed and I am certainly not timeless. God’s creation of me was not a timeless creation.
Here you are conflating two senses of the word “create”; it can mean both “cause to come into being” and “cause to exist”, and it may be possible for a thing’s existence to need a cause (because it is not logically necessary) even if it has always existed. I’m not saying there is any such thing, but even if the universe were eternal it would still require a cause for its existence. That’s why Hindus believe in God.
Since I reject Substance, just as Buddhism rejects souls, then all I am is Accident. We can, I think, both agree that Accident changes from day to day.
Yes, Buddhism does reject Substance (which they identify with souls), in the teaching of Anatman. I take it then that you’re not Mahayana? Because Mahayana Buddhists say that, if you’re going to posit that Accidents are real, you must therefore say that they have substance. It turns into an infinite regress, unless you’re going to deny both Substance and Accident, and say that the only reality is Being (since its nonexistence would be nonsenical): from this they derive their interpretation of Advaita, Non-Duality.
 
We cannot suspend the rules of spiritual causation because we don’t know what they are or how they function.
If we don’t know what they are then how can we tell if they are suspended or not? How can we even know if they exist? You are making a very weak argument here.
Change can occur within an entity without affecting its fundamental nature.
We disagree here. I do not accept the existence of “fundamental nature” or any similar thing such as Substance or soul. If an entity changes then that entity changes.
I agree but they aren’t completely conditioned; otherwise we wouldn’t be responsible for anything we think or do.
Here we can agree. We are free within limits. We are responsible for our actions within those limits.

rossum
 
Two different versions of you imply that there is one person. Otherwise what does “you” refer to?
“You” is a convenient contraction for the assembly of all the different versions of the changing things that constitute rossum. It is easier to say “car” than to list all the different parts present in an automobile. I am merely using a verbal convenience that has no deeper significance beyond verbal convenience.
If all you are is Accident then you cannot have any control over yourself or choice in what you do. You are just a cog in a vast machine…
Thomist Accident is not an exact analogue to the Buddhist world view. It is just an approximation.
Nor does it make sense to refer to self-improvement if there is no self…
It does make sense to compare different editions of me at different times and to see which edition is better.

rossum
 
To Rossum: If there is no substance then all language is equivocal and there is no common referent in communication. Ergo, everything Rossum has said is meaningless to those towards whom he speaks.
Common referents are listed in the dictionary. Language is defined in terms of language, it is a convenience and not a reflection of any deeper reality. The symbol ‘2’ may be called ‘two’, ‘deux’, ‘zwei’, ‘dva’, ‘ni’ or many other things in many different languages.

rossum
 
Only in his capacity as a creator; he would still have his own being, he simply would not have created anything so “creator” would not apply.
I do not recognise “own being”. Here is the opening of the Heart sutra:Avalokita, The Holy Lord and Bodhisattva, was moving in the deep course of the Wisdom which has gone beyond. He looked down from on high, He beheld but five heaps, and he saw that in their own-being they were empty.
All ‘own being’ is empty.
Being—saying he is the cause of his own being is actually redundant (our God being the primal unity theorized by Buddhists, all predicative language is inherently inaccurate in attempting to describe him).
No entity can cause itself.Neither from itself nor from another,
Nor from both,
Nor without a cause,
Does anything whatsoever , anywhere arise.

– Nagarjuna, Mulamadhyamakakarika 1:1
Yes, Buddhism does reject Substance (which they identify with souls), in the teaching of Anatman. I take it then that you’re not Mahayana? Because Mahayana Buddhists say that, if you’re going to posit that Accidents are real, you must therefore say that they have substance. It turns into an infinite regress, unless you’re going to deny both Substance and Accident, and say that the only reality is Being (since its nonexistence would be nonsenical): from this they derive their interpretation of Advaita, Non-Duality.
I am Mahayana, as you can see from my two quotes above. Depending on who I am talking to I first show the unreality of Substance using something like Theravada Dharma-theory. Once that is established I then show the ultimate unreality of Accident using Prasangika-Madhyamika methods. You are correct in your analysis of the failings of Dharma-theory. It tends to correctly analyse reality into Dharmas but then to see those Dharmas as ultimately real.

