Perhaps we are on the brink, and we might step over in the course of our discussion. I need a break to think about it, but what you had to say was interesting.
Right. Consider the following as you please. I am starting to repeat myself, for such general accounts are limited and are just the surface of the technical discussions that Henry and others give us.
Been a pleasure!
Stoppelmann wrote
I would also say that this is of primary importance, and one that is primarily associated with mind, where everything starts for us. Ethics then, would be the “frame of mind” with which we observe and act in the world, which has consequences “as the wheel follows the hoof of the ox.” It is also the reason for an eightfold path: Right View or Right Understanding, Right Intention, Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, Right Concentration. With reference to what we are talking about, Right Understanding is the basis for this.
Right this and right that, and a frame of mind, these beg a deeper question, which is the foundation of anything being right or wrong. Follow the eightfold path and you still encounter this: Right concentration is contingent on what it is you are meditating for, for all the right technique one can imagine is without value if sitting quietly doing nothing is taken as a stand alone goal. Nothing is like this. The question begged by ALL such practices is the metaethical/metavalue question: what is the nature of the Good you are seeking? By 'nature' we are not asking about the good FOR somethig else. We are asking about what it means for something to be good at all. There are contingent goods, like good couches and shoes: ask why a couch is good, and you find yourself referring to its comfort, durability, size, and so on. Contingent goods are identified easily, and they vary according to purpose. A good knife is sharp, well balanced, but then, such a thing would be a bad knife if the purpose was to use it in a performance of Macbeth. Someone could get hurt.
This kind of contingency permeates our ethics, and is responsible to the almost universal agreement that ethics itself is a contingent matter, and "it all depends" on the relativity of circumstances, cultures, and so on. But this analysis is not a metaethical analysis. Consider the knife and note how the good qualities of the knife can become bad qualities given the situation. But good simpliciter is not so indeterminate, for it is not conceivable for goodness or badness itself to be anything but good or bad:make the choice of utility between the suffering of the one over the many, if given the choice, and you have a defensible argument of contingency, that is, the good choice is measured quantitatively in terms of pleasure, happiness produced. But the "bad" of the suffering as suffering is not diminished, for it cannot be diminished. The "bad" quality being bad cannot be, like the sharpness of the knife, reconceived; it would be like reconceiving the color yellow to be some other color. This is because badness as such is not reducible; it is not a construct that can be explained, for it is IN the fabric of our existence and the existence of the world.
Why is this argument important? It brings inquiry to a halt, for one finally has reached an end. As Wittgenstein wanted to show us, there is an impassible and impenetrable "presence" of the world that defies analysis. One cannot analyze being-appeared-to-redly, as the analytics like to talk about qualia, and one cannot analyze the "bad" of a toothache or the "good" of being happy, even if it is Hitler being happy about some new extermination technique. Happiness as such, is unassailable.
Here we have a resting place for religion, for when we try to suspend the narratives and ancient culture that produced the bulk of scripture, and get the heart of what the religious human condition is, we find the non contingency of the value of value. This is called meta-value discovery and it is, frankly, earth shattering in its consequences: the identifying of something absolute in our everyday affairs.
Buddhism, and religious and philosophico-religious inquiries. and living itself, all have, as their implicit mission, the search for the Good and the deliverance from the Bad, to put is bluntly. The longest path is karma yoga. The most direct is meditation which a radical practice of cutting to the chase: nirvana. Nirvana is, far and away, the most mysterious and "impossible" things imaginable, for to approach it, one has to be rid of the world itself.
Pragmatism has its uses within a certain field, but is too little to address the whole of existence. For example, my pragmatism when nursing at the bed doesn’t work when feeding someone, that requires more empathic compassion and patience, just as our interactions with family and friends does.
