Lou Gold wrote: ↑Sat Jan 30, 2021 11:53 pm
OK. However, thinking does not precede everything we can be.
That's what the previous post was about. We awaken into our life as ready-made beings. We don't create consciously our physical, etheric, astral bodies. All this was created for us. Our "I" simply gets into the driver seat. That's why I said that thinking does not precede the
creation of these bodies. As a matter of fact, thinking is the last thing to appear on the scene, it's the latest invention. And that's why we start from it. It is as if you have put on several layers of clothes and then begin to unclothe them in the reverse order.
In this sense, thinking is not the highest but the lowest form of cognition (yet the only one we currently have).
But more important than that is that it is in thinking where we experience causal creativity. This is what gives us self-consciousness. What does it mean to be self conscious? To find an perception in the dream, that mirrors our activity - whatever we are.
Imagine that you are a Spirit that sends its activity towards the World but nothing echoes back you look and look but simply can not find anything that has any relation to you - everything moves on its own. Then you find a small island within the substance of perceptions which acts interestingly. You discover that you spiritual impulses are completely correlated with the movements of that island. You have found your own image within the world of perceptions! Now you become self-conscious, that is, in addition to the world, you also perceive something of your own spiritual activity.
(this is very simplified but makes a point)
At our stage of evolution this happens only through thinking. We think and find our reflection within the thoughts.
Now you'll bring back the example of the zone, where there's no thought and there's still consciousness.
To clarify this we'll have to look at thinking in a little more general sense. Usually when we hear 'thinking' we imagine the intellect - the arrangement of trains of thought, verbal or otherwise. But thinking can be understood more broadly as the act of connecting a
perception to its corresponding
concept or idea. When we look at a tree, even if there's no verbal thought, as our gaze focuses on the tree, there's a silent act of cognition - we experience the idea of tree - this is what gives us the understanding that we see a tree and not a rock. Without this act of cognition we would perceive a green-brown blob but we would never have the understanding of what we see.
Intellectual thinking is only a more special type of cognition, where concepts are connected not to external perceptions but to thought-perceptions that we ourselves create. For example if I think in my mind "tree", I experience a sound-like perception of the word (my voice) and together with it the idea, the concept of a tree. It can be said that I project the idea into perception. While in perceiving, the perceptions evoke the concepts in my cognition.
So when we are in the zone, there's also cognition, even if there's no jumping intellectual thought. But still there's and idea that is being connected to what we see, as we move on auto-pilot. If this was not the case we would not understand what we are seeing. If this idea had to be verbalized, it would sound something like "I'm observing myself, moving on auto pilot".
It is similar with feeling. When I feel joy, there's also cognition in the background - even if not verbalized. The perception is the feeling and the idea/concept is my understanding that I feel joy. If I'm to verbalize this idea it will sound like "I feel joy".
This is the key observation - our cognition is always there when feeling or acting on auto-pilot. If that was not the case, after I'm out of the zone, I would not be able to say that it was
me, who was observing the zone. The fact that after we are out of the zone, we can say "I was in the zone" confirms that our "I" was there the whole time. It was simply cognizing silently, experiencing the meaning of the perceptions, without projecting their meaning into verbal thoughts.
So we are conscious when this act of cognition is present and we become self-conscious when we observe the cognitive activity itself. Then we find ourselves to be creatively present within the cosmic dream. Everything else meets us as a mystery - we don't experience causes - only effects, perceptions, feelings press into our consciousness. Thinking is the only exception - it is the only thing that we experience together with its cause. And this cause we experience as something proceeding from ourselves, from our "I".
This places thinking in a unique position.
Normally, our I, our Spirit, which lives in the ideas and concepts, stands in opposition to the World (the perceptions that we don't control). It seems that these are two different worlds. It simply seems there's no point of contact between them. We either have our perceptions - the Cosmic Dream presenting itself to us, or our own ideas about it. But they seem completely different and unreconcilable.
But when thinking becomes its own object we find a bridge between the worlds. The activity of the "I" becomes perception. Now there's something in the world of perceptions which does not confront us as something foreign but is of our own making. In this way, our thinking has the potential to become the center of a vortex where the two Worlds - of perception (matter, object, not-I) and Idea (I, subject, being) - can become once again One.