Fighters for the Spirit
Fighters for the Spirit
I will let this waiting for substance right now. This is a preparation, a form for the future.
Ethical and religious life must spring forth from the root of knowledge today, not from the root of tradition. A new, fresh impetus is needed, arising as knowledge, not as atavistic tradition.
Re: Fighters for the Spirit
The idea of “bridge” between ordinary life and spiritual life has been at the center of many recent discussions. Is it justified? How to build it? Since making myself understood in this intention has been a challenge, I’d like to share a small example here. The sketches below illustrate the modes of human cognition in a way that, as it seems to me, could serve as bridge for people who feel an interest, or at least an openness, to move beyond the dogma of consciousness as a byproduct of brain activity, and yet have not clicked, or would not click, with spiritual science, for various reasons.
As we know, many express such interest at the level of mere philosophical speculations separate from life, while others who do feel called to act upon their spiritual intuitions may end up not engaging in the necessary self education of the soul, even when the practices have been flawlessly presented to them, through conceptual rendering of suprasensible research. As argued many times, I am convinced that, for certain minds, presenting things from an angle that initially satisfies the intellect may help. This is because, for the vast majority of contemporary humans, it’s only through particularly favorable combinations of thought-pictures that the appropriate thought context can take shape, so that a small miracle of attention may happen. Then, the seeker is enabled to imagine the path to freedom in precisely those thought-sequences that have the power to kindle the healthy motives that need to be connected with, for certain virtuous behaviors to manifest with at least some robustness and consistency. These pictures of motives have the potential to steer the flow of becoming - through inner and outer action - toward concrete recognition of the Spirit. But if there is no funnel, random or feeble spiritual purposes most likely disperse and ‘abort’. And let's face it: the only thing the funnel can be made of is, well, thought-pictures. There is simply nothing else to juggle with.
Now, this example is about the modes of cognition, since these are one of the core angles to approach the question of how our consciousness should evolve. Hopefully, these few notes can give a sense of what I mean by bridging. Sketching this out, I had in mind concrete interactions, not speculations. I can easily see myself using this to speak of cognitive modes with my brother, for example, who has lucid dreams and other experiences, but reads them in all the wrong ways, according to me, and I guess there are many other cases.
What is the sticking point in wrapping one’s head around the modes of cognition? Following Steiner, the usual approach is to begin with the first-person perspective of the waking state, to compare familiar states. Thus we say: “In the waking state we are fully awake in thought, half-asleep in feeling, and completely asleep in the will”. Then we try to feel it and convey it. However, that we feel fully present in ordinary waking refers to thought-picturing consciousness, which then easily becomes established as the self-evident meter used to evaluate awakeness in any state. Since we experience thought-pictures that can apprehend feelings, will impulses, memories, dreams, and thoughts themselves, we call that state fully awakened, and judge the other states accordingly. Yet, consciousness means different things from different standpoints. From a higher perspective - be it grounded in experience or in mere intellectual apprehension - thought-picturing appears as just another kind of dreaming that one has to wake up from. Despite the fact that we can survey dream consciousness from within the waking state, ordinary waking is dreamscape too, relative to spiritual consciousness.
I think this is usually not emphasized enough. The thought context this insight could contribute is sacrificed for the sake of phenomenology. We want to maintain the first-person perspective, therefore we stand in ordinary waking space as the only possible starting point. Yet, at the beginning, the first-person perspective is not easy to appropriate anyway, other than theoretically. And the concept of being asleep, awake, or half-awake usually remains just as shadowy. Usually this lands completely flat, at least in my experience (and I remember how I struggled with it myself initially). At the same time, the one thing that actually is shadowy and should be recognized as such - thought-pictures - feel mobile and lively.
