FB, I’m quite aware that your view is nuanced and multifaceted, synthesizing many different things together. Above, I intentionally expressed in a sharper way, probably justifiably seeming like I oversimplify your views, but my goal was to point attention to certain core questions. Being flexible and capable of sensing the grain of truth in every perspective, no matter how diametrical they might be, is a necessary skill, but we also need to be able to discern when there are certain things that cannot be both true.findingblanks wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 3:53 pm "Could it be that we simply say "If I don't grasp my inner being as extending into the Cosmos, where I would live in spheres weaved of the musically lawful ideal activity of beings, then there's simply no such thing, and anyone claiming the opposite is simply back-projecting shadows."?"
For me this would be translated as acknowleding that the degree to which somebody's experience is not coming from a union with reality is the degree to which any claims they make about objective reality are insubstantial.
Somebody might be experiencing and speaking from a deep unity with reality and, yet, they might not fully grasp this, thereby they themselves would inaccurately characterize their experience as less objective than it really is. The opposite is probably the more obvious cases we experience. An experience that one person characterizes as 'extending their inner being into the Cosmos' might be both experienced and explicated via other symbols that don't sound anything like 'extending' or 'being' or even 'cosmos'. However, my hunch is that if we spend enough time carefully listening to each of those people, we'll find that there is very powerful overlaps in what they are talking about, despite the fact that on the surface it will sound to each like the other is just soupy or some other description that makes good sense from within that frame.
So, yes, I do think we can say that to the degree that somebody is making truth claims that aren't coming from within reality itself those claims are untrue. That can be anywhere from 1% to 99% in my opinion.
I’ll add something in line with Ashvin’s post above. Imagine how we can smoothly move our attention through the interior experience of our body, we can start from the head, pass through the neck, the chest, the belly, the legs. These are direct phenomenological experiences. We may call them illusionary dashboard experiences but this simply throws us in the head where we assemble flimsy mental images of dashboards. We can in no way build the inner experience of the legs or anything else from combinations of these mental fragments.
Imagine that for some reason you know only the reality of your head region (maybe you have grown up as a brain in a vat). You experience certain sensations and thoughts but you have never had a body – or maybe it’s there but you haven’t found its sensations yet. For example, the concept of a hand doesn’t even make sense. Your whole inner existence can be described as head sphere/space. Now someone tells you “Through certain inner effort I’m able to expand my attentional activity and pass through regions of inner experience that I choose to call chest, belly, etc. The words are not important, they are only tokens for the actual phenomenological experiences I’m describing.”
Now you are faced with two basic options. (1) One is to quickly survey your head-sphere experience and ask: “What could it be from my familiar experience that this person may be mistaking for whatever he describes as chest experience, legs experience, etc.?” If we take this route, we more or less assume that the person is having inner experiences not too different from our own, but for whatever reason he describes them as going beyond our ordinary conscious sphere.
(2) The other option is that maybe the person is speaking of something experientially factual. This doesn’t mean that we should blindly take his word but simply investigate the route of inner experiences that he describes and try to stretch our attentional activity in ways that maybe we didn’t even suspect could exist before.
Does this analogy make the whole situation clearer? Of course, the analogy is not perfect. When we move through the bodily regions we still feel as an “I” that moves the spotlight of attention through domains of various senses qualities. This is all different when, for example, we consider the movement from Earth region, through Moon, Sun, to Saturn region. Now we do not simply contemplate shifting colors and other qualities on our screen of perception but our most intimate being joins/awakens into regions of increasingly ideal intuitive activity of the Cosmic Mind. Our sensations in our Earthly bodily volume are only the decohering condensation of the higher activity. But the point remains the same: in both the head-sphere and the Cosmic case, we are speaking of inner experiences that can never be found were we to remain within our familiar inner movements and phenomena.
I beg you to give a moment of dispassionate and unprejudiced contemplation of these options. Try to feel how there’s something tempting in the view that in our brain-in-a-vat state, we already have everything necessary at our disposal. Thus, when someone speaks of other kinds of experiences, described as being lifted outside our familiar sphere, we simply try to guess what of our familiar brain-space phenomena, this person is back-projecting into fantastic metaphysical ideas.
On the other hand, try to feel how in the other case we need to start with certain humility, and be clear that maybe there are aspects of existence that our life’s journey as of yet hasn’t acquainted us with. This humility is not meant to demean us but only to prepare the fertile conditions for growing toward something new.
In the lines of what Asvhin asked, could you, please, take a concept – say the Sun sphere – and try to feel what experiences this brings about in you? Do you try to search through the palette of your familiar psycho-somatic phenomenology and basically say “So I think that when Steiner spoke of the Sun sphere, he was simply experiencing so and so, which I also experience, but because he was a product of his times and he lived in certain cultural conditioning, he decided to speak of these experiences through Theosophical and Christological terms.” Or you take seriously what Steiner explains all the time – namely, that our consciousness needs to be lifted from the body and expand into the higher spheres of the Cosmic Mind, just like we need to be lifted from head-space if we are to find the legs-space – and conceive that we encounter inner experiences of ideal activity at Cosmic scales that cannot be reduced to our familiar bodily experiences. It’s actually the opposite – only from that perspective do we truly understand our embodied experiences as a kind of convoluted and aliased (perforated) fragments of the Cosmic. No amount of patching and recombining of our ordinary psycho-somatic experiences can ever build the Cosmic, but we can trace how the former precipitates and decoheres from the latter.
Please recognize that this is a question that cannot be solved by saying “It’s all a spectrum, a little bit of this, a little bit of that.” Yes, this sounds highly satisfying for the abstract intellect but leads nowhere in regard to actual experiences. It’s like the brain in the vat saying about the leg experience “yeah, it’s both. It’s a projection from within my head space but maybe there’s also something factual about it – that is, there’s something that justifies that projection, it’s not a completely arbitrary fantasy.” However, this is just a polite way to say to the person reporting the experience “Call them legs if you will, but I know that you are simply projecting the same head-experiences that I have. The time will come when we’ll get rid of such unnecessary projections and we’ll all accept the only reality of our head-spheres.”
Right now I can’t think of a simpler and more explicit way to point at this fundamental problem. Maybe you can indeed explain what you experience when you meditate on the Sun sphere (or you would probably say that you meditate not on the Sun sphere per se, but on what Steiner must have experienced that he dubbed ‘Sun’). Here ‘Steiner’ is just a synonym for anyone who reports experiences beyond our familiar psycho-somatic space. Many possible variants open up. For example, one can say “I think that those who have developed their subtler organization can indeed become conscious within the Cosmic scale strata of the Divine Mind, but I simply can’t confirm whether these higher-order spheres are like they describe it.” Another option is: “Maybe these experiences are indeed Cosmic in nature and irreducible to familiar ones, but they emerge as a kind of Cosmic-scale hallucination and we need some kind of proof coming from another direction that these experience correspond to real structures in the Divine Mind. It could be that there’s no such higher Mind at all!” Or we can be completely blunt and say “These are all completely trivial human-scale experiences that are loaded with superstitious ideas of Cosmicallity.” I’ll be grateful if you describe your own inner process.