Pragmatists say that experience ITSELF is a pragmatic phenomenon. Any experience. Consider the scientific method: X is true according to how well works, and something working is measured by its output, its consequences. So truth is a "forward-looking" concept. What is nitro glycerin? IF it is impacted is such and such a way, THEN it will explode. What a thing is is determined by our anticipated responses in the encountering, and this makes truth a temporal concept. I walk along, see a friend, and instantly the language, and the entire body of remembered events of what this person will do, say, and so forth, rises to greet him or her.
As to "all of existence": what existence do you refer to? What is a flower or an interstellar mass?: I see the flower, and my resources rise to anticipate what I will encounter, after so many encounters in the past. The "what is there before me" AS a presence that is not part of this anticipatory matrix, is transcendental or "absolute". Cannot be spoken, for speaking itself is pragmatic. Buddhism, serious meditation, breaks down the pragmatic anticipation,
releases one from the grip of their instantly conferring identity. It is a momentous event to witness a world without these identities in place. To approach such a state is the goal of meditation, and it is inherently liberating and enlightening. the prajnaparamita agrees:
Tasmāc Śāriputra, śūnyatāyāṁ
Therefore, Śāriputra, in emptiness
na rūpaṁ, na vedanā, na saṁjñā, na saṁskārāḥ, na vijñānam;
there is no form, no feeling, no perception, no volitional processes, no consciousness;
na cakṣuḥ-śrotra-ghrāna-jihvā-kāya-manāṁsi;
there are no eye, ear, nose, tongue, body or mind;
na rūpa-śabda-gandha-rasa-spraṣṭavya-dharmāḥ;
no forms, sounds, smells, tastes, touches, thoughts;
na cakṣūr-dhātur yāvan na manovijñāna-dhātuḥ;
no eye-element (and so on) up to no mind-consciousness element;
na avidyā, na avidyā-kṣayo yāvan na jarā-maraṇam, na jarā-maraṇa-kṣayo;
no ignorance, no destruction of ignorance (and so on) up to no old age and death, no destruction of old age and death;
na duḥkha-samudaya-nirodha-mārgā;
no suffering, arising, cessation, path;
na jñānam, na prāptir na aprāptiḥ.
no knowledge, no attainment, no non-attainment.
Tasmāc Śāriputra, aprāptitvād Bodhisattvasya
Therefore, Śāriputra, because of the Buddha-to-be’s non-attainments
Prajñāpāramitām āśritya, viharaty acittāvaraṇaḥ,
he relies on the Perfection of Wisdom, and dwells with his mind unobstructed,
cittāvaraṇa-nāstitvād atrastro,
having an unobstructed mind he does not tremble,
viparyāsa-atikrānto, niṣṭhā-Nirvāṇa-prāptaḥ.
overcoming opposition, he attains the state of Nirvāṇa.
I read western phenomenology because it articulates extremely well the world that I am trying to overcome. Pragmatism shows us that language is not an assignment of markers to talk about things. It is a powerful dynamic structure of meaning that constitutes our existence in the world.
Even as someone who has tried hard to be understood, perhaps more than the average immigrant, resulting in social advancement, the affective aspect of cognition has been very present in my observations. I am also a lover of art, and can become absorbed in colours and brushstrokes, or light and shadow, the shape of a foot or the line that is enough to interpret it as something special. But as you can perhaps see, equally poetry and especially Roget’s Thesaurus, can fascinate me for hours. I wouldn’t call it craving, rather a fascination, but then again, I am conditioned by the literature I have read to avoid the temptation to grab, possess, or even rip out, instead I would draw or photograph a wallflower for example, rather than putting it into a pot.
Dharma or dhamma is reality-as-it-is, the illusion is the perceptions and preconditions that mislead us to believe that we are separate from that. These perceptions might be the semantics, the language to achieve a desired effect through the use of words, with which we fool ourselves as much as we fool others.
