Journey
ANIL MITRA—COPYRIGHT © May 2011
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Contents
Version of April 24, 2011 1
Purpose 1
Errors and minor changes—This document / AREX 1
Ideas for Change—This document / AREX 1
Filling in the Template—This document / AREX 3
Preface 4
Introduction 4
Universe 9
Summary 9
Being 10
Universe 10
Our World 13
Logos 14
Cosmology 15
Identity 18
Pathways 18
Metaphysics 18
Religion,
Science, and Humanism 19
Summary 19
The Envelope of Human Culture 20
Science 21
Modern, Traditional and Primitive Religion 21
Religion and Science 23
Secular Humanism 24
Future of Science, Religion, and the Culture of
Knowledge 25
Journey 26
Summary 26
The Idea of the journey 27
The Universe 27
From the World to the Universe 28
Journey and process 31
Appendix
on Source Material 32
Individual 32
Culture 32
Nature 33
Sources 33
Version of April 24, 2011
When marked ‘strike through’ the errors have been
corrected in—or introduced to—the original
In the final section Sources,
add a note that I include those who have influenced the thought behind the
present narrative and not those who have had the greatest influence on my
thought in general or who are great in some general sense. Thus I have high
regard for Bertrand Russell and he is undoubtedly one of the great analytic
philosophers but his direct influence on the present narrative is small. Also
note that there is no suggestion that the reader should read all of or only
the listed thinkers. Finally note the omission of Charles Darwin, Ernst Mayr,
John Searle, and William Blake
‘accumulate knowledge’ should be ‘accumulated
knowledge’
‘history
importance’ should be ‘historical importance’
described in the latest physical
should be estimated from the latest physical
All occurrences of fundamental principle (an old
name) should be replaced by Principle of Being (not needed for AREX)
The preface has the following paragraph inserted before
the link the summary of the main division
There is a briefer version of this narrative, Journey—Pathways. The Pathways version
omits the first two divisions and reproduces the final division. The function
of Pathways is to provide a template for a Universal Journey. Although
the template will benefit from further thought, experience, and expression it
must remain a template. This is because the journey has been shown to be one
that does not and cannot end
Brief comment on objects, abstract objects, and inhabiting
abstract objects
Ideas for Background study
Phase ideas. Philosophy—Epistemology,
e.g. normative (quality of reasons for belief—foundational, coherence) vs.
naturalistic (conditions of belief acquisition typically result in truth;) Metaphysics—as
Theory of Being, Universe; Logic; Political-Economics; Religion—as
connection to Universe; Theory of Objects; Value and Ethics. Science—Theoretical
Physics (classical, quantum, and relativistic physics) and Cosmology.
Logic, mathematics, computation theory related to Theory of Logic,
Representability, and Creation Phase
Phase Experiments. Transformative practices—the
catalysts—of the major, indigenous, and new traditions (religions)
Phase Social Transformation. Networking; manuals;
public speaking—media, university, church, the street corner; ritual
practice… Political, economic, cultural-religious value and action
Phase Creation—Theory, design, simulation, construction
of a variety of being: physical, psychological, social, and technological.
AI, AL, Simulation of psycho-social aspects. Merging with Idea and
Experimental phases
The idea of the section is to discuss / evaluate the
cosmology of scriptural accounts. The material falls under cosmology but is
presented in a separate section because of its special significance in the
traditions, especially of myth and religion
Journey states and shows
that the Universe has and can have no external creator (add this to AREX
> Journey—A Template > Introduction > Cosmological consequences
of the Principle of Being.)
Emphasize that ‘External creator’ has no meaning since
the Universe as Allbeing has no ‘outside’
Note / emphasize that while one domain may create
another or infuse material or seeds into another, the idea of creation is
relatively fragile while that of infusion may be robust
Note that there can be no original creation in the
sense of a designer for the Void is the Absence of Being and, therefore,
there can be no intelligence. The word ‘creation’ in ‘original creation’ is
therefore not appropriate, it is a misappropriation of meaning—an assertion
of a meaning in a context where there can be no such meaning. It would be
better to say, simply, there is becoming of manifest Being without any
suggestion of an act of creation or causation. The word ‘original’ is also
inappropriate because there is no original manifestation; the Universe is
eternal. Nor is manifestation self-creation. In the Void there is no
self. The idea of ‘self’ made applies when the self (personal or object) has
already come at least partially into Being
Make clear that no culture can exceed the UM in its reach and
that no known standard culture has a record of this (demonstrated.) Note that
this does not mean that this realization is greater than the realizations of
the cultures; it simply means that the estimate of the Universe in this
realization is the greatest and, first, no culture can have a greater
realization of the envelope of the actual
Change ‘I know little’ to ‘Little can be known’
Division Journey
and Journey—A Template in AREX
Emphasize that it is essential that this Division remain a
template because Journey (including religion / science) are not / far from
being / never completed
In relation to ‘the way’ of Nature, add comments on the
aspect of Tibetan Buddhism of explored in Ian Baker’s The Heart of the
World
Add a final section In-process sources
‘See the documents… ’ for ideas and changes
Such a section may be in future versions; each version
will have its own in-process document(s)
Add the following sub-section to section Metaphysics
Theory of Objects
The Theory of Objects developed in other documents
includes the following topics. First, it provides an account of knowledge.
Since knowledge and knower are distinct the question arises How can we
claim to know anything at all? Second, What kinds of ‘thing’ or object
are there in the Universe? It is consistent with the purpose of this document
that no more than the following brief treatment should be provided
How can we support our knowledge claims? What do
we know? A partial answer has already been provided: via abstraction we
do, in specified senses, know the Universe, the Void and other objects of the
metaphysics. The claims of the Universal metaphysics. It is seen in other
discussions in this narrative that the gaps in this knowledge may be filled
in but at most at the limit of the context. We sometimes approach this limit
but the fact of the limit and the fact that we do not always achieve it is
not an occasion for lament. For many practical purposes the ‘good enough’
knowledge of adaptation is all we need; there is risk involved but risk is
the part of the order of Being
What kinds of Object are there? The following discussion
is incomplete with respect to both kind and argument; the other documents
fill in the incompleteness. Here we outline the treatment of the particular
and the abstract Objects
Theory of particular and abstract objects—an outline of
main ideas. The theory of particular and abstract objects is developed in
other documents though not here. This theory identifies two kinds of objects,
particular or concrete and abstract. The particular object is roughly what we
regard as concrete, e.g. bricks and electrons. A typical abstract object is a
number. The number ‘one’ is not concrete—we cannot touch it, and it does not
seem to be located in space or time. There are a number of modern accounts
the nature of abstract objects—i.e., precisely what are they? This is where
the present treatment departs from the modern accounts. It is shown that
whereas abstract objects may have Experiential roots, their conception has
become essentially conceptual or symbolic while the particular objects retain
some degree of rooting in Experience—even though we understand them via
concepts. However, the Principle of Being implies that, subject to Logic,
every concept has an object. Therefore, the (concept) of an abstract object
defines a real object but on account of abstraction, spatiality, temporality,
and causation have been ‘abstracted out’ to some degree; in some cases, as in
number, temporality is altogether abstracted out. Abstract objects are not
atemporal: their temporality is irrelevant to their Being; thus the present
treatment departs from and resolves the main difficulties of the modern
theory. The relevance of this development of the theory of objects for
Being in general and Human Being in particular is the possibility of
inhabiting abstract objects
The working out of the template should address issues that
include the following
1. There
may be a distinction between those that draw inspiration and meaning for
their Normal lives and those that enter a journey of transformation from the Normal
to the Universal. The former would be Observers, the latter Journeyers
I am not sure that this
distinction would be good—it might result in a class distinction. It would
however be a way of reaching a wider audience
Alternates to ‘Observer’ and
‘Journeyer’ may be good
2. The
journeyers would understand the need for Idea and Transformation and that
Idea is not limited to the usual sense of free cognitive content but extends
to perception as free, to emotion and to the body
The journeyer will be
significantly on his or her own. Some common templates for ways and catalysts
may however emerge and be cataloged; beginnings are already cataloged
3. The
Observers would be introduced to the metaphysics at least at the level of the
Introduction to Journey—A Template of the AREX (Template) document. They may choose
further levels beginning with the journey document
Some Observers may become
Experts on metaphysics and related topics. The source materials show immense
potential for development
4. All
Observers, especially those whose role excludes development, will require
emotional and symbolic content to fill out and fill in the cognitive content
This may be worked out by story
/ myth, art including music and motion and ritual, pilgrimage…
It may draw from the sources
(including the major traditions)
Should there be standard literatures,
standard rituals, standard ways…? Should there be accounts of journeys?
5. Is
an institutional structure desirable? Should it emerge by design or by
occasion… or perhaps by occasion and design?
This would be a later concern
These changes will not be made until (a) Well thought out
in principle and detail (b) Written and perhaps (c) It is time for a new
version of journey (one that incorporates AREX)
The ‘journey’ of the title is an exploration of our world
and its place in the Universe
The word ‘Universe’ is capitalized because it is used
in a particular sense that is introduced later. The development in the
narrative depends crucially on particular and often new meaning and shades of
meaning. As alternative to introducing altogether new terminology, the
narrative may employ capitalization where words would normally be lower case
The main source of ideas, principles, and details for this
narrative is the Journey in Being (JIB) website, http://www.horizons-2000.org.
A greater variety of material and detail may be found in documents linked
from the upper right of the home page of the site. In this text, these may be
referred to as ‘other documents’
The reader not interested in background may pass over the Introduction, read the summaries of the first
two divisions—Universe and Religion, Science, and Humanism—and
then proceed to the final and main division, Journey
To summary of
first main division Universe
A brief Appendix on
Source Material focuses on influences on the narrative and material
for further development and the ongoing journey
Introduction
The journey is an exploration of our world, the
Universe, and the embedding of world in Universe. It is an exploration in
Ideas and in Being; it is a realization of the meaning and Identity of individual,
world, and Universe
In the introduction a number of terms—Universe, Ideas, Being,
Identity, metaphysics, limits, ultimate, greatest, possibility and others—are
used without immediate explanation or definition. This introduction is not
intended as systematic development—explanations andor definitions are given
later as part of a natural development
The idea of the journey can be explained by beginning with
its view of the Universe
Many religions and philosophies of life have an explicit
view of the Universe. And in perhaps every individual's imagined path through
life there is an at least background and implicit ‘world view’ that may be formed
from Experience and absorption from the common culture. When developed in
explicit (e.g. linguistic) terms, such views may be labeled ‘metaphysics.’