Therefore, even if spiritual consciousness has to remain an intellectual vantage point for a while, I believe it can be helpful that the stage is set in the way of a more intellectual overview, even if the phenomenological approach has to be temporarily sacrificed. I guess a more ‘bridging’ presentation would initially avoid the relative concepts of consciousness, unconsciousness, and half-consciousness altogether, so that one doesn't anchor more than necessary the default perspective of ordinary waking, and the sense that consciousness means beholding in thought. After all, that standpoint may be first-person, but it's a first-person who's merrily floating in dreams, while the main purpose is to put the preponderant state of physical submersion into striking perspective, but with the available means, not with the unavailable ones. Here I have tried to depict how the novice inquirer may feel when presented with the phenomenological approach:

This image represents the phenomenological inquiry from the given standpoint of ordinary consciousness. After the relations are explored downwards, towards dreaming and deep sleep, the higher cognitive states extending on the other side feel like a hazy, remote possibility. It’s understood that Imagination does not mean what it usually means, and begins to unfold after persistent practice of certain exercises. But how can Imagination be imagined in relation to the ordinary state, which is simultaneously felt fully conscious and accomplished, as confirmed by its capacity to evaluate the sleeping states? Thinking should become “living”, but through what context is the novice enabled to sense that ordinary thinking is not the real thing, but shadowy, and lifeless? Yes, the intuitive context is one answer, as explored in the many great analogies and exercises proposed on this forum. But what if the listener is too ‘immersed’ to follow and catch the insights?
A while ago, Rodriel wrote that “the basic esoteric elements of sleeping and waking” are one of “the plainly spiritual scientific concepts I refer to more or less without reservation in any community": How has this worked out in real life? Have listeners been able to draw anything fruitful from these concepts and come closer to an understanding of the aims of cognitive development?
How about presenting a larger overview of human experience, starting from the fundamental qualities of thinking, feeling, and the will, rather than from the phenomenology of the grades of consciousness as experienced in the waking state:

Hopefully the symmetry, continuity and direction emerging from the overview convey a sense of plausibility, lawfulness, and meaning - similar to how science and art are able to uncover logic, symmetry, and continuity in nature - and that can help inspire the will in the direction of the necessary phenomenological steps. Here the waking state is designated as a sleeping mode of consciousness, even if it may feel striking at first, and non-phenomenological. Also, the order in the three spiritual activities feels reversed along the ordinary cognitive states, but finds its deeper resolution and meaning in the three higher states, after a kind of inversion point is passed. Beyond that point, thinking is turned inside out and awakening begins, to continue with feeling being turned around, and at last, the will. All this would not be phenomenological at first. But again, the goal is to create a favorable thought-context using what's at hand.
Moreover, this view may put the materialistically-oriented and the non-dualist alike in a positive soul disposition. The former finds space to contemplate that, in the familiar waking state, there is something that indeed arises from the brain - the thoughts. Thinking activity is not that, but the materialist is appeased, since all he knows about thinking (the thoughts) is indeed allocated to the brain. What’s beyond that is new to him. Thus he may become more open to contemplating the brain-based thoughts as reflections or projections of some other ‘Platonic-space template, or activity, that materializes in brain activity, when sifted through the world of matter. Similarly, the non-dualist can be reassured that the impulse to extinguish all content of consciousness is one that finds its rightful place along the path. Once brought forth, Imaginative pictures do have to be extinguished. That there's a preliminary phase aimed at vivifying the experience of thinking, before it can be properly extinguished, may sound acceptable to the non-dualist.
There would be more to add, but, as said, these are floating sketches and my attempt was only to give a general sense of where I’m heading to, when I think bridge. In this intention, there is no purpose to minimize the necessity to train the soul faculties with strict discipline and warm enthusiasm. It’s rather the opposite: the hope is that this contextualization can be conducive to precisely those necessary resolutions, for certain minds. These minds surely need to hear that the illustrations are shared and received from within the limited perspective of ordinary waking. That’s the environment of the interaction, and at some point it has to become clear that no real understanding can be gained by simply re-picturing thought-pictures. Self-motivation and original action are required. Yes, even more thought-pictures would form as a result, but the point is, not all thought-pictures are equally effective. Some can stir the will, others can’t.
As we know, many express such interest at the level of mere philosophical speculations separate from life, while others who do feel called to act upon their spiritual intuitions may end up not engaging in the necessary self education of the soul, even when the practices have been flawlessly presented to them, through conceptual rendering of suprasensible research. As argued many times, I am convinced that, for certain minds, presenting things from an angle that initially satisfies the intellect may help. This is because, for the vast majority of contemporary humans, it’s only through particularly favorable combinations of thought-pictures that the appropriate thought context can take shape, so that a small miracle of attention may happen. Then, the seeker is enabled to imagine the path to freedom in precisely those thought-sequences that have the power to kindle the healthy motives that need to be connected with, for certain virtuous behaviors to manifest with at least some robustness and consistency. These pictures of motives have the potential to steer the flow of becoming - through inner and outer action - toward concrete recognition of the Spirit. But if there is no funnel, random or feeble spiritual purposes most likely disperse and ‘abort’. And let's face it: the only thing the funnel can be made of is, well, thought-pictures. There is simply nothing else to juggle with.
