The
way of being Contents
and summary Experience as the beginning of discovery Meaning. Existence. A first meaning for objectivity An existent
is a concept-object. With sufficient abstraction, there is objectivity. The world, individuals, and civilizations a being is an
existent; being is existence. the void is the being
that has no part. The fundamental principle of metaphysics In the void there are no constraints, therefore all
possible states emerge from the void. The universe
is the greatest possible being. The universe is the logically possible universe. Attitudes toward the real metaphysics
Notation The way and its origins
The aim of the way of being is
living well in the world and shared discovery and realization of the
ultimate.
An ultimate, if there is one, would be present in
the immediate; it would not be alien to the immediate, in the way of
traditional ‘ultimates’. If we do not see the ultimate, it is
because we do not yet see well enough. The aim of being will be seen to be the aim of
being. The way of being is a way of realizing the aim. The origin of way, and a source for discovery and
realization, is in the story the world—material, animal, human, and
personal. Experience as the beginning of
discovery
However, let us also seek discovery beginning in
the immediate—in conscious experience. experience is
consciousness or subjective awareness in all its forms. There is experience, and there is experience of
experience. Experience as consciousness is effectively, the
place of knowing, negotiating, and enjoying the real in life and beyond
death; it is the effective place of ‘being’, becoming, designing,
and realization.
A view of the world as experiential is therefore
powerful as the intrinsic place of realization. If this view could be rendered objective, then, e.g. via science and technology, it would also be
instrumental. It would be powerful as intrinsic place and instrumental means
of realization. Can objectivity and reliability be found from the
experiential view? Is experience limited in space by our world, and in time
by birth and death? One approach to objectivity might be to
‘extract’ materialism from the experiential view. Instead, we
will find objectivity from within the experiential view; the meaning of
objectivity will be altered but enhanced. The emergent view will have
idealist and materialist sides but be neither. That there are experience and experience of
experience is known by abstraction of
what is definite and undistorted from the welter of phenomena. This is perhaps an effective place to begin to
discover the world—the possibility of objectivity or otherwise, and the
nature of the limits of bodies and birth and death. Meaning. Existence. A first meaning
for objectivity
A concept—an
instance of ‘experience of’ (in which intention or relation is
implicit) In the case of pure experience, the referent is
open or null. A concept and its possible objects constitute concept meaning (in linguistic meaning,
concepts include bare signs in association with iconic concepts). Pragmatically and effectively, an existent is a concept-object. But with
sufficient abstraction, though the concept is not eliminated, yet the object
is definite and perfectly known because the concept is faithful to
it—the concept is a perfect or objective
stand-in for the object (and this language in which concept and object are
dis-intertwined is perfectly permissible). How far objectivity can be taken
is further addressed in the real metaphysics.
In summary of this paragraph— An
existent is a concept-object. With sufficient abstraction, there is
objectivity.
That there are experience and experience of
experience says, also, that there is existence. Where there is a concept and possible objects but
no actual object, there is nonexistence— The world, individuals, and
civilizations
Within
experience there is a world whose reality or
existence is intuitively obvious. However, it is a powerful source of metaphysical knowledge or knowledge of the real, to not
assume reality of the experience of the world but to demonstrate it, for
demonstration is a way to precise and complete knowledge.
Within experience there is an experiencer
or individual self. Whereas the
existence of experience is ontologically transparent, existence of
individuals, other persons, civilizations,
the world is not (even though it seems obvious to intuition). It is a
powerful source of realism to attempt to show the existence of individuals
and the world. However, this will not be explicitly attempted
in this brief work (it is done in other linked versions).
Yet, we will be able to conclude objectivity of the world later, in the real metaphysics. This will require significant upward
revision of the typical intuitive and ‘obvious’ picture of the
world—to an ultimate picture of the universe as the greatest possible. Being
a being is an existent; being is
existence.
There is
being and there are beings, at least as instances of experience. As said earlier, objectivity, which includes that
beings are more than instances of experience, will emerge with the narrative. The universe is all being.
The
universe exists; equivalently, it is a being, or has being. Since there is no other being, the universe has and
can have no effective cause—i.e.,
cause in the sense of interaction. The universe is not created. Beings are parts of the universe. the void is the being that has no part.
Existence
and nonexistence of the void are equivalent; therefore, the void may be said
to exist. laws of nature, i.e. patterns everywhere present in a world,
exist—they have being or, equivalently, they are beings. There are
no laws in the void. The fundamental principle of
metaphysics
For a possible being to not emerge from the void,
would be a law of the void. All possible states emerge from the void. The previous sentences, beginning with ‘laws of nature’, may be contracted to
one— In the void there are no constraints, therefore
all possible states emerge from the void.
Which implies the fundamental
principle of metaphysics— The universe is the greatest possible being.
This knowledge is true and objective. It is real in
the sense that the real is the object
of the truth. ‘Greatest’ does not mean
‘best’. However, the greatest does include the good—and the
best in any meaningful sense of the term. If a logically possible being does not exist, the
universe is not the greatest possible; a logically impossible being cannot
exist. Therefore, the greatest possible and the logically possible are
identical, and the universe is the logically possible universe. In summary of
this paragraph— The universe is the
logically possible universe.
The real metaphysics
The truth of the essentially objective knowledge so
far is derived via abstraction. It implies that our world necessarily exists
as it is (but does not imply it is as we might think it to be). The universe
as the greatest, reveals an ideal but does not show as how to realize it or
how we relate interactively to it. Pragmatic knowledge-in-action, of which the
abstract ideal is a boundary case, which includes our ancient through modern
traditions regarded as ever open to modification and never as dogma, though
imperfect by traditional criteria, is the only, and therefore, an ideal
instrument of realization and relation. The ideal illuminates and guides the
pragmatic; the pragmatic illustrates and is instrumental toward the ideal;
the two, while dual, are a synthetic unity; which we name the real metaphysics, and which is the means of
realization. It is in relation to the ideal of realization, in the ultimate
and in-process in the immediate, that, even where not objective by
traditional criteria, the real metaphysics is perfect by values it reveals.
