Lou Gold wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:23 amAshvinP wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 4:34 amYeah, I think that is valid example. But I also know where this is going... as we mention often here, Thinking and "deeper reflection" here is not equated with racing thoughts and verbal chatter in our minds. Since we are so used to that sort of thinking, we assume it must be the only sort of thinking. That is again the complete being fallacy at work (henceforth known as "CBF" from me). What we are speaking of is the qualitative living essence which underlies our everyday thinking. Consider the following:
Steiner wrote:On no account should it be said that all our action springs only from the sober deliberations of our reason. I am very far from calling human in the highest sense only those actions that proceed from abstract judgment. But as soon as our conduct rises above the sphere of the satisfaction of purely animal desires, our motives are always permeated by thoughts. Love, pity, and patriotism are driving forces for actions which cannot be analysed away into cold concepts of the intellect. It is said that here the heart, the mood of the soul, hold sway. No doubt. But the heart and the mood of the soul do not create the motives. They presuppose them and let them enter. Pity enters my heart when the mental picture of a person who arouses pity appears in my consciousness. The way to the heart is through the head. Love is no exception. Whenever it is not merely the expression of bare sexual instinct, it depends on the mental picture we form of the loved one. And the more idealistic these mental pictures are, just so much the more blessed is our love. Here too, thought is the father of feeling. It is said that love makes us blind to the failings of the loved one. But this can be expressed the other way round, namely, that it is just for the good qualities that love opens the eyes. Many pass by these good qualities without noticing them. One, however, perceives them, and just because he does, love awakens in his soul. What else has he done but made a mental picture of what hundreds have failed to see? Love is not theirs, because they lack the mental picture.
So seeing the stunning sunset without naming it as beautiful or wallowing in lovely thoughts about it, just breathing it in-and-out so-to-speak would be complete or incomplete?
Incomplete, yes. There is always the cognitive element in perception, which is what gives rise to "enjoyment", "inspiration", "beauty", etc.. Breathing in-and-out is itself a physical reflection of cognitive integrating-differentiating activity (I mean the literal respiratory process here). But we are still incomplete as long as that element along with the source of our feelings and desires remain subconscious. The problem is not the fact that we are incomplete, but the fact that we do not consciously recognize that we are incomplete and all the implications of that recognition.