I think tis kind of thinking needs a closer analysis: Let's say I have through some yogic practice come realize at the perceptual level a certain intimacy with reality-as-it-is. And so, where I once looked around me an saw trees and stars and the rest and there was nothing threatening to disconfirm this perceptual (or, apperceptual) acquaintance, and my thoughts and feelings were aligned with normal living; now I "see" something that was hidden by this conformity. The, call it matrix of conformity, was pervasive, meaning a unity, a totality, like a dictionary's totality: look up a word and you find more words. What was it that was concealed? Something that has always already been there, but ignored. Buddhists call this the Buddha nature: one does not acquire it, one already IS it, a kind of purity that underlies the matrix of conformity. At any rate, there I am, bent in the direction, say, of liberation and enlightenment, just starting to "see" and having moments of clarity. How this to be described?
One thing holds: I am not thrown into chaos, like a child's "blooming and buzzing" (James). I still know trees are trees, and I am still grounded implicitly in the language that makes propositional knowledge possible. I can say, here I am, and there is a cell phone on the table--these are not threatened in the least, and while the identity-imparting nature of such utterances remains intact, I can still experience the loosening of the grip of identity this
totality has (see adjacent thinking in Emanuel Levinas's Totality and Infinity. A VERY hard read. But that is just the way it is) once had.
this is important to see, I claim: To annihilate language is not the purpose, nor is it, therefore, an annihilation of the boundary that separates me from the world I encounter. Intimation of reality-as-it-is is not a complete dissolution of the self. It is a question of agency. I may be delivered fromt he conceptual structures that place interpretative walls between me and the tree, but once these walls are weakened, there is an enduring implicit "I am" that attends all. This is, of course, the Cartesian cogito, a "thinking substance" if you will; BUT, and this is a critical point: The very semantical walls that are threatened in the process of seeing more penetratingly into the world are precisely what create expressions like "I am". This is a very strange juncture, the circularity (hermeneutics) of language that at once brings one to awareness, yet the awareness itself is "about" the very constructed semantics of the awareness.
In other words, when we try to talk about liberation and enlightenment, we find ourselves tied in knots, discarding the very thing that is essential for affirming what we want to say. Hermeneutics, which is endless question begging, Heidegger called a "feast for thought" is unavoidable.
This is why the Zen master's fan goes flying across the room.
It sounds a lot like “beginners mind,” which I learnt to use in nursing, approaching especially difficult situations without prejudgement. This is particularly important with people with mental disorders, but also with common dementia, where sufferers are often suggested to have purposely done something, whereas their biggest problem is not having intentions, but reacting to every moment. It takes some practise, because, as you say, our conditioning is often dominant. It was also not willingly adopted by my staff.
Consider what Husserl said about starting a absolute poverty in his Cartesian Meditations:
First, anyone who seriously intends to become a philosopher
must "once in his life" withdraw into himself and
attempt,within himself, to overthrow and build anew all the sciences
that, up to then, he has been accepting. Philosophy wisdom
(sagesse) is the philosophizer's quite personal affair. It must
arise as Ms wisdom, as his self-acquired knowledge tending
toward universality, a knowledge for which he can answer from
the beginning, and at each step, by virtue of his own absolute
insights. If I have decided to live with this as my aim the
decision that alone can start me on the course of a
philosophical development I have thereby chosen to begin in absolute
poverty,
Of course, as I understand a "beginner's mind" it is not about forgetting training, but about being free of extraneous judgment, things that hinder objectivity. The assumption is that it is made clear just what is being made free: a regard for an environment that should be honest and efficient. Consider that in phenomenology (which dominated western thinking for more than a century after Kant) is just this, but about something radically different: human existence.
I meant engaging “with” it rather than “in” it, the latter would imply noticing, whereas the former is reacting. Meditation isn’t a feral state, but it is a state of not reacting; being aware but not responding, much like we would if we were concentrating on something, without allowing ourselves to be distracted. In meditation, we are concentrated on awareness itself, and it depends on which form our meditation takes, whether sitting, lying down, walking, what that awareness perceives, but still be do not engage with it. We take in everything but do not participate.