None of this denies the conventional reality of Accident but it does strongly deny the human tendancy to reify things and to build up large philosophical superstructures behind them.The emptiness of emptiness is the fact that not even emptiness exists ultimately, that it is also dependent, conventional, nominal, and in the end it is just the everydayness of the everyday. Penetrating to the depths of being, we find ourselves back on the surface of things and so discover that there is nothing, after all, beneath those deceptive surfaces. Moreover, what is deceptive about them is simply the fact that we assume ontological depth lurking just beneath.

– Jay Garfield, “Empty words, Buddhist philosophy and cross-cultural interpretation.” OUP 2002.
Thomist Substance, as well as any reification of Accident, is an attempt to see ontological depth in something that does not have any such thing.
[The Buddha said:] “This is how to contemplate our conditioned existence in this fleeting world:
Like a tiny drop of dew, or a bubble floating in a stream;
Like a flash of lightning in a summer cloud,
Or a flickering lamp, an illusion, a phantom, or a dream.
So is all conditioned existence to be seen.”
– Diamond sutra, Chapter 32.​

rossum
 
I do not accept the existence of “fundamental nature” or any similar thing such as Substance or soul. If an entity changes then that entity changes.

rossum
Rossum:

If I go to the beach and get sunburned, it is me who gets sunburned! I remain me. I do not become someone else! This is too obvious. I even know this while I’m getting sunburned! You will never convince any of us of such absurdity.

God bless,
jd
 
“You” is a convenient contraction for the assembly of all the different versions of the changing things that constitute rossum.
That might have some very small weight if we forgot about consciousness. If we forgot about the subjective certainty that it is me who wants to exist. If we forgot about the subjective certainty that it is me who intends. If we forgot about the subjective certainty that it is me whose intentions either change, or remain the same, whenever I wake up in the morning.

The fact that my trillions of cells replace themselves so many times during a certain period does not equate to substantial change. If I kill a billion of them by burning my hand on a stove, it is still I that is in possession of my hand, and it is still I that will undergo local cellular repair.

The problem with your philosophy is that it is surely a slippery slope. Even Scientologists, who have based much of their -ology on Buddhism, cannot rid themselves of the I. The term they use for the I is, thetan. They are so completely abused of the I, that their claim is that all living things possess, while alive, a thetan. When a human being dies, all of its trillions of theta depart the matter and float around in search of another bit of matter, or another aggregate, to inhabit. Prove that wrong!
It is easier to say “car” than to list all the different parts present in an automobile.
Poor analogy. A “car” is a mere “functional aggregate”. Humans are more than that, though we are, in part, that. Neither the car, nor any of its parts, knows it’s a car, or, possesses intentions. It has no consciousness. It is as opposite to a human being as it can possibly be. The gulf between a human and a car, for that reason, approaches infinity. OTOH, I am my closest personal possession.
I am merely using a verbal convenience that has no deeper significance beyond verbal convenience.
A pure naked assertion. Nothing more and nothing less. And, it’s source is a misunderstanding: that the changes that our physical structure undergoes does not require a stable subject. On the contrary, it does; otherwise chaos and disorder.

God bless,
jd
 
Common referents are listed in the dictionary. Language is defined in terms of language, it is a convenience and not a reflection of any deeper reality. The symbol ‘2’ may be called ‘two’, ‘deux’, ‘zwei’, ‘dva’, ‘ni’ or many other things in many different languages.

rossum
Rossum:

I disagree. (Of course, what else would you expect! 😉 )

Language is nothing more than spelled out sounds. However, the referents to those sounds are ontologically real. The referent objectum pre-exists and presupposes the spelled-out-sound. For example, when one views another person. What does one see? An immobile being? One that does not pre-expose its intentions and thoughts? On the contrary. As observers, we ratiocinate, make intelligible to us, the other’s intentions before the other has had a chance to utter a word. Children learn this before they learn to talk. They know if they have displeased their moms. They know if they have pleased their moms. They know if their moms are displeased with dad. They know if mom is OK with the supper she is preparing. How do they know this? They know from her gestures, her facial expressions, her body language, the furtiveness of her eyes, the furl on her nose, the shape of her lips, the tone of her unintelligible sounds, etc.