Now, this example is about the modes of cognition, since these are one of the core angles to approach the question of how our consciousness should evolve. Hopefully, these few notes can give a sense of what I mean by bridging. Sketching this out, I had in mind concrete interactions, not speculations. I can easily see myself using this to speak of cognitive modes with my brother, for example, who has lucid dreams and other experiences, but reads them in all the wrong ways, according to me, and I guess there are many other cases.
What is the sticking point in wrapping one’s head around the modes of cognition? Following Steiner, the usual approach is to begin with the first-person perspective of the waking state, to compare familiar states. Thus we say: “In the waking state we are fully awake in thought, half-asleep in feeling, and completely asleep in the will”. Then we try to feel it and convey it. However, that we feel fully present in ordinary waking refers to thought-picturing consciousness, which then easily becomes established as the self-evident meter used to evaluate awakeness in any state. Since we experience thought-pictures that can apprehend feelings, will impulses, memories, dreams, and thoughts themselves, we call that state fully awakened, and judge the other states accordingly. Yet, consciousness means different things from different standpoints. From a higher perspective - be it grounded in experience or in mere intellectual apprehension - thought-picturing appears as just another kind of dreaming that one has to wake up from. Despite the fact that we can survey dream consciousness from within the waking state, ordinary waking is dreamscape too, relative to spiritual consciousness.
I think this is usually not emphasized enough. The thought context this insight could contribute is sacrificed for the sake of phenomenology. We want to maintain the first-person perspective, therefore we stand in ordinary waking space as the only possible starting point. Yet, at the beginning, the first-person perspective is not easy to appropriate anyway, other than theoretically. And the concept of being asleep, awake, or half-awake usually remains just as shadowy. Usually this lands completely flat, at least in my experience (and I remember how I struggled with it myself initially). At the same time, the one thing that actually is shadowy and should be recognized as such - thought-pictures - feel mobile and lively.
Therefore, even if spiritual consciousness has to remain an intellectual vantage point for a while, I believe it can be helpful that the stage is set in the way of a more intellectual overview, even if the phenomenological approach has to be temporarily sacrificed. I guess a more ‘bridging’ presentation would initially avoid the relative concepts of consciousness, unconsciousness, and half-consciousness altogether, so that one doesn't anchor more than necessary the default perspective of ordinary waking, and the sense that consciousness means beholding in thought. After all, that standpoint may be first-person, but it's a first-person who's merrily floating in dreams, while the main purpose is to put the preponderant state of physical submersion into striking perspective, but with the available means, not with the unavailable ones. Here I have tried to depict how the novice inquirer may feel when presented with the phenomenological approach:

This image represents the phenomenological inquiry from the given standpoint of ordinary consciousness. After the relations are explored downwards, towards dreaming and deep sleep, the higher cognitive states extending on the other side feel like a hazy, remote possibility. It’s understood that Imagination does not mean what it usually means, and begins to unfold after persistent practice of certain exercises. But how can Imagination be imagined in relation to the ordinary state, which is simultaneously felt fully conscious and accomplished, as confirmed by its capacity to evaluate the sleeping states? Thinking should become “living”, but through what context is the novice enabled to sense that ordinary thinking is not the real thing, but shadowy, and lifeless? Yes, the intuitive context is one answer, as explored in the many great analogies and exercises proposed on this forum. But what if the listener is too ‘immersed’ to follow and catch the insights?
A while ago, Rodriel wrote that “the basic esoteric elements of sleeping and waking” are one of “the plainly spiritual scientific concepts I refer to more or less without reservation in any community": How has this worked out in real life? Have listeners been able to draw anything fruitful from these concepts and come closer to an understanding of the aims of cognitive development?
How about presenting a larger overview of human experience, starting from the fundamental qualities of thinking, feeling, and the will, rather than from the phenomenology of the grades of consciousness as experienced in the waking state:

Hopefully the symmetry, continuity and direction emerging from the overview convey a sense of plausibility, lawfulness, and meaning - similar to how science and art are able to uncover logic, symmetry, and continuity in nature - and that can help inspire the will in the direction of the necessary phenomenological steps. Here the waking state is designated as a sleeping mode of consciousness, even if it may feel striking at first, and non-phenomenological. Also, the order in the three spiritual activities feels reversed along the ordinary cognitive states, but finds its deeper resolution and meaning in the three higher states, after a kind of inversion point is passed. Beyond that point, thinking is turned inside out and awakening begins, to continue with feeling being turned around, and at last, the will. All this would not be phenomenological at first. But again, the goal is to create a favorable thought-context using what's at hand.