Which is a fair way to put it. I want to philosophize about it, understand it. I want a descriptive account that lays this out, for I am confident that "not reacting" nor being distracted can also terminate inquiry, and inquiry has more work to do. Enlightenment: this is both cognitive and affective. Cognition's analysis shows us that thought is structurally temporal. I know this is a cup, and this means I anticipate, I already know it, if you will, prior to the encounter, and so I am not surprised what I see it. The future is unmade, and it is made BY that anticipatory matrix automatically, spontaneously. Essentially, what meditation does is free us of the future, or better, cancels time altogether, for there is no dynamic of production of a what-will-be if anticipatory memory is suspended. And hence, the present is annihilated, becomes meaningless as a stand alone phenomenon. Traditionally the term used for this is nunc stans. The eternal present.
Thinking like this is a kind of yoga: these concepts are working models for ascending to an enlightened mind. They help work out explicitly the nature of attachments. There are revelatory moments in this.
Cognitive impairment is seldom complete, except in appallic syndrome or a so-called vegetative state, or in a coma. There are impairments that have an impact on alertness, cognition, and behaviour, but still leave these people mobile, even if instable. Even among dementia patients we know of terminal lucidity, which refers to a return to mental clarity and working memory among some dementia patients shortly before death, although experts don’t know exactly why a person may experience this and it raises many questions.
You can either respond to a situation reflexively or reflectively, and a few examples above showed that conditioning sets in even when cognitive restrictions are present, and I think that rousing speeches are also causing a reflexive response, although, as you say, it is by habitually restricting ones reflective capabilities.
Quite interesting, really. I wonder about near death experiencers who have no cognitive function at all, or anything else, because there is no pulse or blood pressure. They are dead. Yet they report extraordinary things. Typically, they are dismissed as "brains in the throes of death." But these are fascinating testimonies. I have seen several and their accounts are without question sincere.
It is interesting to read how much regular meditation benefits concentration, it disciplines the mind and enables a flow state to be achieved, so that the fear and worries are put into perspective and dealt with reflectively.
As I see this, and this may sound odd, concentration is a kind of out of the body experience. In fact, all perceptual encounters are like this, but concentration is a focused projection of awareness. It is not simply a stilled mind, but a dynamic focus. One has to dismiss any physicalist restraints on how this can be done, after all, physicalist thinking is an epistemic failure (though this is something that is very difficult to argue given the default naturalistic attitude). This kind 0f thinking steps outside the boundaries of philosophical thinking, and into the quasi mystical.
How are perceptual encounters out of the body experiences? Because IN the body, knowledge is impossible, and the candle on this table is not IN the body, and Kant, by my lights, opens tis door (a very worthy read, Kant's Critique of Pure Reason).
One could say that it is about liberation in order to become enlightened, since dukkha is very much involved in restricting our ability to see things clearly. It also has to do with the discipline, the Bushido Code, which I read in German, called “Die Sieben Wege des Samurai” by André Daiyû Steiner, a Zen teacher here in Germany, shows how service is central, and most importantly:
“There is surely nothing other than the single purpose of the present moment. A man's whole life is a succession of moment after moment. There will be nothing else to do, and nothing else to pursue. Live being true to the single purpose of the moment.” ― Yamamoto Tsunetomo, Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai.
I certainly see this to be true, and the freedom of the moment is nothing short of extraordinary. More than true. Profound, this sense of being bound to nothing, for when genuinely achieved, a "pure self rises to awareness, and one starts to understand what the Buddhists are talking about.
However, the matter is not analytically settled, and by this I mean, IN the solemn moment, there is an expansiveness and a gravitas that intimates greater depth to experience. Not really something that wants to be talked about, because the occasion belongs a radical unfolding of one's own nature, or, the nature of one's existence that is equally true for all, but only acknowledgeable within.
Buddhism is far stranger than is generally held. This is because most do not take inquiry more deeply into what is being said.
My meditation teacher told us the story of the Stundent that goes to his Master and asks, how it is that he is always so relaxed and joyful. His Master said, “it isn’t difficult. When I sit, I sit. When I stand, I stand. And when I walk, I walk.” The student is puzzled and says, “but I do that too!” The Master shook his head and said, “No, no. When you sit, in your mind you are already standing, and when you stand, you are already walking. And when you walk, you have already arrived.” That seems to touch on that “authentic dasein” of Heidegger.
