Stranger wrote: ↑Sun Apr 09, 2023 11:55 pm I may also disagree with many scientists or philosophers, but that does not mean I deny the validity of science or philosophy as a method of acquiring knowledge. This is the difference between the scientific and sectarian approaches. In the scientific and philosophical approach people admit that they can be wrong, they take their views hypothetically, and many of them indeed were wrong with their theories or philosophies, including the most leading scientists or philosophers. In the sectarian approach it is unthinkable, they consider their views to be always true and any other views not aligned with them always by default wrong, especially when related to the founders of their sects. If Steiner would really be a scientist, he would present his teachings as assumptive, as all good scientists and philosophers do, but instead, he and his followers accepted them as the truth in its final form with no possibility of being wrong. And as I said, in the spiritual realm it is especially important to be skeptical and exercise spiritual discernment because it is very easy to become deceived by imposter discarnate beings. I do not claim that Steiner got his esoteric knowledge from the dualistic hierarchies, but I'm just pointing to the possibility of it being quite real, for a simple reason that I don't see even a glimpse into Oneness in his teachings (in the way it was pointed to by Christ or in the Eastern nondual traditions), but instead, a very assertive denial of it: " It is precisely of this oneness-striving that one must be cured if one wishes to stand correctly in the spiritual world."
Everyone besides you, Eugene, must have noticed how this piece that you have written is once again stuffed with contradictions:
- You say that good scientists and philosophers take their views "hypothetically”, still you do not take your views hypothetically at all, suffice to notice how you use Oneness as the absolute of absolutes, by means of which you decree either the seriousness or the sectarianism of any other views. For some strange reason, you are - in your own vision of taking own views hypothetically - the only one benefitting from a special exemption. An exemption that entitles you to not take your views hypothetically, as it appears.
- You claim that you grasp the meaning and the limitations of intellectual, abstract modeling, compared to first-person, experiential, living understanding. To be on the safe side when stating or implying such claims, you have even adopted the habit of replicating Cleric’s wording of this idea. Still, you keep on falling in the trap of confusing the methodologies set by the philosophy of science for science - and more and more adopted by philosophy at large as well - for the knowledge one can start growing into when aspiring to discover the truth of reality, when engaging the path of REAL first person understanding, when the experience of understanding is brought within, enlivened from within, rather than looked at, examined from a distance, as an external phenomenon.
Sadly, you still don’t get the difference between the established good practices for approximating - or mimicking through models - the DYNAMICS OF THE SCREEN OF PERCEPTIONS, I.E. THE VEIL, (for ex. falsifiability principle) and the practices and methods of Spiritual Science, that allow us to deploy our higher sense organs, to gradually FIND (find! not create, or replicate!) a path to the Truth of universal reality BEYOND THE PERCEPTUAL VEIL.
Inevitably, when one mixes up the levels of the two quests/inquiries - the one beneath the veil, with the one across the veil, then it’s easy to believe that one can grasp the higher level from the perspective, and with the methods, of the lower. That’s how you end up extending the methods of secular science, where any claims for truth could be called “sectarian”, to Spiritual Science. Basically you do that because you don’t know any other methods. So you make do with what you have - materialistic methodology - not realizing that, in so doing, you exclude for yourself the possibility to FIND a path to Truth. Parallel to that, you still utter an aspiration to truth, but lacking any methods, other than the materialistic, to inflow such wording with meaning, you are faced with the impossibility of moving beyond abstract words, and with the plague of permanent self-contradiction.
What’s going on is this. Instead of finding the elevated path on the RIDGE of the polar balance between the extremes of idealized sense-free oneness (mysticism) and idealized sense-dense multiplicity (materialism) you are torn apart, half of you smashed onto the vertical axis of Oneness, where the depth of multiplicity is endlessly molded into trivial duality, and the other half of you left agonizing against the opposite flat wall of materialism-compliant methodology, where multiplicity is deified and iconized, i.e. endlessly replicated with models, that obviously have to admit they can be wrong, just so the theorizing process itself can be idealized, and kept going.
Manifestly, when you spend all your vital energy keeping such extreme split open, smashing your self-function onto both reductionist asymptotes at the same time, the vertical and the horizontal, the mystical and the materialistic, then the unified middle ground, the synthesis, the central ridge, the high path, spiraling the extreme opposites into unity, remains invisible. Inevitably, any help to DISCERN (not create, as one would create a theory!) the high path on the ridge of true knowledge, on the way to inner discovery of Truth, and any encouragement to start walking the path, will be judged through the lens of materialistic inquiry, and called “sectarian”.
Again, when one self-limits oneself to the methods applicable in the sense-bound lands of “good science and good philosophy” - where activity is focused on producing the ultimate reading grid for perception of sense phenomena (mainstream science) and perception of thought phenomena (mainstream philosophy) - of course coherent practice has to incorporate “the possibility of being wrong”, the possibility that the next best model could approximate the flow of perception more fittingly. No reasonable theorist would claim that their grid is the ultimate and only one, that they behold the truth of phenomena.
Your mistake is to naively extend such contextual methods to the pursuit (not the creation! as one would create a model!) of Truth beyond the screen of perceptions. Your particular position (compared to Lou’s, Mike’s, and others’) where you attempt to adhere to BOTH opposite asymptotes of materialistic methods and mystic affirmations, is probably the hardest, most contradictory, and impossible to maintain. It forces you to what I would call a superstitious view. One can sense the essence of this superstitious approach when you speak of the deceiving dual hierarchies and luciferic beings, for example. One can feel the fear. Superstition is always associated with fear. Unfortunately your understanding of the Christ events, your understanding of Oneness, is not liberating you from fear. This is because it is abstract, affirmed understanding, it’s conjured up. If you were to really gradually grow into understanding, you would gradually dissolve all fear and need to superstitiously throw up demiurgic theories.
PS. Let’s incidentally remember that we still have no explanation of:
1. what the affirmed “Divine hierarchies” are in your vision, and how they square with the statement that our connection to Source is direct.
2. a hierarchy that’s not “nested whatsoever” but “commonly rooted” (Lou’s tip). How does it work? What is its raison d’être?
Lou, Mike, Lorenzo, anyone else - maybe you want to try and come to help?