Moreover, this view may put the materialistically-oriented and the non-dualist alike in a positive soul disposition. The former finds space to contemplate that, in the familiar waking state, there is something that indeed arises from the brain - the thoughts. Thinking activity is not that, but the materialist is appeased, since all he knows about thinking (the thoughts) is indeed allocated to the brain. What’s beyond that is new to him. Thus he may become more open to contemplating the brain-based thoughts as reflections or projections of some other ‘Platonic-space template, or activity, that materializes in brain activity, when sifted through the world of matter. Similarly, the non-dualist can be reassured that the impulse to extinguish all content of consciousness is one that finds its rightful place along the path. Once brought forth, Imaginative pictures do have to be extinguished. That there's a preliminary phase aimed at vivifying the experience of thinking, before it can be properly extinguished, may sound acceptable to the non-dualist.
There would be more to add, but, as said, these are floating sketches and my attempt was only to give a general sense of where I’m heading to, when I think bridge. In this intention, there is no purpose to minimize the necessity to train the soul faculties with strict discipline and warm enthusiasm. It’s rather the opposite: the hope is that this contextualization can be conducive to precisely those necessary resolutions, for certain minds. These minds surely need to hear that the illustrations are shared and received from within the limited perspective of ordinary waking. That’s the environment of the interaction, and at some point it has to become clear that no real understanding can be gained by simply re-picturing thought-pictures. Self-motivation and original action are required. Yes, even more thought-pictures would form as a result, but the point is, not all thought-pictures are equally effective. Some can stir the will, others can’t.
Ethical and religious life must spring forth from the root of knowledge today, not from the root of tradition. A new, fresh impetus is needed, arising as knowledge, not as atavistic tradition.
Re: Fighters for the Spirit
Federica wrote: ↑Wed Dec 10, 2025 7:19 pm How about presenting a larger overview of human experience, starting from the fundamental qualities of thinking, feeling, and the will, rather than from the phenomenology of the grades of consciousness as experienced in the waking state:
There would be more to add, but, as said, these are floating sketches and my attempt was only to give a general sense of where I’m heading to, when I think bridge. In this intention, there is no purpose to minimize the necessity to train the soul faculties with strict discipline and warm enthusiasm. It’s rather the opposite: the hope is that this contextualization can be conducive to precisely those necessary resolutions, for certain minds. These minds surely need to hear that the illustrations are shared and received from within the limited perspective of ordinary waking. That’s the environment of the interaction, and at some point it has to become clear that no real understanding can be gained by simply re-picturing thought-pictures. Self-motivation and original action are required. Yes, even more thought-pictures would form as a result, but the point is, not all thought-pictures are equally effective. Some can stir the will, others can’t.
Thanks for sharing these interesting illustrations, Federica. I don't think there is anything wrong with presenting things in this 'inverted' way, and indeed, it is often helpful to utilize metaphors which highlight the dreaminess-sleepiness of the ordinary waking state in relation to potential higher states (for example, metaphors comparing animal or childlike conscious experience to our intellectual waking experience). Perhaps there will be more thoughts to add on these dynamics, but I will only make a simple observation now.
Let's imagine that the 2nd diagram is presented to a 'novice', like your brother. I imagine that, if he remains even slightly interested in the meaning it conveys, he would then have a ton of follow-up questions about its significance. For example, why is the diagram divided into W, F, and T? What are we speaking about when we say, "the will remains pure potential"? What is signified by "WFT flow"? It may be difficult for us to adopt the perspective of such questions from the novice because, through our conceptual-meditative efforts, we have thoroughly explored this fundamental spectrum of spiritual activity. All the categories and descriptions fit quite effortlessly into our intuitive context, but we should try to imagine how the diagram would be experienced without any such prior exploration. As soon as such questions are posed to us by the novice, the only option to further elucidate their meaning is by offering introspective guidelines. There is simply no way to make ideas like "pure potential" or "incoming WFT flow" more understandable without pointing toward the corresponding inner experiences (and attaining concrete orientation to this TFW inner spectrum is already a major introspective accomplishment that many people will not attain in an entire lifetime). Without that, the diagram may as well be presented in hieroglyphics.