The implicit views are also metaphysical even if not so labeled. When
extrapolated beyond their domains of validity, views from science and common
Experience are also metaphysical
At the core of this view is the Principle of Being (PB)—i.e. the
assertion that The Universe has no limits
The Principle of Being and its consequences will be called
The Universal metaphysics (UM.) UM
will be shown to be an ultimate metaphysics. Since, as it will be seen, there
can be at most one true metaphysics, this metaphysics may also be called the
metaphysics
This metaphysics provides context for journey. Since
meaning depends on context, the meanings of terms as used here must await
development of the metaphysics for their specification. When readers
encounter terms such as ‘science’ and ‘religion’ they may think, not without
validity, that their Experience gives them some handle on the meanings of the
terms. However, the possibilities inherent in the meanings depend on the
possibilities of context. As an ultimate context, the Universal metaphysics
provides ultimate possibilities for meaning of the elements of culture such
as science and religion
If it is true, the Universal metaphysics is immensely
powerful (the statement of the Principle of Being may, however, not make this
explicit.) Consequently, demonstrating the view and bringing out its power should
be one aspect of its development
As an example of power, an alternate expression of the Principle
of Being is The Universe is the greatest possible (Universe)
Modern science and common
Experience reveal apparent limits to the world—the world behaves according to
the laws of physics; its behavior is limited to these laws; it appears, then,
that the metaphysics and physics are in contradiction. Therefore a second
aspect of the development should be to show that the metaphysics and science
/ common Experience do not stand in contradiction
A consequence of the Principle of Being (the Universe has
no limits) is that there is no limit to the kinds of thing or entity in the
Universe. Ask Are all things material in nature? An approach to a
metaphysical system that attempts to answer this question at outset takes the
risks of error and over-complication that burden all subsequent development.
An answer to the question may be given later but at outset it is efficient to
assert that, with Being simply as that which Exists, all kinds
belong to Being (for this purpose other meanings and connotations of ‘Being’
are excluded.) While this avoids risk, it appears to be—and may be—trivial.
It will turn out to be immensely powerful, to have momentous consequences,
even if trivial
A third aspect of the development of the metaphysics is to
develop consequences for Being
A primary implication of the Principle of Being for
journey is the Principle of Identity (PI)—i.e., the Identity of Self and All
Being which is demonstrated later. The narrative also uses terms from
Indian Philosophy—Atman or, roughly, Self and Brahman or All Being
In the following we use Allbeing to mean All Being,
Brahman, or the Universe (in its oneness.) ‘Allbeing’ may be pronounced ‘All
Being’
This idea is not new but the fact of its demonstration is
new and immense in its implications
The principle has been seen in other forms in prior
thought even though there appears to be no demonstration. One form is
Aristotle’s version of what has been called the principle of plenitude (by
the historian of ideas, A.O. Lovejoy.) Aristotle’s version of the principle
is that no eternal possibility will be unrealized. This version assumes an
eternity but otherwise may seem to be self-evident because it seems that if
an event is possible it will have probability of realization in a finite
interval of time must be greater than zero and therefore it must be certain
to occur in an infinite amount of time. However, the premise is not true: it
is possible that any real number may occur in a random sequence of real
numbers; however the probability that any given number will occur is zero.
This is because the order of infinity of the number of items in a sequence is
a lower order than the order of infinity of the real numbers
A first implication lies in the fact of the demonstration
which gives credence and certainty to what is otherwise a cognitively
plausible idea. A second implication is that the method of demonstration
provides analytic tools that enable coloring in the picture of the Universe
and therefore of Identity as hitherto not possible. Thus, though there have
been glimpses of the view in the common literature of history of thought,
their cognitive content is infinitesimal in relation to the present
development
However, the symbolic and affective content of the
historical views may be significant; this idea is elaborated in the section Modern, Traditional and Primitive Religion
of division Religion, Science, and
Humanism (here, symbol has the connotation of significant
symbol for human meaning… and includes the archetypal symbol. The narrative
also employs ‘symbol’ in an abstract and more inclusive connotation as a sign
with reference.)
In Indian Philosophy Atman (the Self) is thought to be
identical to Brahman (Universe.) Here, for finite Being, it will be seen—shown—that
the Identity is a process rather than a state. The process is one through
endless variety (no limits,) is spatially unlimited and endless in time,
experiences summits and dissolutions and in which there is no limit to the elevation
of the summits
What, then, is the journey?
It has three interwoven stages
Discovery of the Principle of Being, its
demonstration, and its power. The principle—the Universe has no
limits. The power will be made manifest in the narrative; an example is that
in contradiction of standard thought, there is no limit to the variety of
Being. In that the discovery and demonstration are due to the author, this
discovery is individual or personal. As an example of the power of the
principle, it follows that there are infinitely many cosmological systems in
which the principle has been discovered and demonstrated. This limits the
significance of individual aspect of this stage. The trivial character of the
demonstration seen later also limits this significance
Elaboration of consequences of the principle as
the Universal metaphysics (UM;)
and, in combination, with the traditions—including science—as Applied
metaphysics (explained later.) Elaboration shall include fundamental
exemplification of the power of the UM. This, too, is a personal or individual stage
Journey to the Ultimate… as revealed and shown
possible by UM
and with beginnings in the immediate—personal Experience, the
Traditions—combined and illuminated by UM into a dynamic process. This stage is
Universal in the Experience of the Ultimate is Universal
Emphases in this narrative—the personal is
deemphasized in the three stages, leaving (1) The demonstration of the Principle
of Being, (2) Consequences of essential significance to the journey, (3) Journey
to the Ultimate—for which this narrative provides a template (with sources)
The journey to the Ultimate or Universal Journey is
the main emphasis. It is perhaps only in providing a template that there can
be Universality
Naturally, perhaps, there is no claim to have completed
the journey; the journey is at a beginning. For finite Being, every stage of
journey partakes of ‘beginning’
How can we proceed? (1) The metaphysics or view of
the Universe with its own logic illuminates the entire process including
experiments in transformation of Being which are essential to realization and
appreciation (2) Turn to tradition—science, technology, myth, shamanic
practice, depth psychology (further detail in the narrative)
Briefly, the port of entry is the body… in the
non-reductive meaning of body as including psyche and, from the Principle of
Being, on up to the Universe (this use of the idea of body is developed in
greater detail in the later section The Ultimate
in division Journey)
Outline of the Narrative. The main divisions of the
narrative are (1) Universe, (2) Religion, Science, and Humanism, and
(3) Journey. These are followed by an Appendix on Source Material
Universe—the first core
division of the narrative—defines the range of Being. Includes metaphysical
overview including the central demonstrations (proofs) but details and the
development of the metaphysics may be found in other documents. The
metaphysics, called the Universal metaphysics or, simply, the
metaphysics shows limits and contours of the Universe. This demonstrated view
of the Universe is ‘context’ for journey
Religion, Science,
and Humanism—the second division—has two functions. (I) Estimate what
standard traditional and modern systems say of the local and ultimate dimension—shape,
size and duration—of the Universe. It will be seen that what these systems
say is local and that even where there is local validity, what is revealed is
infinitesimal in relation to the Universe. Some modern thinkers conclude that
the dimension of the Universe is essentially as revealed in science; here it
is shown that science and its reason are silent on their shadow or ‘outside’…
even on its probable dimension. It is therefore concluded that there is no
conflict between the standard systems and the Universal metaphysics. (II) Note
an immensely significant refinement of Knowledge—Applied metaphysics (full
development is in other documents)
Journey—the third division
and main emphasis. The development has two aspects (I) Particular—an outline
for a Universal journey (II) Universal—this outline is written also as a
template for general development of a system of knowledge and action that
goes beyond the relatively static systems of cosmology, moral knowledge, and
action of traditional religion and modern secularism (the Ideal or Ultimate
religion referred to above)
This ultimate and Universal notion of journey is developed
in this third main division. The first two divisions are preliminary and are
provided with summaries for audiences who are not inclined toward their
modest level of detail
Appendix on Source
Material provides some information on resources. Because the journey
is in-process it seemed best to provide a brief, eclectic, suggestive, and
in-process collection
Since the picture of the Universe is greater than the
standard and common pictures, including those of science and myth, the
metaphysics is new. Since the picture reveals that the Universe is the greatest
possible (universe) the metaphysics is ultimate in capturing (in ways that
will emerge) and revealing a Universe that is also ultimate
Modern humanism—which draws its metaphysics from science—and
traditional religion have limited awareness of the necessity of an unending
journey
Audiences should therefore anticipate that they will be
covering material that they have not encountered before; much of this
material is new at least to the known literature. The meanings and conceptual
systems of this narrative may, on this account, require effort to be
understood. Although they are now familiar to me, I first encountered them as
one might a dawning Experience of a strange, exotic, and beautiful planet
circling some distant sun
The net meaning of the metaphysics and the meanings of the
terms are new. Even when the terms used are not new it is sometimes necessary
and sometimes efficient to assign the terms new meanings. In order to follow
the development and to understand the metaphysical and other understanding developed
it will be necessary to attend to the meanings as defined here. Readers who
are experienced in metaphysical thought and therefore think they already know
the meanings of the terms may face especial difficulty unless they are
willing to re-educate their metaphysical understanding. Most of the
metaphysical definitions are found in the division Universe
Many archaic and modern texts—religious and other—are of
such length and detail as to be in themselves an adventure. They provide
enormous amounts of material that provide occasion for immersion, debate,
entertainment… The individual enters into a literary world that is a
diversion from the actual world. The subject of religion becomes, largely,
the system of belief rather than living in the system of the world
In order to make this narrative accessible, useful, and
demonstrative rather than merely revelatory or entertaining it must be brief
The narrative is not a scripture. There is no system of
material that must be taken as dogma. There is nothing to believe. Where the
narrative is certain, belief is irrelevant; where it is uncertain, the reader
is not asked to believe; in either case, the interaction of ideas and action
is essential; in the first case—certainty—action may be imperative, in the
second—degrees of certainty—the basis of action is an estimate of the best
outcome… and the attitude of action is trust or faith (with faith as the
attitude, not of belief, but that which is conducive to the good outcome.) The
narrative is not a treatise on metaphysics, science, or religion; it is not a
text or treatise in the standard senses. The ideal audience would be
simultaneously receptive and critical… and immensely so
It is not the purpose to develop ideas of metaphysics, science,
tradition, or humanism. However, some useful developments are sketched;
details may be found in other documents
Universe
Summary
This essay introduces and demonstrates the Principle of
Being—the assertion that The Universe has no limits. Although simple
in form, the consequences of the principle are profound
In other forms the principle has been glimpsed before.
