findingblanks wrote: ↑Fri Sep 27, 2024 6:45 pm Like I said, I only have an hallucination of what that person means. I've certainly met people who can distinctly and evocatively describe their self-willed attentional activities, but who, from my observation, are living in a delusion of freedom. And the converse, people who describe their attentional activity in words and phrases that eliminate the notion of a self-willed 'center' that they identify with, and yet who I experience (and they describe) as living from a space of highly senstive freedom. Of course, because of the linguistic structures that make the most sense to them, their language will seem to contradict any possibility of 'freedom' to those who can't fathom how it is logically possible to be free without having the notion of a subject that is 'doing' the freedom.
Steiner's (and others), "It thinks in me" and "It wills through me" are experiences that many people not within his tradition describe as their own experience when they pay closer attention to what is actually happening in their experience of attentional activity. To steer clear of debate mode, I am not saying that their experience necessarily confirms Steiner's description, only that they read his phenomenology as validating what they experience.
But, yes, I can imagine the person you are describing being very lost and wayward and deluding themselves in various ways.
When I pay close attention to the experiences of going through your exercises, I don't find a 'self' that is doing the exercise. I do find a narrative about that. And, most importantly, I 100% can attend to the facet of the experience that I am happy to call 'self'. I tyipcally speak in terms of 'self'. It's useful, more useful than coming up with terms that work against the grain. Sort of like how Steiner will use language that presupposes space/time/perception and then need to clarify that he simply can't avoid speaking in those terms but wants the listeners to realize he pointing to experiencing that is outside of those frames. And, I really can speak of a 'self' and mean it, despite knowing that most people have a slightly different frame for it.
The importance of noticing what is utterly distinct about intentional experience can't be overstated. As you say, there is a causal identity in that experience. For me, one way of saying it is that there is a polaric experience between "It" and "I" that feel absolutely fundamental and in which the experience of freedom arises and, if carefully maintained, can be developed. I can see why the experience of this polarity will be languaged by some as a primal self-experience, and by other's a primal 'no self' experience. If those different people each seem to be demonstrating the 'fruits' and underlying phenomenologies of the experience, I see them as each speaking from a direct experience of this polaric 'primitive'. But, as I said, people can be speaking 'perfectly' from either position and still be lost completely. I only know this because I still can experience falling off the surf board in both directions. But learning to surf and stay up for longer periods and find our own style of interacting with the waves...is well worth the spills. As I know you know.
Right, those are important points to highlight. There is no need to postulate any metaphysical "self" or "no self", "center" or "no center". And there are plenty of people who go to the other extreme, treating all of their feelings and thoughts as the pure and original expression of their personal intents. Cleric gave a great illustration of these extremes with a clip from Friends

We can observe an interesting polarity that has two extremes. One extreme is when we completely embrace the belief that Monica is flipping the switch and we only observe the playback. Such a view however doesn't have any practical value. We still need to act 'as if' things depend on our inner activity. We can't simply let go and observe how Monica takes us out of bed, showers us, works, feeds us, and so on.
On the other extreme is Phoebe. This is where there's rightful criticism about how free we really are. It's true that most of our life we simply flow along and say "I'm totally doing it!", without realizing just how many of the things happen for the most complicated reasons, and as you say, we just take credit. This is just as a pathological condition, as the first.
If we express our intuition of a story to a friend, we know the story won't tell itself - we need to move our intuitive activity and condense the meaning into corresponding pictures and words. Yet we know this activity is also constrained by various factors - we can't claim responsibility for the imaginative 'substance' that constrains the palette of mental pictures we can summon. Probably we won't be able to summon mental pictures of perceptual experiences we have never had during life. When we condense those pictures into verbal words, the palette will be constrained by the languages we have learned. The way we can express those words will be constrained by the organization of our throat, larynx, vocal cords, and so on.
But to become more sensitive to these constraints it is a precondition that we feel causally united with the attentional activity that we concentrate and thus experience how the constraints drag against that activity, providing flashes of insights as to their inner nature.