If that is agreed, then I feel like the 'general sense of where you're heading to' is precisely the phenomenological-introspective approach. And, as discussed before, there are risks we need to consider when enticing the materialist or non-dualist into 'accepting' the concepts because they seem to fit harmoniously with already explored intuition of 'how reality works'. The risk is that this disincentivizes the soul from realizing its helplessness and its need for guidance when confronted by the truthful (phenomenological) flow of reality, thereby cultivating the inverted inner stance (from the 'peripheral eye' perspective) that is necessary for our introspective efforts to bear fruit. It is exactly what you expressed in the other thread:
"This is like a constant blow on human dignity. Hopefully more and more people will find this forever behindness of present theoretical science the saddest, most unbearable thing, and that a truly human will must rebel against this."
Why doesn't DH, like so many others in his position, find this state of theoretical science unbearable? It's because he cannot even imagine a process of inquiry that doesn't rest on never-ending theoretical assumptions about reality. Such a process can never be imagined without the introspective effort that brings the soul into contact with the assumption-free flow of its intuitive activity. In this case, it isn't realized that the soul can follow and feel out the structure of ideal reality within its imaginative flow, which is to say, it isn't realized that this is what the soul is already doing when weaving through the mathematical landscape and modeling the behavior of 'conscious agents'. This is why the introspective observation of inner activity is so critical for awakening from the dreamy-sleepy intellectual waking state, becoming conscious of how the latter takes shape. If we take that dream metaphor to the higher spectrum seriously, then we should see how no dream images really stir the will into awakening orthogonally to the dreamscape more than other dream images.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
Re: Fighters for the Spirit
Federica, great illustrations!
I'll have to read it again because I'm still in the office and could only go through it in a more beta brainwave state, so apologies if I have missed something. But like Ashvin notes, it feels to me that your approach is already phenomenological (how else could "Feeling is turned around and begins to perceive the breath of Spirit-Logos" be made sense of?). The third column of the table can be attached to the Imagination, Inspiration, and Intuition waves of the first. Which is actually great, but I'm not sure in what way exactly you see that approach as non-phenomenological.
Re: Fighters for the Spirit
AshvinP wrote: ↑Thu Dec 11, 2025 2:58 pm Thanks for sharing these interesting illustrations, Federica. I don't think there is anything wrong with presenting things in this 'inverted' way, and indeed, it is often helpful to utilize metaphors which highlight the dreaminess-sleepiness of the ordinary waking state in relation to potential higher states (for example, metaphors comparing animal or childlike conscious experience to our intellectual waking experience). Perhaps there will be more thoughts to add on these dynamics, but I will only make a simple observation now.
Let's imagine that the 2nd diagram is presented to a 'novice', like your brother. I imagine that, if he remains even slightly interested in the meaning it conveys, he would then have a ton of follow-up questions about its significance. For example, why is the diagram divided into W, F, and T? What are we speaking about when we say, "the will remains pure potential"? What is signified by "WFT flow"? It may be difficult for us to adopt the perspective of such questions from the novice because, through our conceptual-meditative efforts, we have thoroughly explored this fundamental spectrum of spiritual activity. All the categories and descriptions fit quite effortlessly into our intuitive context, but we should try to imagine how the diagram would be experienced without any such prior exploration. As soon as such questions are posed to us by the novice, the only option to further elucidate their meaning is by offering introspective guidelines. There is simply no way to make ideas like "pure potential" or "incoming WFT flow" more understandable without pointing toward the corresponding inner experiences (and attaining concrete orientation to this TFW inner spectrum is already a major introspective accomplishment that many people will not attain in an entire lifetime). Without that, the diagram may as well be presented in hieroglyphics.
If that is agreed, then I feel like the 'general sense of where you're heading to' is precisely the phenomenological-introspective approach. And, as discussed before, there are risks we need to consider when enticing the materialist or non-dualist into 'accepting' the concepts because they seem to fit harmoniously with already explored intuition of 'how reality works'. The risk is that this disincentivizes the soul from realizing its helplessness and its need for guidance when confronted by the truthful (phenomenological) flow of reality, thereby cultivating the inverted inner stance (from the 'peripheral eye' perspective) that is necessary for our introspective efforts to bear fruit. It is exactly what you expressed in the other thread:
"This is like a constant blow on human dignity. Hopefully more and more people will find this forever behindness of present theoretical science the saddest, most unbearable thing, and that a truly human will must rebel against this."
