I also value the experience of the absence of thoughts but if we take it as epistemological basis we arrive at an incomplete system. If I empty my room of all furniture, the empty room doesn't explain what's my place in the picture - the activity that fills and empties the room. That's what I noted some time ago that we should be very careful not to consider that the empty awareness explains out of itself the existence of thinking. If we are true to our observations we would have to admit that thinking comes 'from a different direction' so to speak. The causative activity is not something that we indifferently observe to raise from the empty awareness and create the thoughts (I speak of active thinking, not hearing words in our head).Eugene I wrote: ↑Thu Mar 25, 2021 2:00 pm Just a comment here (I remember writing about it before). The value of the experience of the absence of thoughts is very practical and epistemological tool, its an experimental method to gain insights into the mechanism of consciousness and cognition. In that state we have a chance to experience the base reality of our direct conscious experience: the presence of the space of awareness and its unifying property (which we never noticed before). Then when we start adding to that clean empty state sensory phenomena or feelings, we start to experience and understand how the phenomena of consciousness appear and disappear in the space of the awareness but never are separate from it and always united into the wholeness of right-now totality of experience. And then we start adding thoughts to that and examine how they work and notice that the thoughts are similarly conscious phenomena, but they also carry meanings (their qualia). The meanings may be ideas, imaginations, intuitions and a whole range of very subtle spiritual meanings. But the key is to see how the meanings are different from the very reality of experiencing them, the awareness of them, and different from the rest of the phenomena. There is absolutely nothing wrong with thinking and thinking is the most amazing faculty of consciousness. However, without understanding of the nature of thoughts and their meanings, we typically fall into cognitive mistake and confuse the meanings with reality. That is exactly what materialist do: they create an imaginative scheme of the "material world out there", which is nothing else as a bunch of meanings, and then take this world as reality and disregard the direct realty of their direct conscious experience (hello Dennet). When we drop materialism, we usually just adopt a different intellectual model of reality (idealistic or other) but still remain living in the world of the meanings "as if" it is our new reality, and never return to the actual reality of our direct conscious experience. So, it's a matter of learning how to properly use this powerful tool of the intellect: we can use it to its full capacity only if we learn to recognize the base reality of conscious experience and distinguish from the "fabricated" reality of the meanings of the thoughts. Once we do that, we can fully use the thinking mechanism but will never be again fooled by believing that the meanings are the actual reality, we will only see them as at best representations and reflections of reality (more or less accurate, or even entirely false in many cases).
This places the whole role of thinking into a subordinate role, as a side effect of the primary awareness. But if we are honest we can't do that. It's the same reductionist error all over again - trying to produce something from the materials that don't contain its essence. This also explains why you see thoughts only as adding 'meanings' that will always float loosely above perceptions.
There's another limitation of the empty room. In our life we awaken in certain situation. We're in a room. That we learn to empty it. OK, that's valuable experience. But are we really objective to claim that we are now at the grounds of existence? Just because we simply observe flies entering and leaving the room? Just because it's the only thing that we know? We need our activity to start exploring our space. Then we find that this is just one room with two windows in a larger palace with many rooms. Then outside the palace we discover a whole world and so on. And please note - and this is an important one - even if we are outside the palace we can still empty our consciousness from 'furniture' that we create. But then in thoughtlessness we behold very different panorama. This relates to what I've been saying about probing the world of ideas through thinking. In this way we expand our knowledge to geometries outside the room which are just as objective as the initial room but put the room and everything else into a much wider perspective. And I repeat - we don't need to support this perspective through thoughts that add artificial meanings - once the idea geometry is expanded and explored we can behold it even without thought activity.
I'm sure you've had such meditative experiences. Just because we have no thoughts it doesn't mean that we find ourselves in the same state every time. Sometimes we clear the thoughts and we feel in a dark spot in our head and nothing around. On 'sunnier' days we clear the thoughts but we experience our whole body from head to toe vibrating - fully objectively, not by holding this as some artificial thought. If you've had similar experiences you'll also be able to understand better what I mean with world of Ideas and that it has nothing to do with postulating some additional philosophical layer. This is what Ashvin meant when he tried to point to thinking only as a more specific form of a much more fundamental form of spiritual cognition. If you really had such experience (I hope so) of feeling the no thought state, while the totality of awareness as a whole holds different meanings, then you'll have to admit that the state where you experience only a dark spot in the mind and nothing else, and the state of a full body perception awareness, even though you don't think about them, still are experienced as different ideal content. You understand, even without thought, that your awareness encompasses two different meaningful situations. Now if you admit as a possibility that through active thinking and meditation it's possible to investigate even wider spectrum of inner geometries, you'll reckon that all of them will be experienced as different ideal meaning - again, even without conceptualizing them. If you grasp these different ideal contents within the different no-thought states, then you'll be closer to what I mean by world of ideas. I hope you would agree that we can't speak about 'adding' any Platonic layer of meaning out of ourselves in this way.