It is in this sense that human knowledge has objectivity. The pragmatic side of the real metaphysics, our
local knowledge, is ever in process – in interaction with action. The
real metaphysics itself is in process and includes interaction with action. The epistemology associated with this dual
metaphysics is dual: perfection for the ideal, pragmatic for pragmatic. Yet,
from the revealed values, it is a perfect synthetic unity. It is unlike
traditional through modern epistemologies, which tend to prefer
‘purism’, as if ordinary purity of epistemic criteria might
result in perfection of knowledge. The new epistemology devalues but does not
eliminate interest in traditional through modern epistemology. Individuals and civilizations have being. An immediate consequence of the fundamental
principle is that individuals and civilizations inherit the power of the
universe as the greatest realization of possibility; otherwise
it would not be the greatest. Let us develop further consequences of the
fundamental principle—consequences within the metaphysics. There are
consequences for the metaphysics and its nature, and the problems of
metaphysics, ancient and modern, and, in consequence, the entire range of
human knowledge. Here we develop only some transparent consequences for
realization. The
universe has identity or conscious sense
of self and world. The universe and its identity are without limit. The only
limit on hypothetical beings is the constraint of logic, i.e.
the universe is as ‘rich’ as possible. The universe has phases of
local and ultimate peak manifestation
and dissolution as the void. Individuals
and civilizations inherit the power of the universe. They merge as one in
peaks of being—occasionally in ‘this life’ and always
beyond death as the apparent end of
‘this life’ (which is real but not absolute and therefore a
‘teacher’ in this life). The
immediate world is embedded in a limitlessly greater universe, which we do
not see at present. More precisely, we do not see the immediate and the
greater as distinct. There are
intelligent, effective, and enjoyable paths
to the peak. To be on a path requires living well in this life as platform to
realization. The way cannot avoid the negative but the best approach to the
negative joins direct address and being on a path. To be on a path is not
just to follow, but to negotiate and share realization and, simultaneously,
develop paths. The means
of realization is the real metaphysics. enjoyment in its broadest sense is a
value. This includes deferment of ‘lesser’ enjoyment in the
interest of the ‘greater’. Consequently, the aim of being is the
aim of the way of being. The essential conclusions include that— The universe and the individual are ultimate and
ultimately equivalent. There are effective and enjoyable paths to the
ultimate. There is an imperative to be on and to develop paths.
Attitudes toward the real metaphysics
As the expression of logic, the real metaphysics is
internally consistent. Since a given world ‘is what it is’, that
it is not another possibility is consistent with the real metaphysics (and
the very concept of possibility). Particularly, the real metaphysics is not
inconsistent with science for science is part of ‘what the world
is’. Further, scientific theories are models of the empirical and any
projection beyond the empirical is not necessary; therefore, there is no
contradiction between the theories of science and the real metaphysics. However, we may doubt the proof of the fundamental
principle from its magnitude and the nature of the proof—particularly
the derivation of existence of the void. An alternative proof is that the
universe and void have unconditional being,
i.e. being without exception, and are therefore
universe-and-void is necessary, without presumption. From symmetry both
manifest universe and void must exist but neither eternally, therefore the
universe must phase between manifest nonmanifest. Again, from symmetry, for
the universe to be only one cosmos such as ours is a violation of symmetry,
and it must therefore be all possible worlds. Necessity may be
regarded as the cause of the universe. Necessary cause is distinct from
effective cause.
And, now, here is a
heuristic—universe as the logically possible is the boundary of all
science. Thus, even if we doubt it, the fundamental
principle is reasonable. Therefore, from doubt— Two
alternative attitudes to the fundamental principle
arise (i) as an axiom of metaphysics and (ii)
given the value of its ideal, to regard it as an existential principle of action.
To hold
doubt and confidence simultaneously, is powerful. Certainty is empty;
ontological nihilism is confused. The way
The
means of realization is the real metaphysics, as it incorporates action and
tradition. The means include incremental analysis and action, and catalytic
transformation via effects on emotion.
The real metaphysics incorporates tradition—e.g. science and technology, which is instrumental, and
yoga in which it is being or beings that are transformed, e.g. by meditation,
mindful action, and yogic practice. It is inherent in the real metaphysics
that all this is taken non-finally, transitionally, and experimentally. The traditional ways include the religions and
transformative and therapeutic practices. The ways may act incrementally, as in ‘rationality’
(which includes emotion and value), or catalytically in their effect or in
catalytic practices such as meditation and exposure to natural environments. Path templates
There are two path templates, everyday and universal, intended for adaptation to a variety of
interests and individual and group contexts.
The
essentials of an every-day template are—rise
early-dedication-affirmation, review, realize (reflect-write
on the way and yoga-exercise-share), exploration,
evening renewal and community, and sleep early. Essentials
of a universal template are—pure being and community,
ideas (reflection, writing, publishing), becoming (nature with
psyche; civilization, society, and community; artifact; universal and
incompletely known), and Universal Being. The way ahead
The
way ahead is shared discovery and realization in the worlds of psyche, nature,
civilization, and the universe.
Sharing of the ideas of the way are also envisioned
as a stream of continuous text in
which every age has texts that attempt summation and re-vision of established
and emerging ideas. |