Why doesn't DH, like so many others in his position, find this state of theoretical science unbearable? It's because he cannot even imagine a process of inquiry that doesn't rest on never-ending theoretical assumptions about reality. Such a process can never be imagined without the introspective effort that brings the soul into contact with the assumption-free flow of its intuitive activity. In this case, it isn't realized that the soul can follow and feel out the structure of ideal reality within its imaginative flow, which is to say, it isn't realized that this is what the soul is already doing when weaving through the mathematical landscape and modeling the behavior of 'conscious agents'. This is why the introspective observation of inner activity is so critical for awakening from the dreamy-sleepy intellectual waking state, becoming conscious of how the latter takes shape. If we take that dream metaphor to the higher spectrum seriously, then we should see how no dream images really stir the will into awakening orthogonally to the dreamscape more than other dream images.
That diagram is certainly not intended to be presented to a novice. My intention was only to try and illustrate here in this forum an example of what I mean by bridge as I conceive it in my mental process, not as a finished product usable to present the evolution of consciousness to anyone. The diagram needs to be expanded into a whole series of diagrams, or a book, in order to become apprehendable and digestible. It would be witless to hope to encapsulate any such large-spectrum ideal tableau in just one diagram. Then, as you say, all sorts of questions would accumulate, throwing the novice's mind into a maze of possible tangents - in the best case scenario. I am aware that they can’t comprehend this sketch as such - which is also why I haven't done anything with it, apart from posting it here. This is what I meant by “floating sketches”.
This said, I don’t agree that “the only option to further elucidate their meaning is by offering introspective guidelines”. The alternative option is to create a sufficient and favorable discursive context around this core question of the qualities of human experience. The ideas of “pure potential” and “incoming WFT flow” absolutely can be made more understandable than hieroglyphs for the novice, before a meditative practice is established. Even the contrast between the two sketches (once these are reelaborated in simpler steps, etc.) may evoke the nature of introspection before introspection is engaged. To exemplify these possibilities of ordinary consciousness was the entire purpose of my post, but apparently you would only be convinced if I were to eventually present you with an entire book - maybe - and okay, this example has provided no convincing illustration of the benefits of offering a thought-context meant to be apprehended in ordinary consciousness, and how this context may elicit - inevitably through a combination of thought pictures - certain specific motives and resolutions which eventually may transform into introspective action.
Yet, it should be evident that presenting the novice with the higher levels of cognition in specific, differentiated terms, highlighting their natural and logical continuity along several lines of progression can only constitute a non-phenomenological approach; not to mention that when I speak of combustion of the self or extinction of thinking, there is no sense in which these ideas correspond to direct experience, and yet my mind is able to render the magnificent picture of lawful relations that emerges from contemplation.
Then, speaking of the risks of "desensitizing the soul to realizing its helplessness", I think these do not increase when a bridging thought context is built and probably it's the opposite. In fact, the soul is already desensitized, thus the question is not what approach desensitizes more, but rather what approach can better speak to the already desensitized mind to result in activation of the will. And my view is that, for the desensitized mind, phenomenology risks feeling like hieroglyphs, or fog (as in the first sketch), if it's introduced too early, when the ordinary consciousness has no thought-context yet to rely upon. As you say, Hoffman cannot even imagine a process of inquiry that doesn't rest on never-ending theoretical assumptions about reality. Which is precisely the reason why, in these conditions, a directly phenomenological prompting would most likely fall flat, in the dire absence of a context to support in decipherable (ordinary) terms the motives leading to the beginning of an specific spiritual practice. At the end of the day, the main sticking point is that:
“Such a process can never be imagined without the introspective effort that brings the soul into contact with the assumption-free flow of its intuitive activity.”
The process of inquiry that doesn't rest on never-ending theoretical assumptions can be imagined. It can’t be immediately experienced from within, but it can be imagined. It can even be sensed. Its existence and nature can absolutely be imagined. They can be pictured. And the lack of its reality can even be sensed, although at first as if in negative terms. That is, one can sense that a lawful dimension is cruelly lacking, and so the perceived void can attract the mind and compel the will towards its center, spurring it into action. Before this context is formed, however, encouragement to introspective observation of inner activity would probably go in one ear and out the other, precisely for the reasons that you have mentioned.
