Federica wrote: ↑Fri Jul 21, 2023 6:44 pm
AshvinP wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 4:35 pm
True, the subconscious passions are the truly destructive force that eventually leads to death. These are embedded in our lower conceptual activity as well. That wasn't always a bad thing - the Spirit works against matter (including all manifest reality) and the price of suffering-death was the only way to provide the foundation for free spiritual activity. Through faith in Christ (understood in the deeper, active sense), however, we are able to purify the passions with reasoned ideals and thereby harmonize them with our living organism. Spiritual activity no longer needs to come at the expense of living processes, but can progressively become their defender and preserver at the individual and collective scales, first esoterically and then exoterically. The process of death is then progressively experienced as that of
metamorphosis, with more and more continuity of consciousness.
I came across a really helpful passage that speaks to this issue of the gap between purely conceptual and imaginative modes of exploring spiritual reality. It is a refinement of the PoF understanding. The main issue is that we experience the concept as completely
transparent to our understanding. Scott made a similar point before when speaking of mathematical concepts. We can't help but feel there is nowhere left to go from such pure concepts. The imaginative symbol, however, can preserve conceptual clarity while also maintaining the experience that there are deeper layers of meaning embedded within the concept, and these layers can only be unveiled by entering into the flow of thinking itself. The symbol maintains our
interest in what we have perceived, outwardly or inwardly, even after we have grasped the perception in concepts.
Each of the three basic functions of consciousness—perceiving, thinking, and speaking (which are the basis also of other human faculties)—has a distinct character and is experienced differently by adults today. Perception, for instance, poses many riddles. The disjointed particulars of perception immediately provoke questions; they are not at all transparent or comprehensible to contemporary perceiving. The difference in the “givenness” of perceiving and thinking lies not only in that perceiving is mediated through the senses while new concepts, new thoughts, appear in consciousness through intuition; much more significant is the fact that thoughts and concepts are only wholly comprehensible and transparent to us when they are really thought. Though we can certainly say things we do not understand, we cannot possibly think anything we do not understand thoroughly. Nothing remains hidden in the finished thought; so there is nothing more to search for in it once it has been thought.15 Therefore, we are justified in taking a “naïve” point of view in regard to thinking. The logic and self-evident nature of thinking—its how—are given from the superconscious sphere, and, in this “givenness,” it is totally transparent and comprehensible. Indeed, anything we understand, we understand only when it is “explained” through thinking, through ideas. In the case of thinking, empiricism is sufficient. Attempts to become aware of the “how” of thinking through logic—which can never be sufficient—do not replace the necessity of entering into the living stream of thinking if we are to understand anything, even logic.
...
Though language appears to us as a perceptual phenomenon, it can be as transparent and understandable as thinking. Language consists of perceptible acoustic or optic signs for our understanding. Understanding (meaning) is the hidden part of language. It does not appear in the perceptual world but occurs—through intuition—in the human spirit. The reality or totality of language includes both the signs and their understanding; neither is by itself the reality of language. Language unites in itself the cognitive elements of perceptual reality that would otherwise appear separately. When we do not understand them, the “signs” are not signs but remain mere objects of perception that we can puzzle over. They are signs only when they mean something besides themselves. When we understand them, the meaning we comprehend absorbs the signs; as objects of perception, they become unimportant and uninteresting. Voices, words; the form, size, structure, and material of the letters—all these disappear as objects of perception: they are dissolved and read.
Kühlewind, Georg. The Logos-Structure of the World . Lindisfarne Books. Kindle Edition.
Thanks for your comments, Ashvin - they make me realize how much I hope I will be able to approach death with some progress done in the direction of pursuing a metamorphosis - and for the quote. I find the quote not so straightforward, especially the first part, maybe because I lack the larger context. Perceiving is first distinguished from thinking and speaking, but then speaking is given as a case of perceiving? And "Nothing remains hidden in the finished thought". Does not thinking remain hidden? How is it "totally transparent"? Probably the author uses thought and thinking slightly differently compared to how we tend to use them here with reference to Steiner, and that's why I am confused. But I do get the second part, on signs meaning something behind themselves, and that the meaning absorbs the perceptible form of the signs. I feel we discussed this in depth - the symbolic valence of language - even before you introduced Tomberg to the forum, and the idea of symbolic ordering.