However, the present assertion infinitely more powerful than its earlier
forms (1) Because the form of the statement makes its power apparent (2) Because
it is demonstrated and therefore secure—it is not merely a plausible
speculation, and (3) The method of proof was occasion for development of methods
of analysis that are pivotal in developing an immense array of consequences.
The consequences bring out the significance and meaning of the principle to
an extent not possible without the demonstration and its methods
The Principle of Being is the foundation of a metaphysics
and cosmology whose subject is All Being—i.e., the Universe. This demonstrated
metaphysics is therefore called The Universal metaphysics. It is shown
that there can be no more than one true universal metaphysics and so this
metaphysics is also called The metaphysics
For the present metaphysics may be regarded as perfect
knowledge of Being, i.e. of that which Exists. These ideas are of course
laden with difficulties that require resolution. Therefore, definitions,
explanations, doubts, objections, and resolutions are essential and are given
later in this division
The Principle of Being is equivalent to the assertion that
the Universe is the greatest possible; e.g., it is unlimited (and infinite)
in its variety of (kinds of) Being and in Extension and Duration. The
metaphysics is ultimate in showing and implicitly capturing this limitlessness.
It will be shown that the metaphysics is also ultimate in providing an
absolute foundation for metaphysics
Some cosmological examples of the power of the
metaphysics are (1) Although some parts of the Universe are implicated in the
creation of others, the Universe itself has no external creator (it is
reasonable that the most stable and robust of cosmological systems are those
whose creation is immanent; this, however, does not disallow infusion of
seeds and elements from other systems) (2) There is an infinite number of
systems of physical laws of which ours is one example. Each physical law is
realized in an infinite number of cosmological systems. Each cosmological
system is repeated an infinite number of times, both precisely and approximately
(3) Any cosmos may suffer instantaneous annihilation; and even if not robust,
there is also instantaneous creation (4) There are ghost cosmological systems
passing through ours at this instant
This metaphysics may appear to contradict science and common
Experience. However, the cosmology and science are shown to be consistent
with the metaphysical cosmology providing a framework and our science filling
in local detail (this idea will be developed as synergy of the metaphysics
and the traditions including science and religion)
The consistency between the Universal metaphysics and
what is valid in modern physical science and cosmology is elaborated in the
next division Religion, Science, and
Humanism. There is a common though not universal attitude that
science has more or less reached into all aspects of the world and what
remains is relatively small in magnitude and kind. Here it is shown that
while what lies immediately beyond the empirically known may be similar to
what has been seen in science, science is silent on the magnitude of and
kinds of Being beyond the empirically known
For the purpose of Journey, the main implication of the
metaphysics is the Principle of Identity—The individual or Self has identity
with All Being. For finite Being, this identity is realized as a process—a
journey in endless variety, summits whose elevations have no limit, and
dissolutions
The metaphysics suggests but does not show how to enter the
journey and its process; that requires experiments in transformation of Being
(self, body) in which the metaphysics, science, and other elements of human
culture provide guides; this process, the journey and main emphasis of the
narrative, is the subject of the final main division Journey
It is implicit in the idea of ‘journey’ that this life—the
here and now—is not suppressed; journey weaves together immediate and
ultimate; and from the metaphysics the immediate / ultimate distinction is
void. In division Journey, it is argued that
good—perhaps best—realization is an ultimate value
To summary of
next division Religion, Science, and Humanism
Definition. Being is that which Exists
Consequence. There is Being. Explanation. The
definition and consequence are not circular because ‘is’ in the definition is
‘is defined to be’ and in the consequence it is ‘is in fact.’ That there is
Being simply says that something(s) Exist; and if that were not the case
there would be neither facts nor appearances nor illusions—e.g. that you are
reading this narrative (or not reading this narrative.) More robust
explanation / proof may be found in other documents
Definition. The Universe is Allbeing
It is important that ‘All’ in ‘Allbeing’ is not
restricted to any kind of Being or any set of places or times;
the following make this explicit—The Universe is everything that Existed,
Exists, or will Exist. A corresponding and similarly explicit definition
of Being is Being is that which Exists somewhere and somewhen (or,
perhaps, at one or more locations and one or more moments) and without
restriction to kind. Note that these comments take time and place for
granted; the development of these ideas from the metaphysics is found in
other documents
Some consequences of the definition follow
Consequence. There is a sense in which we know the
Universe. It is important for the development of the metaphysics that we can
claim precise or perfectly faithful knowledge of the Universe. Certainly, it
seems, we do not have knowledge of all details of the Universe—and perhaps
that we do not have perfectly faithful knowledge of anything at all. However,
detailed knowledge is not necessary for the metaphysics. What is sufficient
is that we refer to an abstract of the Universe—one that is sufficiently coarse
that any information that is retained can suffer no distortion. For example
even though I do not know the Universe in all its detail, I can know the
Universe as a single object without reference to detail; that
knowledge is perfectly faithful. I can know the fact of the detail even if I
do not know the content of the detail. It is in this sense, which is further
refined and deployed in other documents, that the Universe and other concepts
of the metaphysics are perfectly known in Experience
Doubt. The abstract concept that suffers no
distortion may be too trivial to be significant or useful. Response.
In fact, the resulting metaphysics is of immense significance. It is abstract
but immediate; it is remote from detail but the remoteness can be ‘patched’
by working with the metaphysics and knowledge of the local cosmos; where such
knowledge is imperfect it appears that it can meet the limit of knowability
inherent in the context and this imperfection is a matter for celebration for
it is not merely ‘as good as it gets’ but the revelation of opportunity
This version of the narrative does not develop the
metaphysics and its branches—ontology, theory of objects, cosmology, theory
of identity and others—in depth. This development may be found in other
documents. Those documents employ abstraction in the present sense toward a
perfectly faithful study of topics such as theory of objects, study of mind,
study of Extension-Duration-Being and its refinement as space-time-Being. The
abstraction allows perfect faithfulness and the results may be used as
frameworks for detailed but approximate study
Consequence. There is precisely one Universe. Explanation.
On other definitions or notions of the ‘universe’ there may be many
universes; e.g., if the cosmos of modern physical cosmology is taken to be
the universe there can, at least in principle, be other universes—even an
infinity of universes. However, it is inherent in the notion of Universe as
All Being, that there is one and only one Universe
Doubt. But surely this is just one possible notion
of ‘universe’ among many! Response. The assertion is correct but not
to the point. If we have a vague idea of a concept, many tentative
definitions are possible. Each definition corresponds, in fact, to a (at
least somewhat) different concept and it might be effective to use different
words, universe1, universe2, and so on. Doubt.
How can it be said that the present definition is the definition? Response.
That is not the claim; what is claimed is as follows. (1) Formally, the
present definition is part of a conceptual system, the Universal metaphysics
that is being developed, and while working with this system this is the
definition that is being used. Other systems with other definitions are
possible and for those systems their definitions must be used (2) It is
demonstrated that there is one metaphysics, the Universal metaphysics which
is ultimate (in senses described in the development.) Therefore, while other notions
are possible, the present notion is part of what is perhaps the most powerful
and consistent system possible, and (3) Thus while the present system is
conceptually effective it is, as shown in the subsequent section, There is precisely one Universe, also factually
and dynamically effective
Consequence. The Universe has no external
creator. Explanation. As Allbeing, there is nothing outside or
external to the Universe
Consequence. For the Universe, possibility and
actuality are the same. The Universe is all possibility. Explanation.
Possibility refers to states that may or may not obtain but are consistent
with the constitution of a context; for the Universe there is no state other
than the actual states—for the Universe, that a state does not but could
obtain has no meaning—and therefore to be possible, a state must be actual;
and since it is trivial that the actual is possible it follows that, for the
Universe, possibility and actuality are identical
Consequence. The meaning of ‘The Universe has no
external creator’ is the same as—i.e. identical to—the meaning of ‘The
Universe can have no external creator.’ Explanation. See the
discussion of possibility
Consequence. The Universe contains all Laws. Explanation.
A law is our reading of a pattern; the Law is the pattern;
therefore, a Law has Being
Observation. The conclusions so far are certain. Explanation.
The conclusions are based in perfect knowledge
An observation concerning force and energy that is
not part of the main development. Force and energy have significance in
the physics that describes our cosmos. Force is an interaction and,
generally, objects do not exert forces on themselves; there may be apparent
exceptions for distributed objects when there is delay and reaction may be delayed
relative to action; however, the concept of force is (generally) that
fundamental objects do not have self forces. In the case of the Universe,
there is no external object and therefore the idea of an external force for
the Universe has no meaning. Since the Universe as a whole does not obey our
physical laws, conservation of energy does not apply to the whole. If
conservation of energy did not apply to a domain for which energy has
meaning, e.g. a domain such as our cosmos, and if energy suffered uniform
loss or gain increasing with energy density (e.g. proportionality) the result
would be runaway gain or deflation toward zero (i.e. exponential behavior.)
Such a cosmos would lack the stability of ours; this suggests that among a
population of cosmological systems there might be a natural selection of
those with energy conservation like behavior. What kind of ‘physics’ would
lead to exponential energy behavior? One example is the case in which action
and reaction do not balance in their net energy effect (e.g. action and
reaction are not equal and opposite of which a special case is self-force)
Definition. The Void is the absence of Being
Consequence. The Void Exists. Explanation.
Given a part of the Universe, its complement—the rest of the Universe—Exists.
Regarding the Universe as a part, its complement which is the Void must also
Exist
At this point doubt is introduced. In other documents,
alternative demonstrations and plausibility arguments are given. Perhaps the
most powerful of the demonstrations is that there is no distinction between
Existence and non-Existence of the Void and therefore the Void may be taken
to Exist. However, doubt seems to remain. Still the Existence of the Void
does not so far seem to be an important conclusion and therefore it is not
yet clear whether this doubt is significant
The Principle of Being—Being has no limits. Explanation.