It is so clear: some dream images of the ordinary consciousness do have more power to stir the will than others. Obviously they do. Ordinary thought sequences are not all created equal. Just think about your own past experience, the passage from philosophical thought to the path of freedom. Are you able to affirm that the particular thought sequences you were engaged in played no role in creating the favorable context that made you change your habits and take up an introspective practice? Or would you insist that introspection was born out of introspection? As Cleric wrote:
In Imagination we can see how a thought train has a life on its own. It begins to grow and integrates until the "I" (which lives in the growth of the thought) awakens to its reflection in the image. Not all thoughts have the conditions to grow into fruits within which the intuition of the "I" is reflected. Most of our daily buzzing thoughts are like aborted growth which never reflects the activity of the "I", let alone deeper secrets of the spiritual worlds. We have these rhythms on all scales. Our incarnation is the growth of one such Cosmic Image that seeks to reflect the intuition of the Whole.
Ethical and religious life must spring forth from the root of knowledge today, not from the root of tradition. A new, fresh impetus is needed, arising as knowledge, not as atavistic tradition.
Re: Fighters for the Spirit
Federica wrote: ↑Thu Dec 11, 2025 11:02 pm The alternative option is to create a sufficient and favorable discursive context around this core question of the qualities of human experience. The ideas of “pure potential” and “incoming WFT flow” absolutely can be made more understandable than hieroglyphs for the novice, before a meditative practice is established. Even the contrast between the two sketches (once these are reelaborated in simpler steps, etc.) may evoke the nature of introspection before introspection is engaged.
...
Yet, it should be evident that presenting the novice with the higher levels of cognition in specific, differentiated terms, highlighting their natural and logical continuity along several lines of progression can only constitute a non-phenomenological approach; not to mention that when I speak of combustion of the self or extinction of thinking, there is no sense in which these ideas correspond to direct experience, and yet my mind is able to render the magnificent picture of lawful relations that emerges from contemplation.
There is misalignment in our understanding of 'phenomenological-introspective' approach, but it's difficult to locate precisely where this misalignment arises. I am only further confused by sentences such as those above.
What you describe before the glowing parts, from my perspective, feels to be negated by the glowing parts. It only makes sense if we picture such a presentation in a completely schematic way, which essentially asks people to memorize how the concept of 'imagination' should always be associated with the concept of "sensing-thinking observing itself", and so on (and this is the only way it could remain without introspective observation of the TFW spectrum), or if we consider "phenomenology" as something that only involves the deepest meditative states that lead directly to clairvoyance. Perhaps that's why you say it is non- or pre- phenomenological. I doubt the former scenario is the case, from your perspective, but I am not sure why the latter would be the case, either. We know that phenomenology and study-meditation is not only deep meditation, but also involves the kind of TFW and higher cognitive promptings you are illustrating.
Cleric made the same point. We realize the diagram is a symbol for a more expanded approach and 'ideal tableau' with systematic steps, but it's not at all clear why these steps would ever be considered non-phenomenological. There is truly no such thing as orienting to higher cognitive experience in its differentiated relations and continuity with ordinary experience, without a phenomenological orientation. If we simply imagine what the steps would be to elucidate the meaning of the themes reflected in that diagram, we inevitably feel our inner process moving toward introspective gestures. We feel that the meaning of "incoming WFT flow" can only be further grasped by living within our imminent flow and feeling how the differentiated spectrums take shape, overlap, diverge, meet resistance, open degrees of freedom, and so on. It is the same with "combustion of the self" or "extinction of thinking" - these certainly correspond to direct inner experiences on the meditative path, but they will be understood in an entirely misleading ('non-dual') way if they remain uncomplemented by those specific inner experiences. This is what we all did to gain a footing in this supersensible domain, and we need to keep doing so as to remain relatively stable when our footing inevitably becomes precarious on the 'balance beam' of higher development.