If by authentic dasein you mean a temporally structured agency that is, in its freedom, on the cusp of creative possibilities, then you could look at it like this: we are Time. Time is inherently anticipatory, and before we become aware of our own freedom, we are lost in the "They" that is the language and the culture that carries us through life. So, when one sits one is already standing, one is never attending to the present, for to exist is a future-looking event.
But keep in mind, Heidegger was no mystic, nor was Husserl. There is, however, in that Der Spiegel interview, mention made of Buddhism suggesting the possibility of a new language. I'd have to look it up to see. Not much there though.
I understand what you are getting at. I also tend to argue against the notion of truth that dominates modern thought and in its manifold effects determines the world we live in, and get looked at sceptically. I think it is my comparative studies that have given me this perspective, estranged me from the church in which I was once an elder, but also towards the end of my career, isolated me a little, so that I was considered aloof and distant by my peers – which didn’t really fit, because I still enjoy a relationship with employees from the past. Michel Henry would interest me, so I might by the reader. His rejection of Marxism in favour of a Marx that he interprets as both a philosopher of reality and a philosopher of life sounds similar to Erich Fromm, who also differentiated in a similar way.
Michel Henry (and I am not aware of his Marxism, though I intuitively think I see the idea: there is no escaping the moral observations of Marx. But then, implementing these has always been a disaster) follows through from Kierkegaard, Husserl, Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida; especially Husserl and his four principles of phenomenology. Derrida is (a good read on this is John Caputo's Radical Hermeneutics) the one that puts the nails in the coffin of language being "about" something that is not language, and thereby inserts this extraordinary "distance" between thought and what-is-not-thought, for lack of a better locution. The entirely OTHER of thought, which is transcendental.
As to modern thought, Heidegger wrote The Question Concerning Technology. He rails against turning the world into a "standing reserve" and has a nostalgic eye on the poets like his obvious favorite, Hölderlin, a romantic who reminds me of Tolstoy or Wordsworth, a glorious celebration the natural world, but then, there is that sense of "homeland" that probably many had at the time, which encouraged nationalism, Nazism, and the rest. There was this popular Volkism I read about once. Dangerous and morally unstabling.
Don't know much about Fromm.
No wonder you experienced some estrangement from associates. This thinking is alien to anglo American analytic philosophy.
Or they are distracted by triviality, but when you encounter people who suffer the loss of loved ones, or what I experienced, the disappointment of a failed therapy (my staff mourned the death of a 46-year-old patient that we were sure we could help to get back on her feet), or the struggle with a long infirmity, like long-covid and similar ailments, then existential questions arise. The problem is that the way these are addressed is not appropriate, and here I am close to Michel Henry in my appreciation of Christianity.
Yes, you have it, and there it is: blissful unawareness. Going to church and being a part of a community of believers is no longer an option if you read existential philosophy, and issues of suffering rise up out their slumber, and life deepens, as does responsibility and one's humanity and compassion. We have forgotten that we exist, says Kierkegaard.
I would add that we should be careful not to judge, for, as Yeats put it, "the world's more full of weeping than you can understand." The burden of the knowledge of suffering is too great, and this is the very essence of religion. When the human condition is complete, not like Heidegger but more like Kierkegaard or Henry, and reaches into our primordial indeterminacy for God (one could argue, though with difficulty, that this is the purpose of suffering. As Dewey put it, if life were free and easy, no problems to solve, then there would be no education, no art, no music, no meaning; and God would never be conceived. Hard to think like this when children are screaming in burning cars and the like, but it is exactly this kind of thing that makes God a necessity. I argue for the positive drive to God as well, of course: the consummation and resolution of our love and compassion) we become different people. It is, again, I argue, a step out of culture, out of human dasein, and into our existential transcendence.