Soul_of_Shu wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 5:23 pm
AshvinP wrote: ↑Mon Aug 09, 2021 4:44 pmYes, I think careful consideration of our 1st person experience naturally leads us to the conclusion that other 1st-person perspectives exist, and are always interacting with our own perspective, giving rise to willing-feeling-thinking within our perspective. They can still all be 1st person perspectives of the One essential Mind, though. Is that still "solipsism" or something else?
Solipsism, as BK defines it, is the notion that all of reality is a projection of one's personal mind, not taking into account any transpersonal Mind. However, I suppose it could be conceived to be that M@L
is the sole Solipsist.
Right. For me, I am gradually coming to think this particular issue is not even one suitable for analytical philosophy or science. It is a purely spiritual issue. All issues are spiritual, but some spiritual issues have overlap with intellectual philosophy-science, like "
is there really material stuff existing apart from my mental essence?", and some do not. The latter are strictly matters of higher cognitive perception. If we develop our cognition so far as to intuitive knowledge, for ex., we take on the entirely different perspective of another being's soul. It is very difficult to even talk about with these words. But I imagine it's the sort of experience which relates, "
my 'I' is the same, as it is shared by all, but the contents of perception have completely shifted to another perspective of the 'I'". In the midst of such an experience, it makes no difference whether the contents are exactly the same as the 'other soul' experiences them, i.e. whether we are still actually experiencing an expanded sphere of our own perspective or the truly existing perspective of another soul, because it is so completely different than our own normal perspective that it transcends all such questions of the intellect. Whatever the case may be, our consciousness has expanded to encompass novel perspectives, which means the potential was always there for such expansion from within our own perspective - if that is called "solipsism", so be it.
Eugene wrote:This is in the "gray area" of the philosophy of consciousness. I'm not aware of any philosophers considering the possibility of personal subjective experiences being simultaneously 1-st person experiences of the One Mind. As I said before such view would run into the subject combination problem which is still being debated among the philosophers of consciousness.
I think my response to Dana addresses the above as well. For me, the "subject combination problem" seems to exclusively belong to domain of the abstract intellect which cannot grasp higher modes of cognition. Put another way, it simply disappears as a debatable topic when confronted with the immense reality of shared, interwoven soul-perspectives. Perhaps similar to the experience of all questions about how consciousness evolved from matter, or how "something came from nothing", or anything similar to that, dissolving when entering the mystical state.