Since the Void is the absence of Being it has no Law. If the Void had a limit
that limit would constitute a Law. Therefore the Void and, consequently,
Being have no limits
Another form of the Principle of Being—The Universe
has no limits. Explanation. The Universe is Allbeing
Significance. A little imagination reveals and it
will be soon seen that the Principle of Being is immensely powerful
Doubt. Therefore the doubt regarding the principle
is significant. However, the doubt is not that the principle is in any
sense—in terms of meaning or logic—absurd. Rather the doubt seems to be a
feeling of unease regarding the various proofs, e.g. equivalence of Existence
and non-Existence of the Void. Because of the importance of the Principle of
Being it is important to not ignore or minimize this doubt. As noted there
are alternative demonstrations but doubt remains. A plausibility argument
uses the scientific principle called Ockham’s Razor that says, roughly, that
explanatory or predictive hypotheses should be as simple as is consistent
with facts. Applied to what is not in the Universe, the simplest
hypothesis is that nothing is not in the Universe and this implies
that what is in the Universe is ‘everything’ or, in other words, the Universe
has no limits. However, plausibility is not proof. It is therefore important
to address the doubt
Need for Action; Faith. Presence of doubt does not
eliminate the need for action. Faith may be defined as the attitude that is
most conducive of positive outcomes. In view of its consequences, it will be
seen to be worthwhile investing faith in the Principle of Being. Practically,
this entails devotion of some effort to acting upon the principle. In terms
of attitude this entails some investment of faith
Maximizing outcomes. Grant that the Identity of
Atman and Brahman, though not absurd or paradoxical, is not certain (this
lack of certainty is not on account of any incoherence of the Universal
metaphysics—it satisfies strict Logical principle—but on account of
uncertainty in its foundation.) The opportunity presented is immense (on some
valuations.) Identity is one outcome of life and being. Other valued outcomes
are the life well lived, the good society… These outcomes are not exclusive.
Given that Identity is valuable if remote, the maximum net expected value is
likely to be achieved by distributing resources judiciously among the various
outcomes (a trivial implication of what is called ‘optimization theory.’) Faith
is the attitude that is conducive to a net good outcome under uncertainty
(and uncertainty can be seen as a value in that it enhances reward or value
of outcome)
Our World
Our world or cosmos has limits and laws (a world such ours
with laws and that is structured and more or less stable will be called Normal)
Doubt. Assertions that (1) Our world has limits and
(2) The principle that the Universe has no limits constitute and apparent
contradiction. I.e. the Principle of Being appears to violate science and
common Experience. Resolution. The limitlessness of the Universe
implies the necessity of our cosmos with its Laws and limits. That same
limitlessness implies the necessity of many more or less stable Normal worlds
(of Normal behavior—i.e. of laws and limits) against a background of
formlessness and minimal form
From the Principle of Being it appears that every concept
that is in the form of a reference to an object or state of affairs has a
realization in the Universe
Objection. Some descriptions can violate logical
principles. E.g. ‘An apple that is simultaneously entirely green and entirely
not green.’ The description violates the principle of non-contradiction which
is the most secure of logical principles. Response. That a concept or
description that violates logic does not mean that the concept cannot be
formulated; it is therefore not a limit on concept formation (it is perhaps a
necessary aspect of the creation of concepts.) That a concept can be formed
but has no realization seems to be but is not a limit on the Universe: e.g., that
there are lions in Africa and there are no lions in Africa
cannot obtain is not a limit on the Universe (that there are no unicorns
in Africa—or in this Normal World—e.g., as suggested by the fossil record, is
a limit on the world but not on the Universe)
Objection. However, even the principle of
non-contradiction has exception—e.g., as in ‘non-alethic’ logics; although
apparently a priori, logic is empirical over descriptions; remoteness of
origins and that logic is not empirical in the way of factual data gives it
the feel of the a priori. Response. Define Logic—capitalization
distinguishes the concept from logic or the logics—as the requirement on concepts
that they should have reference in the Universe (this entails the concept of Logic
as deduction by considering the fact that when two or more concepts have
simultaneous reference, this may imply a relation among the concepts.) Also,
Logic is not empty because the logics are at least approximations to it or
parts of it
Objection. Some descriptions are semantically
empty—i.e. have no meaning. E.g. ‘The Universe as a whole was moved a mile to
the right.’ That assertion has no meaning because it locates the Universe in
space but there is no space apart from the Universe (the Universe is Allbeing;
and note that by the same reason, space as a whole must be immanent and
relative even though it may be as-if independent and absolute for a part of
the Universe.) Another example is that of irresistible force meeting
immovable object; together, the two notions constitute a violation of viable
semantic form / logic. Response. Thus concepts must have adequacy of
semantic form; generally from semantic and logical considerations Logic is
adequacy of referential form. This suggests that Logic must be far greater in
range of application than the logics and that Logic and science may intersect
at root. It would not be that there are limits to the validity of traditional
logics but to situations where they are applicable (meaningful;) in and out
of such contexts, Logic has unlimited application. The discovery of Logic is
an immense project
Significance. This is perhaps the first coherent
conception of Logic; other conceptions are either approximation or
generalization. The present conception may turn out to be one of first rank
and with immense consequences
Definition. The Logos is the Universe in all its
detail
Consequence. The Logos is or contains the object of
all concepts of adequate referential form (the Logos is the object of Logic)
In today’s world, cosmology is often taken to be physical
cosmology. Here, cosmology is the study of the variety, extension, and
duration of Being in the Universe. It may be argued that on this definition,
cosmology is physical cosmology. However, it will be seen that cosmology is
far more than modern physical cosmology. It may therefore be appropriate to
use the term general cosmology which is what we shall understand by cosmology
Objection. From modern science, cosmology is and
must be general cosmology. Common Experience suggests that there cannot be
anything outside what is revealed in common and scientific observation. Response.
The present general cosmology has been demonstrated by via reasoning that is
necessary. Continued objection. Naturally, doubt will remain. Is not
modern physics our best source of information on cosmology? Response. This
concern is addressed in the next division Religion, Science, and Humanism
On demonstration
From the Principle of Being, demonstrations of
consequences are generally trivial (exceptions will be noted and treated
appropriately.) The following are non-trivial (a) What to prove (b) Meshing
consequences with our world or cosmos (c) Otherwise interpreting consequences
(d) Whether the consequences are significant (robust) and what that
significance is or may be (e) Realizations of consequences
Therefore consequences are stated without explicit
proof—explicit proof is not needed
What to prove is motivated by intent; the intent includes
showing the power of the metaphysics and envisaging and setting up
realization
Meshing with our world may be experimental or conceptual.
The experimental mesh is taken up in the division Journey
in connection with realization; conceptual mesh, e.g. with the theories of
physics or biology, is taken up in other documents and may be taken up in
relation to realization as occasions may arise (but also see brief discussion
of Applied metaphysics in section Future of
science, religion, and the culture of knowledge in division Religion, Science, and Humanism)
Significance and robustness is addressed in this section
There is precisely one Universe
The conclusion is inherent in the present conception of
Universe. The goal here is to show its effective truth
Imagine the Universe as two or more domains which are in
eternal isolation. Each domain is then effectively a Universe for which the
Existence of the others has no significance; in this case we may say that
there are, effectively, many Universes. However, the Principle of Being
implies that such eternal isolation is impossible. Therefore there is
effectively / factually precisely one Universe
Similarly there can not be two entities in the Universe
without interaction. This is a dynamical sense in which there is one Universe
Variety
In modern physical cosmology it is known that there is a
small range of parameters of the fundamental constants that make for a cosmos
with rich structure including life
The Universal metaphysics requires realizations of the
entire range of parameters. It does not distinguish between the values that
make for richness versus poverty of structure. However, together with
physical cosmology, the resulting Applied metaphysics suggests the greater
likelihood and robustness of the rich structures
However, subject only to Logic, the Universal metaphysics
also requires an infinity of kinds physical laws (each with a set of
parameters that may lie in a continuous or discrete range… and perhaps there
may be other kinds of variable that define each kind of law.) It may be
reasonable to expect that a cosmos with life has a particulate character
(which is not exclusive of continuum;) however the metaphysics shows that
this is not necessary
Each system of physical laws is realized in an infinite
number of cosmological systems. Each set of realizations has an infinite
number of repetitions and a further infinity of variations (in law andor
configuration, minor and major)
These realizations occur against a background of
formlessness and Absolute Indeterminism (e.g. no universal laws or patterns,)
minimal form and randomness
Our cosmos may destruct due to internal or external causes
at any time
There are creator, annihilator, and ghost systems; a ghost
is one that passes through another with minimal effect; there are ghost
systems passing through ours at this time
It has been seen earlier that space is immanent in the
Universe rather than absolute and external to it; i.e. for the Universe as a
whole, space (and time) are relative (i.e. part of the fabric of the
Universe.) A discussion of extension-duration is taken up in greater detail
in other documents
Doubt. These conclusions appear to violate science
and common Experience. Response. This is a repetition of the doubt at
the beginning of the earlier section Our World
which has a response to the doubt based in the Universal metaphysics. Further
doubt. The earlier response is complete but does not directly address the
common feeling of reality that science and common Experience define the outlines
of our world and therefore gross deviations violate this sense of reality. Response.
In the division Religion, Science, and
Humanism it is shown that the envelope of standard human
culture—which includes and is defined by science, religion, and humanism—is
neutral to what lies beyond its borders. I.e. if we feel that culture defines
the Universe, that feeling is mistaken; culture allows that what lies outside
its standard boundaries may be infinite. When we feel that standard culture
defines the outline of the Universe it is the result of common but circular
reasoning: we have common view that what is there, and therefore what may be
seen, is limited by what we have seen. The Universal metaphysics is not a
deviation within the boundary of standard cultural knowledge; it fills in the
infinite region outside that pervious boundary
Void State
The fundamental principle requires that the Universe enter
the Void state; and that once in the Void state, a state of manifest Being
will emerge (from earlier considerations of the nature of possibility there
is no distinction between ‘will’ and ‘must’ emerge)
The question of why there is Being at all (something
rather than nothing) is considered to be a major problem of metaphysics;
Martin Heidegger called it the fundamental problem of metaphysics; it is
regarded as unresolved and perhaps unsolvable. The Universal metaphysics
shows that resolution is trivial: if the Universe is in the Void state,
manifest Being must emerge
Considerations of Logic suggest that the Universe enters
the Void state but also that there must be interaction across this singular
state. We saw that when there are apparent logical conflicts, the resolution
lies in Logic. This suggests that the ‘Void’ may be a state of minimal Being
(as in quantum theory) and that there is therefore communication across the
Void
Scripture
The fundamental principle requires that subject to logic,
the various scriptures have realization (on some cosmos; such realization has
no implication for actual history on our Earth)
Thus while there is no God the external creator of the
Universe, there are local gods
The theory of biological evolution and the far more recent
and more speculative theories of cosmological evolution suggest that while
all Logically consistent ‘fictions’ must be realized, the significance of
mere fiction in terms of stability and population is minimal
There are robust configurations such as our cosmos and
life on our Earth, these were earlier called Normal. It is the robust or
Normal configurations that, it is suggested, have the greatest significance.