Words are a natural psychological development of our understandings about things so that we can categorize what we see and remember. Words are used to express similarities. In community with other like beings, we naturally want to share and compare similarities. Words are not shallow representations. They express the metaphysics of being and life. Fully consider the depth of the futurum exactum. It may well be the precise ground for reality. That’s not shallow, Hal . . .oops!, I mean rossum.🙂

God bless,
jd
 
I do not recognise “own being”. Here is the opening of the Heart sutra:Avalokita, The Holy Lord and Bodhisattva, was moving in the deep course of the Wisdom which has gone beyond. He looked down from on high, He beheld but five heaps, and he saw that in their own-being they were empty.
All ‘own being’ is empty.
Well, I don’t know about your being, but, I know that I own my being. And, if I have to prove it to Avalokita by screaming my name and that " I AM," I will.
No entity can cause itself. Neither from itself nor from another,
Nor from both,
Nor without a cause,
Does anything whatsoever, anywhere arise.
– Nagarjuna, Mulamadhyamakakarika 1:1
Then, I guess we have been, and are being duped, in an ongoing fashion, when we believe that things “arise,” i.e., come to be. Nothing arises; nothing comes-to-be. This appears to be an illusion of an illusion. What exactly is a cause, to you? :confused:
None of this denies the conventional reality of Accident but it does strongly deny the human tendancy to reify things and to build up large philosophical superstructures behind them.
I was just about to ask you for an example. And, Voilà!, here it is:
Thomist Substance, as well as any reification of Accident, is an attempt to see ontological depth in something that does not have any such thing.
No it’s not. It is a manner of expressing what arising, i.e., coming to be, is without the use it, or a corollary of it, in its definition. That would not be a definition, per se. Besides, your above assertion is showing all of its skin again! 😊
[The Buddha said:] “This is how to contemplate our conditioned existence in this fleeting world:
Like a tiny drop of dew, or a bubble floating in a stream;
Like a flash of lightning in a summer cloud,
Or a flickering lamp, an illusion, a phantom, or a dream.
So is all conditioned existence to be seen.”
rossum
Sorry, my family can’t count on something like that. (They would toss me out! 😉 ) This is nothing more than a nonsensical exaggeration of the fact of our impermanence. However, we are permanent to an extent. We are here, on average, for about 75 years - a longish time, to be sure. And, if you take our souls into account, we exist eternally-from-a-beginning. Which you do not deny, otherwise you would not be able to reappear from time to time, along the Buddhist man-god continuum.

God bless,
jd
 
We cannot suspend the rules of spiritual causation because we don’t know what they are or how they function.
Not at all. If you deny that there are rules of spiritual causation you are rejecting Buddhism.
Change can occur within an entity without affecting its fundamental nature.
We disagree here. I do not accept the existence of “fundamental nature” or any similar thing such as Substance or soul. If an entity changes then that entity changes.

What is an entity if there is no soul or substance? An illusion!
I agree but they aren’t completely conditioned; otherwise we wouldn’t be responsible for anything we think or do.
Here we can agree. We are free within limits. We are responsible for our actions within those limits.

If we don’t exist how does it makes sense to say “We are free within limits”?
 
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Two different versions of you
imply that there is one person. Otherwise what does “you” refer to?
“You” is a convenient contraction for the assembly of all the different versions of the changing things that constitute rossum. It is easier to say “car” than to list all the different parts present in an automobile. I am merely using a verbal convenience that has no deeper significance beyond verbal convenience.
How can an assembly re free?
If all you are is Accident then you cannot have any control over yourself or choice in what you do. You are just a cog in a vast machine…

Thomist Accident is not an exact analogue to the Buddhist world view. It is just an approximation.It still requires explanation.
Nor does it make sense to refer to self-improvement if there is no self…

It does make sense to compare different editions of me at different times and to see which edition is better.
Better from what or whose point of view? Which edition does the comparing?
 
If I go to the beach and get sunburned, it is me who gets sunburned! I remain me. I do not become someone else! This is too obvious. I even know this while I’m getting sunburned! You will never convince any of us of such absurdity.
You get sunburned but your liver does not get sunburned. Therefore your liver is not you. When you were a newly fertilized zygote in your mother’s womb you did not have any skin so that zygote cannot have been you either. The outer layer of your skin is dead; I must say you type remarkably well for someone who is dead. Your skin is not you, it is a part.