If higher cognitive experience is presented without such guidelines, then it can only be misunderstood in the worst possible ways, which could easily lead to an entire lifetime of misorientation. We should try to feel, for example, how all the discussion of higher cognition that accesses experience across the threshold of death can only be seen as unabated arrogance and pride from the standard intellectual perspective. It is pure inflation of an ego that got carried away on its own self-importance and thus imagines the secrets of existence, of life, death, unbornness, immortality, etc., have been magically unveiled in plain view of its prideful eye. This is the only way for the flattened intellectual perspective to understand such a discussion, because the concept of "investigating experience across the threshold of death" is an absurdity, a non-starter for the intellect confined to the dreamscape (head cube). That only changes once it has lifted at least a few degrees of incline off the surface plane and can introspectively sense its formative imaginative gestures within the depths. Only then does the whole thing flip on its head, and the soul realizes, not only that the higher cognitive stages described can exist, but something like them must exist. It is literally unimaginable until that inflection point, just as the dream character can never imagine the waking state through varied sequences of dream images.
Then, speaking of the risks of "desensitizing the soul to realizing its helplessness", I think these do not increase when a bridging thought context is built and probably it's the opposite. In fact, the soul is already desensitized, thus the question is not what approach desensitizes more, but rather what approach can better speak to the already desensitized mind to result in activation of the will. And my view is that, for the desensitized mind, phenomenology risks feeling like hieroglyphs, or fog (as in the first sketch), if it's introduced too early, when the ordinary consciousness has no thought-context yet to rely upon. As you say, Hoffman cannot even imagine a process of inquiry that doesn't rest on never-ending theoretical assumptions about reality. Which is precisely the reason why, in these conditions, a directly phenomenological prompting would most likely fall flat, in the dire absence of a context to support in decipherable (ordinary) terms the motives leading to the beginning of an specific spiritual practice. At the end of the day, the main sticking point is that:
“Such a process can never be imagined without the introspective effort that brings the soul into contact with the assumption-free flow of its intuitive activity.”
The process of inquiry that doesn't rest on never-ending theoretical assumptions can be imagined. It can’t be immediately experienced from within, but it can be imagined. It can even be sensed. Its existence and nature can absolutely be imagined. They can be pictured. And the lack of its reality can even be sensed, although at first as if in negative terms. That is, one can sense that a lawful dimension is cruelly lacking, and so the perceived void can attract the mind and compel the will towards its center, spurring it into action. Before this context is formed, however, encouragement to introspective observation of inner activity would probably go in one ear and out the other, precisely for the reasons that you have mentioned.
It is so clear: some dream images of the ordinary consciousness do have more power to stir the will than others. Obviously they do. Ordinary thought sequences are not all created equal. Just think about your own past experience, the passage from philosophical thought to the path of freedom. Are you able to affirm that the particular thought sequences you were engaged in played no role in creating the favorable context that made you change your habits and take up an introspective practice? Or would you insist that introspection was born out of introspection? As Cleric wrote:
In Imagination we can see how a thought train has a life on its own. It begins to grow and integrates until the "I" (which lives in the growth of the thought) awakens to its reflection in the image. Not all thoughts have the conditions to grow into fruits within which the intuition of the "I" is reflected. Most of our daily buzzing thoughts are like aborted growth which never reflects the activity of the "I", let alone deeper secrets of the spiritual worlds. We have these rhythms on all scales. Our incarnation is the growth of one such Cosmic Image that seeks to reflect the intuition of the Whole.
Again, I simply don't know how the glowing part could ever be considered non-introspective or non-phenomenological. What does it mean to sense a 'lawful dimension that is lacking' without introspecting? A lawful dimension of what would be sensed as lacking?
There are surely thought sequences which can amplify the will-to-introspection, and these are precisely the sequences which are simultaneously exercises, prompts, guidelines for how to introspect and get a feel for the inner spectrum (analogous to the techniques used for lucid dreaming). These sequences embed the imaginative seed of growth within them, and the seeds will not fail to grow if they are met with the water, light, and warmth of the seeking soul. These are the orderly sequences which don't get aborted because they reflect the higher activity of the "I" thinking them without too many levels of indirection (buzzing thoughts), as per Cleric's quote. The only reason these sequences can stimulate the soul to awaken from within the dreamy intellectual state and traverse the self-conscious imaginative spectrum is because they are already walking with one foot in the imaginative state, so to speak. They prompt the soul to imaginatively rehearse its deeper living movements. A proper phenomenology provides the supporting thought-context for introspection, not only standalone exercises, as we have many examples of. This is exactly my experience of the sequences that made the difference on my path - introspection was indeed born out of introspection, in that sense, with the support of the imaginative phenomenological sequences.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."