It is probable that we have little clue as to the range of robust
configurations against the background of formlessness and Absolute
Indeterminism
Immanent creation, as in evolutionary biology and
cosmology, and immanent causation—where there is causation—appears to be more
robust than external creation and god-causation. However, parallel infusion
from one cosmological object to another does not appear to be improbable or
non-robust
A description of the Universe in anthropic terms is
unlikely to be robust. A description in universal terms is far more likely to
be robust. Thus the idea of Atman or self as identical to Allbeing or Brahman
is more robust than the mythic stories of the Abrahamic religions (whose symbolic
and affective significance is not rejected.) While one domain of the Universe
may function as creator for another, immanent creation is more robust than
‘intelligent design.’ The robust character of immanent creation does not
exclude the introduction of seeds from other domains of the Universe
The Universal metaphysics fills out the picture of self as
Allbeing
Since finite Being as finite does not realize the
Universe, realization for a finite Being, which by Logic is necessary, must
occur as an endless journey in variety, summits without limit in variety and
without limit in ‘elevation,’ and dissolutions
Such is the merging of identity with Identity
The experience of identity as Identity is a pathway of
Experience in the transformation of finite Being
The previous section reveals realization of the ultimate
as a journey. The idea the journey is one of experiments, consciously chosen
and iterated or otherwise, that result in pathways. Many paths have blind
ends; a few continue on; goals arise and emerge and sometimes die along
paths; some that seemed to have blind ends come to life later; paths merge.
The idea is of course somewhat metaphorical
Process and becoming are more general than journey. The
idea of a wavefront moving ‘outward’ is a second and coarser metaphor. While
journey connotes first individual then group and aggregate search, wavefront
has the connotation of group then individual and inexorable process. The two
metaphors are not exclusive. They occur together, the journey within
becoming, becoming as the sum of many journeys
Foundation or depth
It is clear that the Void—or any state of Being—may be
regarded as the ‘substance’ of the Universe; but, then, as expression of
Absolute indeterminism, any state of Being may be regarded as the substance
of the Universe; however, if we require that a substance be uniform,
unchanging, and deterministic then there can be no substance and the Void is
not a substance (due to Absolute Indeterminism)
It is clear, though, that the fundamental principle
provides a foundation for the Being of the Universe and therefore for
metaphysics. Though trivial, the metaphysics is ultimate with regard to depth
(foundation.) This result is unanticipated in modern metaphysical thought
where it is held that a metaphysical system requires substance for its
foundation—i.e. without substance, metaphysics can have no foundation (or the
un-foundation of infinite regress)
Variety or breadth
The metaphysics shows that the variety of Being in the
Universe is without limit
This variety is implicitly captured in our
representations; as finite Beings with finitary symbol systems, we cannot
explicitly capture the entire variety via symbolic representation
To the extent possible, the metaphysics is ultimate with
regard to breadth or variety; its capture of the Unlimited breadth is
implicit; the explicit capture is partial
The problems of metaphysics
On account of the ultimate nature of the metaphysics, it
is clear that it has the potential to resolve all meaningful and significant
problems of classical, scholastic, and modern Western metaphysics as well as
the meaningful issues of other metaphysical systems. This is because there is
one true metaphysics, the Universal metaphysics, and the standard major problems
are the result of other, untrue, metaphysics which is guaranteed, not only to
give rise to problems, but to be a problematic
Such resolution as well as detailed considerations on breadth
and depth of the metaphysics may be found in other documents. These documents
also treat problems that are not mentioned here, e.g. the theories of
particular and abstract objects where it is shown that there is no
ontological distinction between the particular and the abstract (a conclusion
that goes against modern thought)
Religion,
Science, and Humanism
Summary
The default cosmology or picture of the Universe in any
culture is the picture provided by the Experience, myths, andor sciences of
the culture. It is characteristic that such views are taken as definitive
It is typical of even reflective individuals to
subscribe at least tacitly to the default view. In the development of an
individual this begins with absorption, enculturation and education. For many
common purposes it is efficient to live and think as though the default view
is the one and valid view of the Universe. An individual may question
the view for intellectual or spiritual purposes but still subscribe to it for
practical and day to day purposes. It may be the view to which a reflective
person reverts in non-reflective moments
The acquisition of the default view as an element of
cultural history is not an easy task. It may have required the labor of the
finest intellects. There is a degree of pressure to subscribe to the view;
such pressure may be external but its most effective form for many is perhaps
the innate desire to know and to be known as knowing. And since there is
limited compass beyond the accumulate
knowledge of a culture there is little direction in imagining and even
less direction in reasoning in the realm beyond the pale of culture
The standard culture often assigns—sometimes tacitly—a
value of infinitesimal or even zero to the region beyond the border of its
known and defined universe. Here, however, that region is shown to be
limitless
It is shown in this division that the standard culture
provides no estimate of the shape, variety, Extension, or Duration of the
region beyond its borders of Experience, imagination, and reason—beyond what
the culture typically regards as the universe
The general human culture may be presented in terms of Religion,
Science, and Humanism. This provides provide understanding of culture and
its limits
A more specific reason for the presentation is this. The
individual who enters the realm beyond the boundary may be possessed of
special insight. Alternatively, such persons may enter into the region beyond
the cultural border via thorough enculturation and recognition of the
pervious character of that border. Such reflective enculturation may combine
with special insight. Careful reflection on the default—here presented in
terms of Religion, Science and Humanism—should be one aspect of preparation
for entering the realm beyond the cultural pale
If the culture provides no estimate of it, is there any
estimating of its ‘shadow’ region? A positive answer has already been given
in the form of the Universal metaphysics
The Universal metaphysics, which is not in
contradiction of what is valid in the cultural picture of the universe,
reveals the region beyond that domain of validity to be without
limit—particularly, it is without limit to its variety, Extension, and
Duration. This Universal metaphysics is the result of imagination and
reason—of conceptual play and insight in the realm of Experience which has
been subject to the sieve of reason (the actual process has included trial
and error)
We saw that for a finite Being, knowledge of this region
does not occur by ideas alone. It requires Experience
This Experience this must be in the form of an endless
journey or adventure in endless variety and with summits of Being without
limit to their elevations … and dissolutions. This Experience must take the
form of transformation of the identity of the individual as it merges with
greater forms of Being
It follows that the essential truth of any future science
andor religion will require an endless Journey in Being for its realization.
It will require participation and immersion in Being
To the main
narrative division Journey
Religion—modern, traditional and primitive religion and
myth—constitutes early culture that has overlap with what could be called
early art and early science; and it constitutes a component of modern culture.
Humanism is a modern substitute for religion that emphasizes that at root the
Universe and world are as seen in science. Therefore modern humanism is often
equated to and may therefore also be called secular humanism. However,
humanism does not insist that human value and quality are reducible to
scientific description. For value and aesthetics humanism turns to
philosophy, art, and history. Humanism may turn to the allegorical side of
religion and to religious interpretations of science for inspiration.
Humanism sees the goal of life as leading a good and rewarding life, and
contributing to and receiving from the common good; therefore technology may
be an instrument of humanism
Traditional religion, science and humanism may be seen as
defining the envelope of standard or patriarchal human culture
The goal of this division, first, is to show the intrinsic
limits of this envelope. What lies outside these limits may be called the
dark regions of human culture. A second goal is to show that standard culture
says nothing and estimates nothing regarding the shape, Extension, and
Duration of this dark or shadow region (even though it is often thought that
estimates are available.) A final goal is to note that the Universal
metaphysics shows that the dark region has no limits
It is shown in other documents that the major scientific
theories are (a) factual over some significant domain and (b) hypothetical
over an extended domain. However, for theories that describe behavior in
detail this extended domain does not extend to the entire Universe. What is
the size of the region outside the domain of application of the scientific
theories? What is the variety of Being in that region? Because the modern
secular Human Being takes science and standard Experience as typical of
Being, the size of the region is often taken as described in the latest physical
cosmology and the variety of Being is often taken by default as more of the
same. However, science is strictly silent on this question of size and
variety. It is also not commonly recognized that the region outside size is
not restricted to the remote in time and space but may also be phenomenal;
e.g. science permits local unseen behavior—the ghost cosmological system.
These define the limits of science. Is it reasonable to assume that the behaviors
that lie outside science are ignorable? If there were no further information
it might be practical to do so for day to day purposes; it would however not
be scientifically or logically correct to do so. Further, it would not be
historically correct for the region of validity of science, e.g. physical
cosmology, changes as fundamental theories change and as new data and
cosmological explanations become available
From the Universal metaphysics we know that the dimension
and variety of the region outside the domains of modern science—science c.
2011—is unlimited. We also know, on account of unlimited variety, that no
science of detail can capture the unending character of that ‘outside.’ This
thought is continued in the later section Future
of science, religion, and the culture of knowledge. The statement
could be made more precise, first, in terms of orders of infinity and,
second, by making it conditional ‘it is unlikely that any science of detail…’
Modern,
Traditional and Primitive Religion
What is the nature of religious content? I.e. what can we
say about the meaning and content of the stories of creation, Being, and
destruction from religion? This content is typically in literal form. The
Universal metaphysics shows that, subject to Logic, every myth is realized
somewhere. It may be argued that even the poetic and the symbolic have
literal interpretation that is therefore realized subject to Logic
What is the significance of this Object content of
religion? Universal metaphysics suggests that where it is lacking in
robustness, its significance is very little—especially for any given
relatively stable world: being true somewhere does not imply either truth or
psychic significance on this Earth or in any more or less stable cosmos.