You are an assembly of parts. One part is not the whole assembly. One of the functions of Buddhist practice is to learn to detach yourself from those various parts. They seem like they are you but they aren’t. Try to move from ‘I am sunburned’ to ‘There is sunburn’.
That might have some very small weight if we forgot about consciousness.
In Buddhist analysis consciousness is just one of the parts that make up a human being. There is nothing so special about consciousness, it changes from second to second and we can lose it entirely and become unconscious. Are you saying that when we are deeply asleep we are no longer in existence because we have lost consciousness?
If we forgot about the subjective certainty that it is me who wants to exist.
You are correct to call it a “subjective” certainty. Buddhism calls it an error. Wishing to exist is an error that leads to suffering:[The Buddha said:] “And this, monks is the noble truth of the origination of suffering: the craving that makes for further becoming — accompanied by passion and delight, relishing now here and now there — i.e., craving for sensual pleasure, craving for existence, craving for non-existence.” [Emphasis added]

– Samyutta Nikaya 56.11
That is the canonical statement of the second of the four noble truths of Buddhism and is fundamental to the Buddhist outlook.
A “car” is a mere “functional aggregate”. Humans are more than that, though we are, in part, that.
We disagree 😉 . Humans are an aggregate, nothing more.
Neither the car, nor any of its parts, knows it’s a car, or, possesses intentions. It has no consciousness.
An unconscious human has neither consciousness nor intentions. Is an unconscious human still a human? If yes then neither consciousness not intention is necessary in order to be human.
I am my closest personal possession.
Strange. Possessions are something external to you. How can you be something that is external to you? Or perhaps you cannot get rid of your possessions? Jesus was very right and very profound when he advised his followers to divest themselves of all their possessions. “Not my will but thine…” Will and intention are just two of the things we need to divest ourselves of.
Language is nothing more than spelled out sounds. However, the referents to those sounds are ontologically real.
Do the sounds “unicorn”, “Zeus” or “Durga” refer to something ontologically real?
That’s not shallow, Hal . . .oops!, I mean rossum.🙂
“I’m sorry, Dave. I’m afraid I can’t do that.”
Well, I don’t know about your being, but, I know that I own my being.
A rich man owns many things, but he has this difficulty with camels, needles and heaven. The less you own the easier it is to get through the eye of that needle.
Then, I guess we have been, and are being duped, in an ongoing fashion, when we believe that things “arise,” i.e., come to be. Nothing arises; nothing comes-to-be. This appears to be an illusion of an illusion. What exactly is a cause, to you?
This is the opening verse of Nagarjuna’s argument against causation based on the equivalent of Thomist substance. It is the start of his discussion of the logical impossibility of any causation based on any substance/essence that underlies things.

The full analysis goes more for ‘conditions’ rather than ‘causes’. The link between cause and effect is too strong to allow change. Our discussion of the presence of the Substance of the apple inside the blossom is relevant here.
We are here, on average, for about 75 years - a longish time, to be sure.
I for one am not. Five years ago I was not the person I am now. In five years time I will be different again. The 75 year duration is an illusion when examined closely. One of the three marks is that everything changes, everything is impermanent:“Impermanent are all compound things.”
When one realises this by wisdom,
then one does not heed ill.
This is the Path of Purity.

– Dhammapada 20:5
It is because everything is impermanent that the search for permanent happiness is not as simple as it first appears.
Which you do not deny, otherwise you would not be able to reappear from time to time, along the Buddhist man-god continuum.
Which I do deny:“All the elements of reality are soulless.”
When one realises this by wisdom,
then one does not heed ill.
This is the Path of Purity.

– Dhammapada 20:7
Remember that “I” do not reappear. “I” appears once and then disappears, creating the conditions for a new “I” to appear in my place. The compound of the many linked versions of “I” is called ‘rossum’. It is another aggregate, like “car”.

rossum
 
Not at all. If you deny that there are rules of spiritual causation you are rejecting Buddhism.
I am denying that there is a “spiritual causation” that is different from ordinary causation. You have produced no evidence that such a different form of causation even exists, and you have told us that you don’t know what it is or how it works:
We cannot suspend the rules of spiritual causation because we don’t know what they are or how they function.
What is an entity if there is no soul or substance? An illusion!
It is not what it appears to be. It is deceptive, an illusion if you like. Things are not what they seem to be. A man with red-green colour blindness sees a dog. Does he see the real dog or is his perception mistaken? Our perception of ‘self’ as a permanent reified entity is mistaken. The mistake is in our heads, not in reality.
If we don’t exist how does it makes sense to say “We are free within limits”?
We do not exist in the way we think we exist. Our thoughts on this question are incorrect, unless we are enlightened. We think that a mirage is water, but it is no water. It is not nothing either, but it is not what it seems to be. Appearances are deceptive.
How can an assembly re ?be?] free?
You are an assembly of a body (which is itself made of sub-assemblies) and a soul. How can you be free if you are also an assembly?
It still requires explanation.
Our actions are free within limits. This is an observation, not an explanation. Free will is not seen as a big problem in Buddhism because we do not have an omniscient God who already knows what we will do in the future.
Better from what or whose point of view? Which edition does the comparing?
Each edition does its own comparing with its own past.