Cleric wrote:With this we have the basic principles in meditation. On the one hand (activity), we aim to artificially sustain a perfectly laminar flow compressing into a focal point, but on the other (receptivity), this activity delineates how the intended flow conflicts with the wider flow within which our individually intended flow is concentrically embedded and modulated. The deeper our concentration is, and reciprocally, the greater the time span of the sphere of our meditative song, the greater the spectrum of scales we can intuitively grasp. As a simple example, imagine that we begin our meditation and try to feel our meditative song extending into an one-month time span. Our immediate reaction would be “One month? But this is impossible!” But why is it impossible? Because such an artificially sustained one-month laminar flow would be severely resisted by the World flow. We say: “My body will ache, I’ll fall asleep, my wife will kick me out, I have other things to do too”, and so on. Yet this already shows in a rudimentary way how even at the purely intellectual prospect of this meditation, we begin to gain awareness of many patterns of the World flow, within which our existence is normally embedded. Most of them are completely trivial but we can only notice them if we resist them.
Otherwise, we can only conceive the constraints abstractly as we normally do in our intellectual inquiries of philosophy and science while we continue to passively flow along with them. Ironically, this is what happens when we go to the extreme of "no center, no self, no doer, etc.", numbing our sensitivity to the inner activity and its constraints. We are forced to continue treating our thoughts like they are our pure and original expressions for all practical purposes and intents in life, even while we abstractly claim they belong to some "mysterious force" that we have no responsibility for. Then we feel like these undeniable constraints are limited to Earthly existence and will evaporate after death. You will notice most modern mystical (and theistic) conceptions tend toward biding time on Earth, putting up with the undeniable constraints, and placing all hope in the belief that they will no longer apply across the threshold. Then it's no wonder the Guardian is continually avoided since we feel that, after death, our soul can circumvent the whole effortful process of intuitively sensitizing to and creatively shaping the inner constraints.
So, if we can get beyond that initial self-imposed limitation that crops up in various forms depending on our inner disposition (more materially, psychically, mystically, spiritually inclined), the process really becomes a scientific method of inner experiment, observation, feedback, new experiments, new observations, etc. All the terms used along the way should refer directly to the first-person flow of activity and the intuited constraints. Naturally, more and more terms will need to be employed as our intuition grows more dense and refined, and those diversified terms will also help us orient, steer, and refine our intuitive exploration in a positive feedback. If we remain faithful to this inner scientific method, we won't fall into the common traps of mistaking the concepts for isolated realities or disassociating from conceptual activity and pretending we have reached the "truth" free of any inner constraints. This intuitive-artistic method is where the whole 'system' of spiritual science comes from - it is a purification and elaboration of the experience of attentional activity and its overlapping, cross-modulating constraints at various scales of existence, condensed into a wide array of artistic symbols.
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I'm not really following you about the Steiner student who has gotten to the first step but then isn't developing the capacity to directly perceive the realities they are reading about in the core texts. I'm not sure that it is important that I grasp such an example, but I was just curious about it because it is interesting to think about the experience of starting to directly know something that you never knew existed until you read about somebody describing it themselves. The easy analogies are hearing about a distant land from somebody and then going there yourself; but I think this leaves out the most interesting differences when it comes to 'discovering' or 'validating' a reality that a clairvoyant has first described and then explained that if we develop correctly we will know because we will validate that experience.
But more importantly, the ground floor kind of exercises you've been sharing are certainly examples that I feel could help anybody become more sensitive to the nature of their attentional activity. I can see why a certain kind of person, who has soaked up a certain linguistic tradition, would probably not even be attracted to these kinds of exercises because they would immediately interpret the language incorrectly through their lens. And the same thing happens in the other direction. People like me who love Kuhlewind exercises can easily dismiss descriptions of experience that seem to make mistakes from the very beginning by using the same words differently, or different words in an unknowingly same way.
So, in my opinion, anybody who can begin your exercises can experience an increase in sensitivity that will have all the benefits that come with increased concentration capacity, increased awareness of the 'flow' and 'curvatures' forming experience, and just the joy that comes from grasping an aspect of Truth firmly in hand. And much more.
I'm glad you find it all helpful. Of course, all of this is not an end-itself, but should lead to practical transformations in our lives and the World in which those lives are embedded. I wonder if you would agree that practically all the predicaments humanity faces today, as individuals and groups, is because most people take the inner flow as unquestionable and don't seek to elucidate the 'intuitive curvatures' in which their inner states are contextualized?