Along the same lines, the significance for life in a relatively stable world
is greater when a Universal story is stated in Universal rather than human or
anthropic terms. Thus the idea that the Being of the individual mirrors the
Being of the Universe has a more reasonable literal meaning than the converse
which includes the idea that God is a person that welcomes us in heaven. That
the literal meaning is more reasonable does not imply truth; and it does not
imply that the cultural or symbolic significance is greater
Without Universal metaphysics, however, the identity of
self and Allbeing—Atman and Brahman—is merely reasonable; and the full
magnitude remains unimagined and unrecognized. With Universal metaphysics
literal content matches even poetic and symbolic content (for Human Being
poetic-symbolic expression remain valuable)
A doubt. The previous paragraph begins ‘Without the
Universal metaphysics … identity of Atman and Brahman is merely reasonable.’ Is
this true? Response. It is true that the identity has been shown from
the metaphysics. However, has / can it been shown from the metaphysics that
there is no other way of this knowledge? The answer is that it has not / apparently
can not. What does the modern paradigm of scientific empiricism say? It does
not say that such knowing does not exist or that it is not possible; at most
it says that such knowing has not been identified by the paradigm and that it
is apparently not possible via its method (empiricism and reason.) It is not
ruled out that there is no mystic apprehension of the Ultimate. Therefore
while I cannot assert the truth of such apprehension, it has not at present
been refuted. The point is important in relation to the journey (division Journey, below) because mystic apprehension and
other ways deserve experimental trial
The original inspiration for the Vedantic image of Atman
and Brahman is not merely intellectual. It is born also of insight and
feeling. What is the significance of this insight and feeling? It has
psychological interpretation but the significance is not explained away by
such interpretation; the significance remains an open issue from
considerations so far (except that there is the significance of experiment
with such insight)
The
symbolic content from the history of tradition may be immense. Ask What do
we know? The positivist may assert that we know—or even that the Universe
is—only what is demonstrated and the skeptic asserts that we know nothing.
However, the positivist’s assertion depends on the meaning of ‘to know.’ And
if the skeptic is true, how does he or she know that we know nothing? The
skeptic responds with arguments from illusion and an essential gap between
knower and known—Well… I mean that you do not know that you
know anything and so the burden is on you to show that you know what you
claim to know! Later it is shown that we have an immense amount of
knowledge. Here, however, we respond to the skeptic that though knowing that
and how I know (certainty and its degrees) is important in some realms it
cannot have Universal significance because we are often called to action,
even critical action, in situations where we have no certainty. In such
situations, intuitive, pre-conscious, symbolic, and affective content may be
crucially important and even if they do not constitute ‘certified knowledge’
they may still have valid or faithful content. The point is not an assertion
of the validity of such knowing but that, despite positivism-skepticism and
certain kinds of criticism, it is important to be open to the possibility of
such knowing. Journey includes exploration of this possibility. It is clear
that it is more than possibility for intuitive, pre-conscious, symbolic, and
affective creatures succeed in negotiating their environments. This facet of
exploration, then, concerns the role of such content in realization of Allbeing
A simple account of insight and feeling. Cognition
is about the ‘shape’ of the world! Perception is normally bound to shape
(hallucination is unbound ‘perception;’) thought is (relatively) free
formation of images and symbols and so potential or hypothetical
binding to yet unknown shape (realism is introduced via archetypes that arise
in pre-development—e.g., evolution, in development, and cultural institutions
such as reason and science which also have processes that impart at least
degrees of realism;) and there are similar degrees of binding to affect… Simple
emotion and feeling connect via body to action; lower intensities are
dispositions, higher intensities more or less binding (talk of action does
not imply behaviorism.) Cognition and feeling are interwoven, lower levels of
feeling shade cognition and result in realism (vs. autism;) higher intensities
of feeling may stop free thought when action is imperative; also, cognition
and emotion shade into one another and merge in attitude; there is no
perfection here nor meaning to perfection but various errors of emphasis and
self-corrections occur; metaphysically, there are states of openness and
states of connection to Being-as-Being, to Allbeing
In religion two fundamental questions are (1) What are
the Universe, its nature, its power, and its variety? (2) How do individuals
and groups connect to that power, what kinds and ways of connection are
there?
So conceived, religion is the immanent seeking of our
lives; it is immanent in our daily affairs (without being named, or
conceived, or consigned to a contrast with the material or scientific)
In this conception, religion and science—and metaphysics—overlap
but are distinct activities; although religion is often opposed to the
scientific and the secular in referring to different ‘spheres’ or ‘planes’ of
Being, that is not the case; there is but one sphere of Being; stories of
religion address Being and psyche (via the symbolic which may include
the literal; hence the significance—though not literal justification—of
counter-scientific stories)
The absurdity / un-robust character of literal
interpretations of many mythic accounts, is obvious. However, in the present
view, the point to the religions is not limited to the literal (in other
perspectives—e.g. as instrument of enslavement of minds, it may be precisely
the point) In the present view, one point to the religions is the symbolic
truth of the fragile accounts; but that is not all; we would also seek
literal truth; we may think that here, Religion, stumbles but what stumble
are the religions; literal truth is found, for example, in the Universal
metaphysics
As has been seen there is one Universe which has
non-manifest phases. In other phases, e.g. ours, there is structure and
process which must therefore have had genesis. Since there is nothing
external to the Universe, this genesis is immanent in the Universe—creation
is immanent. As individuals we have certain creative powers. As manifest in
civilization and artifact, our total and cumulative creative power is far
greater than that of an individual. However, this total creative power is not
only a part of Immanent Creation (i.e. of the Universe) but it is also true
that our creative power was created in Universal Immanent Creation. Since
there is one Universe, there is one Universal Immanent Creation (which may be
dissected into many.) In some religions there are many gods, in some there is
One God. The many gods may be wood spirits and so on. Sometimes the One God
is given an image, e.g. as a person. These devices are not Universal Creation
but ways of conception and connection. A problem remains. It is evident that
Universal Creation is infinitely greater than the total and cumulative
creation of our species. The problem is (a) to understand this power and (b)
to relate to it and to derive from its power. These are the problems stated
at the beginning of this section. This lies at the center of Religion
Modern rational man, material man, literal man, and
scientific man, have largely mistaken the nature of religion; in this they
are perhaps not to be blamed because even modern religious man has largely
mistaken the nature of religion
Because religion is an element of culture and because we
are among the creators of culture, positivist, empirical, anthropological,
paleological, or historical approaches to the conception of religion are
always incomplete (unless the culture under study is the ultimate Universal
Culture)
For natural objects, however, our contribution to their
known nature is limited to how our cognitive system contributes to the forms
of the appearances—or so it would seem. However, Universal metaphysics shows
that any domain or part of the Universe may be implicated in the creation of
the (form of) any other. We may imagine, as a thought experiment, a god
working out various ideas experimentally until hitting upon the structure of
our / other cosmological systems. The Universal metaphysics shows, however,
that this is not merely a thought experiment and that, whatever ‘god’ means,
we participate in it / him / her. Our contribution to nature may be ignorable
but is not zero
In defining—reflecting on the nature and content of—religion
and in practicing it we contribute to its conception. Regarding Religion as,
fundamentally, connection to power (above understanding, say scientific, of
power,) Religion must be not merely of another or imaginary world but must be
the realization via an entire Being and community of Beings of Allbeing; it
is the realization by Being in all its dimensions of Allbeing
Universal metaphysics shows the envelope of this Ideal and
Ultimate conception of Religion. The Ultimate in realization is Brahman or
Allbeing
In the ideal there is a merging of the activities of
science and religion; and, as seen from the Universal metaphysics, this
merging is greater than even synergistic combination (because such synergy,
though greater than either science or religion, does not entail the Universal
metaphysics that must be an element of Religion)
For finite Being the merging is the journey in endless
variety, summits without limit to elevation… and dissolutions
Taken literally regarding their intended literal subject
matters, secular humanism and religion are typically mere shadows of the
truth revealed by Universal metaphysics. As literal, science does not come
close to the variety, extension, and duration seen in the metaphysics. As
literal, the truth of traditional religious metaphysics is extremely fragile
(un-robust.) As metaphor and symbol (and in some cases as plausible,) it is
traditional Religion that approaches the truth of the Universal metaphysics
but the approach remains fractional for it often shows only a fractional idea
but not the full fact of Being-as-journey-without-limit-to-variety-or-summit;
and where it suggests the fact it lacks demonstration and is therefore
deficient in the metaphysical aspects of the means of journey
Conflict between secularism and religion is unfortunate.
The literal truth of secularism—including science and common Experience—is
immensely limited; the literal truth of religion at best suggestive or
remote. The Universal metaphysics reveals a far greater literal-‘material’
domain
The appropriately interpreted symbolic truths of
secularism and of traditional religion complement one another and may be suggestive
of the truth in the Universal metaphysics. In the Universal metaphysics the
literal and the symbolic are united (the symbolic remains useful.) The
conflict between secularism and religion remains a veil, one of many,
shrouding the ultimate. Men remain in conflict among the foothills when,
instead, they might unite to ascend the mountain
Future of Science,
Religion, and the Culture of Knowledge
For finite Beings, realization of the Ultimate must be an
endless journey in variety without end or limit, summits without limit and
dissolutions
This must be the future of any viable ultimate form of
what is essentially true in science, religion, and humanism—of the envelope
of culture. This is not a prediction for our or any human civilization. The
Universal metaphysics shows (1) That it must occur, (2) That its occurrence
for finite Being will be in process and by immersion, and (3) For our
civilization and our particular Being it will occur via Identity if not in
fact; but if it occurs in fact it must occur via journey and immersion and
will and can not occur as cognitive process (on standard interpretations of
‘cognition.’) Further details and demonstration may be found in other
documents
Any science, religion, and the culture of knowledge of the
ultimate future will be ‘knowledge’ by participation and immersion rather
than by remote re-presentation (and the Applied metaphysics mentioned in the Introduction will be an aspect of this
process)
The Applied metaphysics combines together the Universal
metaphysics and traditional knowledge and claims to knowledge (myth and
religion, science and philosophy and other elements of world culture) The
actual development is in other documents
The Applied metaphysics is a synergy of the Universal
metaphysics and the local and traditional disciplines (which include the
modern.) It is a synergy in that the Universal provides a framework and
enhancement of the local; and the local illustrates the Universal. Though typically
particular, the Applied metaphysics is perfectly faithful in some general
treatments, e.g. of mind and of space, time and Being; here the Applied metaphysics
is metaphysics even though particular or specialized. It may reach the limit
of faithfulness possible in some contexts, and may be sufficiently faithful
to be useful in still others; in these cases the Applied metaphysics is not
true metaphysics. Although necessarily a knowledge patchwork, the Applied
metaphysics the best possible knowledge of the entire Universe—as noted it is
a synergy of the Universal and our local understandings. Therefore, while
Applied metaphysics is an epistemic (knowledge) patchwork, it is perfect from
the point of view of the value of knowledge and, from this point of view, may
be considered to be part of the Universal metaphysics
For a finite Being the culture of immersion and
participation will be a journey or adventure without end
Journey
The journey is introduced as a way of fullness in Being.