rossum
 
Not at all. If you deny that there are rules of spiritual causation you are rejecting Buddhism.
If spiritual causation is “ordinary”, i.e. physical, causation, the spirit must be inert! Why bother to distinguish spirit from body at all? It would be the body that should be held responsible for a person’s decisions…
What is an entity if there is no soul or substance? An illusion!
It is not what it appears to be. It is deceptive, an illusion if you like. Things are not what they seem to be. A man with red-green colour blindness sees a dog. Does he see the real dog or is his perception mistaken? Our perception of ‘self’ as a permanent reified entity is mistaken. The mistake is in our heads, not in reality.

How do you **know **all appearances are deceptive? What is your criterion of reality?

If everything is an illusion an illusion must be an illusion! Knowledge and truth must be illusions. How can you distinguish between reality and an illusion? The distinction between reality and appearance disappears utterly…
If we don’t exist how does it makes sense to say “We are free within limits”?
We do not exist in the way we think we exist. Our thoughts on this question are incorrect, unless we are enlightened. We think that a mirage is water, but it is no water. It is not nothing either, but it is not what it seems to be. Appearances are deceptive.

How do you** know** you are enlightened? Your enlightenment could be self-deception!
How can an assembly be free?
You are an assembly of a body (which is itself made of sub-assemblies) and a soul. How can you be free if you are also an assembly?

Because it is the soul that is free not the body. The body is a physical mechanism which functions according to the laws of nature.
Our actions are free within limits. This is an observation, not an explanation.
An observation requires justification.
Free will is not seen as a big problem in Buddhism because we do not have an omniscient God who already knows what we will do in the future.
Omniscience does not rule out self-determinism. Neither knowledge nor foreknowledge is a form of causality.
Better from what or whose point of view? Which edition does the comparing?
Each edition does its own comparing with its own past.

The present is not necessarily better than the past. You still need a criterion to assess which is better. Comparison alone is not enough to reach a decision. And, more crucially, what is making the decision?
 
If spiritual causation is “ordinary”, i.e. physical, causation, the spirit must be inert! Why bother to distinguish spirit from body at all? It would be the body that should be held responsible for a person’s decisions…
The Abrahamic religions tend to see a great divide between the material and the spiritual. Buddhism sees a far smaller divide and has no problem with the same laws causal operating in both realms. Cause must precede effect for both material and spiritual realms and so on. There is only one causation which works the same in both realms. You appear to be trying to set up a second causation about which you can tell us nothing except that we know nothing about it. Hardly a very useful concept.
How do you **know **all appearances are deceptive? What is your criterion of reality?
We can never know reality directly. All we know is through our senses and we know that our senses are deficient, incomplete and imperfect. We see less accurately than a hawk. We smell less sensitively than a Bloodhound. The electrical impulses that arrive at our brains from our sense organs are only a very imperfect reflection of the external reality. The models we build inside our heads, using those electrical impulses as raw material, are even further removed from reality. Reification is yet another level of abstraction built on top of those models. That is why I see reification as dangerous; it is too far removed from reality.
If everything is an illusion an illusion must be an illusion! Knowledge and truth must be illusions. How can you distinguish between reality and an illusion? The distinction between reality and appearance disappears utterly…
The illusion is that we think what we sense is real. What we sense is electrical impulses arriving along our sensory nerves into our brains. Does my computer comprise only a set of electrical impulses in my sensory nerves? No it does not, but I can never know it as anything other than a collection of sensory impulses.
How do you** know** you are enlightened? Your enlightenment could be self-deception!
I am not enlightened.
Because it is the soul that is free not the body. The body is a physical mechanism which functions according to the laws of nature.
There is no soul in anyone or anything. You will not convince a Buddhist if you require a soul as part of your argument.
Omniscience does not rule out self-determinism. Neither knowledge nor foreknowledge is a form of causality.
I am sure that all those philosophers who have spent thousands of years discussing the relationship between omniscience, determinism and free will will be glad to know that all their problems have been solved.
The present is not necessarily better than the past.
Of course. It may be better, it may be the same or it may be worse.
You still need a criterion to assess which is better. Comparison alone is not enough to reach a decision. And, more crucially, what is making the decision?
We compare outcomes. Does the outcome tend towards peace, happiness or nirvana? Does it increase geed, hatred or delusion? “By their fruits shall you know them.”

