No. I'm not one of those nondualists, I would never claim that. I do not think the experience of the absence of thoughts has any significance, although I experienced it myself many times. There are some practical merits to it, but not of any crucial significance. Neither I would claim that I have the whole explanation of the thoughts.
Yes, I absolutely admit that.We should simply make a self-test with us and consider the idea that there may be many hidden layers of spiritual activity, completely unconscious to us, which shape our being and we experience only their end product at the surface as thinking. Pondering on this idea can tell us a lot about ourselves.
AgreedIf we consider the above question in depth we'll reach the conclusion that even though we have reached the core of the intellectual mode of consciousness (in thinking about perceptions), even this liberated mode, looking fully objectively and detachedly on perceptions, is itself still Maya - we simply don't perceive the hidden layers of the spiritual world, on the surface of which we experience our thoughts and identify through them as a liberated no-self.
Agreed. I personally spend a lot of my time in meditation as part of my spiritual practice (well, skipped today due to too much typingI've talked many times that this can be accomplished only through meditation that follows the thread of our intellectual spiritual activity. Through proper development, this thread leads us to the actual spiritual world where the forces behind our thinking are discovered, and together with this a completely different experience of what we are.

Now, if you were able to get any deeper than that and have any findings there, please share with us, I would be very interested. But as you might have already seen, I don't accept sloppy answers and theories