The process is realized via ideas and experiments in transformation of Being.
Sources for the ideas and experiments are the Universal metaphysics and its
implications for Being and process; Experience and reflection; engaging in
and learning from experiment; and human culture—traditional and modern
As understanding, ideas are pivotal in thinking about the
process; as Experience, ideas are appreciation—i.e., Ideas are essential.
However, in their Normal meaning, ideas are an incomplete mode of Being and
realization
Therefore, division into ideas and transformation sets up
a journey. The actual journey lies in the process of adventure without end in
variety, summits-whose-elevations-are-without-limit-followed-by-dissolutions
The conclusion to the division and this narrative opens up
to a Journey in Being
Traditional developments have theories of the immediate
(science, human nature) and ultimate; and ways and catalysts. These are found
in the following—developed; and given rationale, illuminated, integrated
by the metaphysics
Today we think of science and religion as distinct.
Originally, perhaps, there was no distinction or even naming ‘religion’ (or
‘science.’) Culture was more an integral whole and, rather than having
distinct elements with individual and internal criteria, the whole was
subject to external criteria of adaptation (this is of course simplification
and the truth must invariably lie within a continuum.) The concern with
literal truth was not as explicit as it has become. An aspect of the
emergence of philosophy and then science was the emergence of the possibility
of and criteria for explicit truth, though incomplete and not entirely
perfect, of specialized forms of knowledge. This forced myth / religion,
whose meaning may be regarded as symbolic, into a reactive and unnecessary
defense of literal content
We may view science (and philosophy) on the one hand
and religion on the other as follows. Science is understanding of the
Universe; Religion shows how to relate to the Universe (it is obvious that
the power of the Universe is far greater than individual power but it is not
obvious how the individual may relate to or draw from Universal power)
The Universal metaphysics and its development result in
the following conclusions. The magnitude, duration, and variety of the
Universe are infinitely greater than seen in modern science. Generally, the
literal truth of the historical and major religions is at best fragile. The
their future / rational / ultimate development, science-philosophy and
religion merge in a journey of ideas and transformation of being—i.e.,
journey-adventure of unlimited variety, endless summits of unlimited
elevation, and dissolutions of Being at its summits
An ideal of rationality might eliminate myth as an
instrument of transformation. However, the Universal metaphysics shows that
as finite Being we do not outgrow experiment. Myth and faith, perhaps never
precise, are essential instruments of finite Being in its enterprise of
realization of the ultimate. And the ultimate for finite Being is not in
Ideas (in their Normal form) alone but must be in the body which includes
feeling, all psyche, and flesh
This division is a template for myth and representation;
for relation of the finite and the unlimited
The journey is a way of fullness in Being and living—it is
use of all dimensions of Being toward a good—perhaps best—realization of Allbeing
The terms ‘good’ and ‘best’ suggest concern with ethics
and morals. Given that our Being is infinitesimal, the essential problem of
ethics is one of discovery. In that ultimate realization what will be the
ethical ideal… will it be anything like our human ideals… will it have any
significance? We see and will continue to see that the answers must, for
finite Being, be in-process and not to be given in a treatise or a speech or
an imploration and then taken as given; even the thought that we, in our
present form, are moving in the direction of some Universal Ideal is in
error; any ideal requires that our form be in process and that we do not
conceive the ideal while in this form. In our present form we have the
following practical and interactive sources of morals and ideals (1)
Being—our body and psyche, (2) Practical ethics—e.g., the ethical systems of
the various religions and related systems; these include local oral
traditions, and (3) Conceptual or philosophical ethics
This notion of journey would be a definition of a
concept of Ideal Religion—Religion as deployment by Human individuals and
groups of all dimensions of their Being in the best moral-aesthetic
realization via all modes of process and relation (perceiving, cognizing,
feeling, changing, becoming) of Allbeing, immediate and remote
Talk of the ‘good,’ of ethics and aesthetics suggests
seriousness and intellect for it is true that these ideas have been taken
over to a significant degree by philosophers and self-proclaimed moralists.
There is a role for careful reflection and, of course, for caring morality.
Nothing in these thoughts, however, excludes enjoyment or exuberance in Being
Journey emphasizes the endless of realization in
variety, summit without limit, dissolution. It is experimental, without dogma
of mere belief. It is of this world and the Ultimate—each mirrored in and
enhancing the other. Realization is in process interaction between the world
and the Ultimate; it is neither easy nor difficult: it is being on the way to
the Ultimate. Journey is not about showing the way—teacher and pupil—it is
about the relationship of persons to truth
An Ultimate Value—for finite Being, realization of
the Infinite and the Eternal—the Unbounded and the Unlimited—is Ultimate
Attitude—for action: faith. Preliminary attitude—willingness
to relinquish preconceived self-affirming, self-limiting character of
standard world views; Tantric neutrality toward the draw and repulsion of the
Normal
The Universe has no limits
Individuals have no absolute limits except as necessary
from coexistence
The Experience of limits of this world is Normal
Journey is process in two worlds, Normal and Universal,
and in relating these worlds
Logos is the limit of understanding of Normal and the
Universal. Cosmology reveals the variety, extension, and duration of Being.
Understanding of Identity reveals the already present of image the Universe
in the individual… and journey as realization. Metaphysics shows the closed
and open parts of understanding—i.e. depth and breadth (or foundation and
limitlessness, or the unformed and the formed)
Limits of our standard culture are embodied in common
forms of science, religion, and humanism; these stand in contrast to but
within the Universal metaphysics; our world is an infinitesimal fragment of
the Universe. This is an occasion for the Journey in Being
The Journey is endless realization of finite Being
in variety, summit without limit, dissolution. It is experimental, without
dogma of mere belief. It is of Normal worlds and the Ultimate—each mirrored
in and enhancing the other. Realization is in process interaction between the
world and the Ultimate
From the World
to the Universe
I.e. from the Normal to the Ultimate—e.g., from the Brihadaranyaka
Upanishad:
From the unreal lead me to the real;
From darkness lead me to light:
From death lead me to deathlessness.
The Normal
The Normal and its modes and limits are adaptive
Body—Whole Being. Includes but is deeper
than psyche; this is a more inclusive view of body than (reductionist) views
that see the body is merely a base component—as a lump; the two views are not
necessarily in opposition but their difference can be seen as their having a
different conception of ‘body.’ This greater view of body: an expression
of adaptation—sufficiently complex to contain a variety of physiological
functions for self-sufficiency-in-an-environment,
interdependence-communication, and self-expression
Psyche—Cognition-emotion is about the shape
of the world and human action which require degrees of binding and freedom (see
the earlier discussion A
simple account of insight and feeling) and which obtains in
background, pre-conscious, conscious, and symbolic levels; Humor is
adaptation to the unpredicted and unpredictable; A personality is,
approximately, a style of cognition and emotion in relating to self, other,
world; Psychosis is, in one aspect, disintegration of psyche, on
another about re-integration and inclusion (of other, of Identity)
The ideas of Spirit and Soul are already present
in those of Body, Psyche, and Identity. Spirit and soul are therefore
rendered unnecessary (though not, therefore, without use)
The Ultimate
Fullness of Being—the best realization of Allbeing is an
ultimate Human value (as we are in the process, quality of action and goals
are rewarding)
A way to the extra-normal is via the Normal—
In the Normal, the body is the organism which includes
psyche. In the extra-normal, the body is also its flows and relations, the
communal body, the world, and in the ultimate, the Universe
Ultimate form of the body. The way to the ultimate
is transformation of body. Willing self-sacrifice, denial of body-needs,
crucifixion are examples. They have symbolic content for others—are powerful
for some; transformative content for the crucified (crucifixion without
internal / external meaning is empty as in derogative uses of the term martyrdom.)
Yet, these are scratches on the surface of the ultimate. An incremental
approach, perhaps combined with body-sacrifice involving the whole body
(psyche, community, species…) will be most effective
The port of entry to the journey to the ultimate is the body…
in the non-reductive meaning of body as including psyche and, from the Principle
of Being, on up to the Universe. I.e., the ‘body’ is the body and psyche of
the individual, the body of the community, the body of the world… the body of
the Universe; which, in the ultimate, have no absolute distinction. In this
general and non-exclusive interpretation, body is Being
In transformation there may be physical travel. However,
the journey must essentially include descent into self, i.e. in the body.
Symbolic, cognitive, affective content—aspects of psyche—are not other than
body. Again, given that the body is—merges with—the Universe, there is no distinction
between inner and outer, between travel and change
The idea of a way
Connection of the dimensions / layers of individual and
group to the World and Universe in their dimensions and range (variety,
extension, and duration)
The Ways—a beginning
This section on The Ways lays out a practical
approach to the way from this world to the ultimate. It is in outline
because, in entire Human History, we seem to have made but a beginning. That
assertion remains true even when Universal metaphysics is taken to be part of
that history; this is because the form of the metaphysics is that is a system
of ideas. We therefore cannot lay out systems such as in the texts of the
major religions; what truth those texts contain is truth presented as Truth.
From the aspect of Being, Truth is realized in process (per the Universal
metaphysics.) The approach comes from an interactive combination of the
traditional systems and the Universal metaphysics. It addresses the layers of
the person as in the section The Normal,
above. The ways are paths through some traditional dimensions of Being—Nature,
Culture and Society via Psyche and body, that aim to the Ultimate.
The process is an iterative one of experiment, revelation, and reflection
Aim—bridge from world to Universe; Self to
Universal Identity—Atman to Brahman
Approach—the ways begin by addressing the aspects
of Human Being identified in the section The Normal,
above
Experiment—In ideas and transformation… on the way
to Identity; Minimal system—a minimal system to cover the range of
Being
Psyche—Yogas of Gita, adapted to the present
metaphysical psychology; Raja Yoga as meditative connection; Gnâna Yoga as
direct knowledge with support from perception, conception and being-in; Karma
Yoga as connection through service; Bhakti Yoga is, roughly, the Yoga of
Worship and full absorption in ‘God’ but may be, instead, interpreted as
connection to the Ultimate expressed lightly in how we live and relate and
are
Body—rite of passage; catalysts as on the way to
body transformation. Body includes psyche and person, body of community, body
of the world, the Universe; in this non-exclusive sense it is the instrument
of transformation. Inclusive of and further reaching than the Yogas (above.)