rossum
 
You get sunburned but your liver does not get sunburned. Therefore your liver is not you.
Do you really want a reply to this?
When you were a newly fertilized zygote in your mother’s womb you did not have any skin so that zygote cannot have been you either.
Sheer chance that it turned out to be me.
The outer layer of your skin is dead; I must say you type remarkably well for someone who is dead. Your skin is not you, it is a part.
Do you really need a sane reply to this, too?
You are an assembly of parts. One part is not the whole assembly.
My mere physical, i.e., biological side is.
One of the functions of Buddhist practice is to learn to detach yourself from those various parts.
That would be an exciting TV show. Sort of gruesome though. But, there are probably those who would enjoy it.
They seem like they are you but they aren’t.
Do you really want a sane reply to this, too?
Try to move from ‘I am sunburned’ to ‘There is sunburn’.
Next time, I will. It was painful.

Yes. I am an assembly of parts brimming with intentions. An assembly of parts brimming with desires. An aggregate brimming with negations. An aggregate brimming with denials of negations. An aggregate brimming with denials of denials of negations. An aggregate that others recognize on sight. An aggregate that others interact with. An aggregate that is in the world. An aggregate that is in itself. An aggregate that is for itself.
In Buddhist analysis consciousness is just one of the parts that make up a human being.
Just like an arm?
There is nothing so special about consciousness,
How about consciousness of consciousness? How about consciousness of consciousness of consciousness? How about fourth order consciousness?
it changes from second to second and we can lose it entirely and become unconscious.
Yes. We are immersed in life.
Are you saying that when we are deeply asleep we are no longer in existence because we have lost consciousness?
No. Did you read that I said that somewhere?
You are correct to call it a “subjective” certainty. Buddhism calls it an error.
We poor Westerners like my version better, for the most part.
Wishing to exist is an error that leads to suffering:
For some. But, some of them usually terminate themselves. The rest, usually come to their senses before drinking the Hemlock.

May I ask a question? Whenever you are driving, do you sometimes let go of the steering wheel, just to see how a fatal crash looks from within it?
[The Buddha said:] “And this, monks is the noble truth of the origination of suffering: the craving that makes for further becoming — accompanied by passion and delight, relishing now here and now there — i.e., craving for sensual pleasure, craving for existence, craving for non-existence.”
I guess you’d have to be there.
We disagree 😉 . Humans are an aggregate, nothing more.
No more than slugs. No more than worms. No more than maggots. No more than tapeworms. Right?
An unconscious human has neither consciousness nor intentions.
Temporarily. A mere temporality. Unless he’s en-route to next life! 😃 Then, perhaps, he can come back as a maggot.
Is an unconscious human still a human? If yes then neither consciousness not intention is necessary in order to be human.
Consciousness is shared by the higher animals, at least. Intention, not so much. But, 2nd-, 3rd-, 4th-, and 5th-order consciousness is not.
Strange. Possessions are something external to you.
Such as my liver? Such as my intelligence? Such as my memory? Such as my consciousness? Such as my intentions? Such as my continued affinity for my grown children?

The relationship between subject and object is no longer that relationship of knowing postulated by classical idealism, wherein the object always seems the construction of the subject, but a relationship of being in which, paradoxically, the subject is his body, his world, and his situation, by a sort of exchange.

Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Sense and Non-Sense, pg. 74, 1964
How can you be something that is external to you?
Why do you ask this non-sense question?
Or perhaps you cannot get rid of your possessions?
Let’s not go there. 😉
Jesus was very right and very profound when he advised his followers to divest themselves of all their possessions. “Not my will but thine…” Will and intention are just two of the things we need to divest ourselves of.
Jesus was not asking his disciples to become catatonic.

continued . . .
 
continuation . . .
Do the sounds “unicorn”, “Zeus” or “Durga” refer to something ontologically real?
Origin: Middle English: via Old French from Latin unicornis, from uni- ‘single’ + cornu ‘horn’, translating Greek monokerōs. “Zeus”, pronunciation: /zollos/zus. Origin: Greek: related to the first syllable in Latin jupiter and Sanskrit dyauḥ ‘sky’. And, Durga: pronunciation: /ˈdollrgä, ˈdʊrɡɑ/ from Hinduism. But, since I don’t speak those languages, I can’t tell you whether or not the words sound like the things they represent.
A rich man owns many things, but he has this difficulty with camels, needles and heaven. The less you own the easier it is to get through the eye of that needle.
You really don’t want to go there either.
This is the opening verse of Nagarjuna’s argument against causation based on the equivalent of Thomist substance. It is the start of his discussion of the logical impossibility of any causation based on any substance/essence that underlies things.
The full analysis goes more for ‘conditions’ rather than ‘causes’. The link between cause and effect is too strong to allow change.
noun
1 the state of something, especially with regard to its appearance, quality, or working order:
the wiring is in good condition
Our discussion of the presence of the Substance of the apple inside the blossom is relevant here.
Yes.
I for one am not. Five years ago I was not the person I am now. In five years time I will be different again. The 75 year duration is an illusion when examined closely.
Your last sentence is an illusion.
One of the three marks is that everything changes, everything is impermanent:“Impermanent are all compound things.”
When one realises this by wisdom,
then one does not heed ill.
This is the Path of Purity.
– Dhammapada 20:5
I can certainly agree with Dhammapada
It is because everything is impermanent that the search for permanent happiness is not as simple as it first appears.
The Christian knows that only too well. The sublime Christian works for the Vision.
Remember that “I” do not reappear. “I” appears once and then disappears, creating the conditions for a new “I” to appear in my place.
Not according to Scientology. Thetans have been permanent for billions, if not trillions, of years. It is Thetans that re-insert themselves into new matter.
The compound of the many linked versions of “I” is called ‘rossum’. It is another aggregate, like “car”.
Then, what are all the other “cars” called?

God bless,
jd
 
Yes. I am an assembly of parts brimming with intentions. An assembly of parts brimming with desires. An aggregate brimming with negations. An aggregate brimming with denials of negations. An aggregate brimming with denials of denials of negations. An aggregate that others recognize on sight. An aggregate that others interact with. An aggregate that is in the world. An aggregate that is in itself. An aggregate that is for itself.
Your intentions change over your lifetime. You may have the intention “I want to get a drink of water”. Once you have gone to the kitchen and got your drink then you no longer have that intention. Since it is no longer there, and you are still there, then that intention was not you. The elements that compose the aggregate are all changing, coming and going. None of them are permanent. None of them are you.
Just like an arm?
There is a standard list of 32 parts of the body, sometimes used in meditation practice: hair of the head, hair of the body, nails, teeth, skin, … tears, sweat, saliva, snot, synovial fluid, urine.
How about consciousness of consciousness? How about consciousness of consciousness of consciousness? How about fourth order consciousness?
Consciousness is consciousness, whatever its object.
No. Did you read that I said that somewhere?
My question was rhetorical. If we are still ourselves when we are unconscious then it is not necessary to have consciousness in order to be ourselves.
For some. But, some of them usually terminate themselves.
Wishing for non-existence is also an error.
No more than slugs. No more than worms. No more than maggots. No more than tapeworms. Right?
All are aggregates, though the elements of the aggregate are different. Remember that in Buddhism we have all been born/hatched as many sorts of animals and may be in future as well.
Temporarily. A mere temporality.
But during that temporary time that aggregate is still human, despite being without either consciousness or intentions. Hence showing that neither are essential to being human.
Such as my liver?
Your liver is internal to your physical body. We both agree that there is more to a human being than just a physical body.
Jesus was not asking his disciples to become catatonic.
No. Someone who follows the Father’s will would not be catatonic, but neither would they be following their own will.
I can certainly agree with Dhammapada
It is well worth reading if you can find a good translation. There is much that applies to all and not just to Buddhists.
Then, what are all the other “cars” called?
JDaniel, Benedict XVI, Francis of Assisi, Shakya Gautama Siddhartha, Jesus of Nazareth etc.

rossum
 
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