Forkbender
Holofractale de l'hypervérité
- Inscrit
- 23/11/05
- Messages
- 11 366
I agree. However, I think that the burden of proof lies with the person objecting.mutant a dit:These are great questions, and lead to a big discussion. I personally do not believe that people only live through their ID as psychonaut or anything - well I don't for one - similarly, the words we use, even if sometimes they are used in a specific context, they don't loose their other meanings, the historical and other weight of their use etc. So, if you start calling psychedelic phenomena, which are many, different and pretty complex on some occasions [or much simpler in others, in their wonderful quality], 'contacts' or characterise them as divine phenomena and this is becoming established in psychedelic communities, then it would be strange if noone objected to this, even just philosophically.
There is a huge difference between loving to know and loving wisdom in my opinion. Any discussion about terms and reference is not a philosophical discussion in my opinion, it is just scholasticism, trying to define everything, constrict it within its own seperate box, which is against wisdom, which let's things be.So, to answer you question - I am not offended by ideas like religion and god, but I don't like them. I got reasons for this, it;s not just aesthetics. Philosophy through active living, but also as a 'battle of ideas' does not only talk about what annoys or offends the subject [the philosopher]. Philosophy means to love to know, to love wisdom.
Reprogrammed people are programmed as well. Just because the program is better doesn't mean they are more free. The ideal of objectivity has replaced God in society for a lot of people. But it is still just an ideal. Joy comes from within, not from intellectual debate.To speak about elimination of concepts like god or religion not only is an ancient philosophical matter, not only has very stable bases as an idea, but also extends to a totally diffent philosophies of life, and by that I mean the actual living, not only 'battle of ideas'. Eliminating such concepts through proper education and deeper understanding the values of our planet and nature can lead to a much more active and passionate living, a positive lust for life and joy, better communication and social life, ultimately a much more human-centred civilization - of course this 're-programming' is individual.
I don't take it personally, as I know you mean well. :wink: I do however think that any 'crusade' against religion is doomed to reinforce it. That's because it just puts more energy into this idea of religion as a dogmatic entity, which it is not about ultimately.I am totally aware that some people are offended when these ideas are discussed, but I cannot help but feel that this is unavoidable and, in the bottom line, not so tragic or offensive after all. God is ultimately a personal idea - what I am trying to un-structure is not the personal god of each one, but 'god' and religion as a concept - I can't help it that some people take my general scorning of god too personally - I suppose it's unavoidable as I already said.
I came up with that when I was high, but what I was trying to convey is that people generally mistake experience for the object of experience, thereby attaching to what is happening to a specific body. If you are just conscious of what happens to you, you identify with the self, i.e. the supreme awareness, without the attachment to anything. Let it be. The ego is a constrained view of the self, harming itself through isolation. This is the basic message of any religion, regardless of their metaphysical or ethico-spiritual claims.So, Forkbender, what is the difference between self and ego? [from your signature] I understand that everyone [regardless teh community] has some serious trouble against the concept of 'ego'. How would you define ego compared to self?
LOLSo... keep it coming! How do you connect the psychedelic experience with the notion of 'god' ? What happens as the dosage increases? If god = the real reality that is revealed and felt on these states, how come you name it 'god'? Is it that some are too stuck with shamanism practises that are indeed fascinating take on reality and life, but somewhat incompatible with this era or rationalism and computers?
Why call the ultimate truth god?
Coming up next - at psychonaut.com !!!!
Why call it God? Why not? :wink:
For me it is the only concept big enough to hold everything in it, as I experience some form of panpsychism/pantheism/panentheism.
My view on dose is that it matters but is not the sole cause of the experience, as some people tend to have these experiences without ingestion of psychedelics or on very low doses and others never have them. The chance of you having a mystical experience increases when you take a higher dose, but the chance of going bad increases as well. At some point this last part is however decreasing as the substance will so radically annihilate the ego that there is no resistance anymore. This is an heroic dose.