We want to see the body (in the present extended sense) as including the
expression of the Ultimate in the individual
Mystic immanence of Ultimate Identity—pre-conscious,
symbolic-emotive—‘Lift a stone and I am there’
Transparent immanence—cognitive, symbolic—subject
to adequacy of form, every concept is realized
The individual—ideas and theories, catalysts to
extra-normal states
Culture—relations to others (morals) and group
process; symbols; patriarchal or normal institutions and shared practice,
stories, art, places, communities—and action; charismatic influence
Symbolic meaning of Judaic and Christian faith; realism
of an angry god; golden rule as self-improving
Samkhya, Gita, and Buddhism as preparation for
(a) Yoga of the individual—and Theravada Buddhism, (b) Yoga as equality and
unity of humankind—Mahayana Buddhism
Nature—place of intimacy with Being and connection
to the Ultimate; nature as ground to the Ultimate and on the way to it…
Deep knowledge—knowing as living-in... Being-in-nature…
sky… perception over thought
Vision—place and catalyst—disintegration and
reintegration of psyche; a place of mystic immanence
Charisma—and Vision
On Fear. There are persons who fear death; in the Normal
context, death is unavoidable. There are persons fear pain or loss of mental
faculties though not death itself. Pain may be unavoidable. Is it irrational
to fear what is unavoidable? The rational part of that fear may have the
function of avoidance of unnecessary pain or self-destruction. The following
response is possible—Why should I fear that which I do not know whether I
will or will not be able to manage, e.g. pain or loss of faculties? Why
should I fear what is either avoidable or unavoidable? Why should I fear what
is in the future? When the time comes I will manage or I will not but why
should I fear now? Even if natural, is that not a mistake? The answer is
somewhat complex since, first, fear of what cannot be controlled may be a
mistake but it is not easy to distinguish what can be controlled; and,
second, there is a functional degree of fear that motivates appropriate
action
Emotional responses are often regarded as fully
determined by situation but are not because they interact with perception
which may be in error, with thought and interpretation which are often in
error; and further, dysfunctional emotion may be ‘retrained.’ Additionally a
person’s emotional responsivity may change as the body changes, e.g., with
age (the reflections of this paragraph probably have some similarity to the Rational
Emotive Therapy of Albert Ellis, 1913-2007.) However, the retraining of
cognition-emotion may require time and application, first, in reflection
during times where there is no actual crisis or perception of crisis but in
which the conditions of crisis may be simulated, and, second though not
entirely distinct from the first, in actual crises of fact or Experience.
Such change is multi-factorial depending on application (retraining) and
general patterns of living and thought (healthy.) One goal is the achievement
of a healthy pattern of cognition-emotion-action. However, a higher goal may
be sought. This goal is not achieved with appropriate crisis response; the
individual may attempt to move from a negative region of cognitive-emotional-active
patterning to a positive region; this is significantly enhanced by having a
balance between living in the here and now and positive though sufficiently
malleable goals that are responsive to circumstance and understanding of the
world. In the limit, by reaching through self and body, the individual finds
and is in an approach to the Ultimate
On Death. In the Ultimate there is no
death-as-final. In the Normal there is death and Experience of death (as an
idea, as in the experience of ebbing of life, and as in the death of others.)
In the Normal, the Experience of death must have an as if finality (even
though not invariably absolute finality.) This finality, even if but
apparent, is immensely significant. The individual who addresses the issues
of death and pain has addressed a block, perhaps the fundamental block, to
fullness of Being. Perhaps even more importantly, in those that have not
Experienced infinitude, the crisis of finitude is catalytic to that
Experience. The crisis of death has always the potential to catalyze
transformation. In an Existentialist psychology, the crisis of death forces,
catalyzes, or precipitates appreciation of life and its value. In a Universal
psychology, one derived from both Universal metaphysics and normal
Existential human nature, the crisis of death catalyzes the same Existential
appreciation. However, on a Universal (supra-Normal) reckoning, it also
catalyzes, first, appreciation of the magnitude of the Universe and the
Identity and, second, entrance into a real journey of realization. The
reckoning with death and pain is a fundamental instrument in Be-ing
The Appendix
suggests sources for further development
The adventure now facing us is that of realization
This adventure will require imagination (to see
possibilities,) reason (to test for reasonableness,) and experiment and risk
in realization
A central guide will be the Universal metaphysics
Another guide will be the traditional systems mentioned
above
These may be found in detail in other documents. Following
is the most recent detailed document Journey in being: a detailed
version
That document narrates some preliminary experiments
Here, since the Universe opens up before us and what has
come before in our lives is infinitesimal, we provide no further detail
We will return later with stories of our Ideas,
Experiments, and Adventures
Appendix on
Source Material
This appendix functions as an outline of sources. A
primary emphasis in the selection of sources is the material of the section From the World to the Universe of the
previous division
Ideas (theories.) The metaphysics and its
methods; dynamics; psychology of depth; science and technology. India: Veda,
Upanishad, Samkhya, Gita
Catalysts. E.g., Shamanic—e.g., isolations,
exertions, extreme environments; Yogas; Mystic practice, meditation, mantra,
affirmation; modern e.g. isolation tank and hypnosis; disruption and
opening-up of psyche to inner-outer truth; living through and rebuilding
System of experiments—minimal; cover range of Being
Culture—institutions: self, group
(society)—relations and mutual process (morals;) symbol and system, language;
culture—creation, expression (art) and transmission. Patriarchal
institutions—religion, church-structure; science, technology, art, history,
secular structure. Charisma—influence of person—intelligence,
magnetism, energy, ruthlessness…
Patriarchy is standard; it provides guarantees; it has
guarantees even while it has degrees denial of individuality and freedom; it
is of this world… Charisma is singular; if always present, its moment or one
of its moments is the breakdown of patriarchy; it has no restriction to this
world… Therefore, the measure of effectiveness as the effectiveness of
patriarchal institutions is ever incomplete; but the measure of charisma
which is essentially singular, is, even if thinkable, close to being
irreducible to causal or statistical formula
Shared practice—sharing; cumulation of
insight-accomplishment from special psychic and physical energies
Stories, sacred and shared practice—Art,
literature, music; Ritual; Architecture, and place
Cultural process—action (creation, knowing, choice,
decision) and trans-action
Some sources. Major religions. 1.
Trans-cultural—Abrahamic religions (includes Mysticism,) Religions of Indian
origin (Samkhya-Yoga, Bhagavad-Gita…,) … and of Iranian origin; 2.
Indigenous. 3. New religious movements. Other modern sources—Behavioral,
faith based and 12-step programs. Sects. 1. Gnostic. 2. Mystic. Culture.
Instruments of knowledge and relation
Process. Evolution, Dynamics
Being. Physical—elementary through molecular
through bulk or macroscopic. Organic—molecular through organism. Of
psyche—organic through psyche (psyche: mind-person-body; spirit is implicit)
Nature and ways of realization. Nature as a place
of intimacy with Being and connection to the Ultimate. Human Being knows this
and something of it. Nature is of the Ultimate and on the way to it. Common
Experience and representation of nature is that it is of the Normal; but it
is not entirely so; and it is therefore of the Ultimate
Deep knowledge. Knowing as living-in...
Being-in-nature… the sky… perception over thought
Sources
I know little about the destination of the journey which
is, anyway, a process
It therefore seemed that—for present—a brief, eclectic,
suggestive, and in-process collection is best
Sources I have used may be found at A
General Bibliography. This bibliography, though dated, may be useful
(since the time I constructed the bibliography I have found it more useful to
be eclectic than comprehensive)
Here is the most detailed recent document with
extensive sources on traditional approaches to transformation of psyche—Journey in being: a detailed
version
The texts of the major religions may contain useful source
material. I find the following to have use
The Bhagavad-Gita; the Yogas of the Gita
include what in another setting would be called ‘mystic practices’ for direct
rather than merely intellectual connection with a greater real
The Advaita Vedanta, of Adi Samkara, 788 to 821
CE
The Upanishads appear to be suggestive but
require further study before definite listing
Regarding the texts of Judaism, Christianity, Islam,
and Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism, I have found eclectic inspiration. I
have found their metaphysical systems to often be at least apparently
fragile. At present I have neither resources nor sufficient familiarity to
make recommendations on these texts
I have learnt much from my exposure to the history of
thought. This influence may be clearer and is made explicit in other
documents. Here, as acknowledgment by a writer and as suggestion for readers,
I note the names of the main influences without citing texts. The selection,
which has no intent to be comprehensive over my thought or history importance, reflects influence on my
thought more than importance
In philosophy—especially metaphysics but also
logic, ethics and natural philosophy under which, for purposes of this essay,
I include the theories of science and mathematics—Parmenides, Plato, Aristotle,
Adi Samkara, Johannes Scotus Eriugena, Giordano Bruno,
René Descartes, Baruch Spinoza, Isaac Newton, Gottfried Leibniz, David Hume,
Immanuel Kant, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Arthur Schopenhauer, GWF Hegel, Franz
Brentano, Bernhard Riemann, Gottlob Frege, Georg Cantor, Friedrich Nietzsche,
Ludwig Wittgenstein, Martin Heidegger, Albert Einstein, Karl Popper, Kurt
Gödel, Werner Heisenberg, Erwin Schrödinger, PAM Dirac, John Bell
There are modern stories of adventure: Darwin’s Voyage of
the Beagle, Einstein’s ideational adventures in space-time-being, Watson and
Crick’s work in the structure and replication of DNA; these works, though limited from the
perspective of experiment, reveal much about the world that is useful to
‘journey’
I have found little of value to journey in works that
see Religion through a reductionist prism of our modern paradigm of
empiricism and reason; the tendency of such works is to exclude what is
valuable in our world and the culture being studied
Here are some accounts at the boundaries between our culture
and indigenous cultures
Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man
of the Oglala Sioux, The Premier Edition, 2008, SUNY Press
The Heart of the World. A Journey to Tibet’s Lost
Paradise, 2004, by Ian Baker has some interesting syntheses of modern
thought and Tibetan Buddhism rendered as a journey
Make Prayers to the Raven: a Koyukon View of the Northern
Forest, 1983, Richard K. Nelson
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