AshvinP wrote: ↑Sat Apr 01, 2023 10:29 pm
So we come full circle back to the question, how is it possible that some (perhaps not you, but certainly others) have risen above all that to the realm of Creator transcendence, yet they don't know the higher-order details of the created WC which is never separate from the Creator, such as the Spheres/Beings we pass through in disincarnate state, or when they are presented such details, they can't determine immediately whether they are true expressions of the Creator or not (or can only do so based on personal preferences of how we can relate with Oneness)? Wouldn't this mean that Creator and creation are, in fact, phenomenologically, epistemologically, ontologically separate? I know you assert they are not separate, but how do you explain this glaring epistemic discrepancy?
Each form/phenomenon (percept, cognition, idea etc) is ontologically the Creator, and so each of us are processes of the interdependent streams of forms/cognitions within the consciousness of the Creator. The interdependency within and between the streams is governed by the lawful structures. But the fact that each phenomenon and stream is ontologically the Creator does not mean that each stream or act of cognition automatically knows every other form/phenomenon in the World.
As an analogy, imagine we are the waves of the surface of the same ocean. When our cognition only runs along the surface, we only see and experience waves (little ripples within our own wave, or other waves closely around us), and from such horizontal perspective the waves seem to be separate from each other. We can develop our surface-cognition further and see more waves around in the horizontal dimension and understand their groups and structures and flows and the laws that govern their flows etc. However, at some point we may look down into the depth and discover that, oh!, it is all just one and the same ocean, there is only water and all waves are made of the same water! But that does not mean that each wave, when it realizes that is it just water, immediately knows what is going on with every other wave across the surface of the ocean. Ontological unity does not mean the full informational access across the full "space" of the ocean. Still, each wave can experientially and directly know that it is made of water and so in no way separable from the water of the ocean. Why? Because the "water" of the ocean is Consciousness, it is the Self, and Consciousness has the fundamental ability to knowingly experience itself. Don't you know that you are conscious? So do I and everyone else, duh! But we have a weird belief that "my consciousness is something different and separate from your consciousness" because we cannot immediately experience what other people experience. That belief is especially supported in materialism where consciousness is believed to be an epiphenomenon of material brain, so there are as many separate and different consciousnesses as there are human brains in the world. But no way, materialism aside, there cannot be ontologically a multitude of separate consciousnesses, otherwise they would not be able to communicate with each other. Ontologically there can be only one consciousness within which there is a multitude of the cognitive processes running and interacting with each other but not necessarily having direct access to all the cognitive experiences of each other.
So, as Cleric described it somewhere else, there is "vertical" expansion of the boundary where we reach to the dimension of the ontological oneness and acquire the knowledge of various universal aspects of that ontological dimension of the "depths of the ocean", and there is "horizontal" expansion into higher order details of the created WC (meaning that, of course, such "horizontal" is actually multidimensional fractal with its own vertical hierarchy). Correspondingly, there are "mystical reductionists" who do not care about the WC and only expand to the vertical dimension, and there are "structural reductionists" who don't pay any attention to the vertical and only expand into the "horizontal" WC. Both of those approaches are limited and both can only acquire a distorted and one-sided knowledge of reality. If we indeed want to know the truth of what reality is and all that it does, we need to push the boundary in both vertical and horizontal dimensions, into the widths of the ocean (the world of the ocean waves and forms) and into the depths of it (the transcendental dimension of what the ocean IS).