Federica,
We could substitute willing for perceiving and feeling for speaking. It is through our willed intents that the shared perceptual world arises, and it is through the life of feeling that our thinking intents condense into shared perceptual forms. It is probably best to get a sense of these things by testing them out in our first-person experience. We should seek the
experience of our conceptual activity and resist overlaying that experience with more concepts via the inner voice. We can distinguish between 3 types of concepts, i.e. those relating to natural objects, those relating to man-made objects, and those relating to supersensible objects. All domains of experience require concepts to separate out particulars from an otherwise indistinguishable continuum of meaningful qualities. If we perceive a natural object to which we attach the concept of "tree", we can sense how there is still some lack of transparency, something hidden behind the concept. Namely, we don't have a clear sense of the functional
intents behind the concept of "tree". We can describe its color, shape, size, and so forth, and encompass that with the "tree" concept, but its place within the intentional flow of our evolution is not at all clear. We should really practice looking at such objects and sensing how our conceptual activity is responding in comparison with other objects.
When we perceive a man-made object to which we attach the concept of "table", that is relatively more transparent to us. We perceive a flat surface with legs and sense it was intentionally designed for holding up other objects and that is its purpose in our stream of evolution. For the most part, it becomes uninteresting for us to think about it any further. There is still some lack of transparency, however, because we don't clearly sense the whole constellation of ideal relations which intended the manifestation of the table, such as the chain of production materials, the chain of economic relations, etc. Most people lack interest in thinking through such things, just as they lack interest in thinking through the intention behind the tree concept, but on the esoteric path, we strive to make these intents more conscious by various methods such as the object concentration exercise. In that exercise, we seek to arrive at the functional concept that encompasses a broader sphere of intentional relations that go beyond our mere
personal use of the table. Although that is theoretically easy for us to conceive, it is nevertheless difficult in practice to attain, which is why we have to persist in the exercises for a long time.
When we picture in our mind's eye the form of an equilateral triangle, then there is practically complete transparency of the concept. We don't sense that there is any intentional relation hiding behind the concept other than our own. We simply intend the meaning of equilateral triangle and the form manifests as a seemingly perfect reflection of that meaning. There is no interest for us to go mining beneath the surface of this manifestation and, unlike with man-made objections, there doesn't even seem to be any opportunity to do so. So what is this transparency all about? It is our intuitive sense of how the concepts interrelate and transform. Even if we do not explicitly formalize these logical rules in our consciousness, they are implicitly transparent to us at our current stage of evolution. That is because the "I" lives in the morphic thinking space. Within that thinking morphic space, the "I" most firmly lives within the spiritual soul currently, at least for most people in the civilized world. That is why supersensible concepts are experienced as the most transparent. We are most intuitively attuned to the rules by which such concepts transform. These concepts are devoid of living relevance, however, i.e. of the feeling quality in speech.
Speech (including all gestures) is the only place in our normal consciousness where sensory forms, audial or visual, that are shared objectively with others through the course of life are united with clearly experienced intents. There is hardly any 'gap' between them in the case of physical gestures or our native language. In the realm of nature, we hardly experience any intents underlying the forms (except dimly in the case of animals). In the realm of supersensible concepts, we only experience our own personal intents and these are not shared with others unless we engage in speech. Higher development could be conceived as expanding our capacity for perceiving and forming speech from the supersensible concepts into broader transpersonal spheres of be-ing so that all sensory forms, outer and inner, are experienced with their corresponding intents. Then we progressively awaken to the fact that all of Heaven and Earth is woven from Divine speech - the Speech responsible for our mathematical concepts is the same as that responsible for the kingdoms of Nature, which is why the former can so accurately model the latter. We only fail to experience that Speech-quality because our normal thinking consciousness imposes wide gaps between the sensory forms and their spoken intents. That is why higher consciousness is often referred to as
reading the occult script, akashic record, and so forth. Just as human speech can be recorded in the mineral element (or digital element), Divine speech is continually recorded in the ether, astral, and higher worlds.