Transcendental Ego

ENOAH October 18, 2025 at 23:36 2000 views 63 comments
Some months back I had a discussion on this forum (with whom, I can't recall) about Husserl's phenomenological exercise aiming to get at the transcendental ego. We were not in agreement about something. It wasn't about the fruitfulness of Husserls method. On that we agreed. It was about the so called transcendental ego (t ego). Briefly, they supported Husserls Hypothesis that the t ego was the end game in any search for the self, often confused with our real consciousness. I believe that there is no self but a consciousness before [beyond] the self, and that is the real so called t-ego [true /real consciousness; i.e. before a self is constructed by joining history/human consciousness] philosophers and mystics alike are after. I propose that it is the body in its organic functions simultaneously aware like all creatures to varying degrees, of drives, feelings, sensations movements etc. The t-ego Husserl purports to unravel remains within the world of representation and is therefore still just the illusion of the body "having" a/the Subject, albeit in its purest form. One must leap beyond representation even of the body, to the body itself, if tge end is to arrive at true being.

I acknowledge that my presentation both above and below seems lazy and does not adhere to traditional academic structures. But if you can cross that rickety bridge, I'd be interested in your thoughts.

The so called transcendental ego is still not Real consciousness. The t ego may be the purest [most bracketed] source of meaning [primal signifier], the subject [doing so called it’s best to] reflecting without reflecting upon itself [for a change] the closest that becoming can be to being [the present participle without predicate, but still, a part of speech]. But it’s still within the framework of representation when it necessarily remains in place, implying its own reality as an entity which is other than the simple body. It necessarily becomes a representation, albeit the last and purest representation, and therefore a fiction. What philosophies hope to arrive at when they seek true being [and not the self no matter how stripped naked] is actually the organism in its aware-ing. That is, being [just being]. And the latter is not [state of] a knowledge or an experience. To be a knowledge or experience , is to take it away from being and into becoming [being with a predicate, including being me, i.e. representation]. Being is [just being]. There too is Reality. And only there in being / is-ing.

So how does the phenomenological exercise get you to that, Real consciousness? It can't. But it gets you so close it becomes at the very least, the dream of a possibility. You only access real consciousness when you're being real consciousness. I think, no longer, therefore I am. As soon as think, therefore, and I entered the picture, am was displaced by become. And good luck being am without the incessant intrusion of becoming if you were born into human history.

Comments (63)

javi2541997 October 19, 2025 at 04:50 #1019649
Quoting ENOAH
So how does the phenomenological exercise get you to that, Real consciousness? It can't. But it gets you so close it becomes at the very least, the dream of a possibility. You only access real consciousness when you're being real consciousness.


I think this is very intriguing.

What do you mean by "real"? Because, reading carefully this paragraph, it seems that there could be non-real/hallucinatory/dreamlike consciousness. If this is the case, how can we distinguish? I believe that our ego is always real based on your definition of reality, but at times, our consciousness may not be. There are multiple situations where Cogito is located, but it is challenging to find out which of the different versions of myself is actually real. I do not think reality is dependent upon consciousness.
ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 05:52 #1019659
Reply to javi2541997 Quoting javi2541997
What do you mean by "real"?


"Real" is the aware-ing organism, aware of its drives, feelings, sensations, image-ing etc. Shared by all living organisms in varying degrees

The "unreal" is human consciousness or "mind," representations displacing the real aware-ing with desires, emotions, perception, ideas, etc.

Quoting javi2541997
how can we distinguish?




We don't distinguish. Hence, the metaphysical/epistemological problem.

The latter, we access by knowledge, and it displaces the former, always there, but not accessed by knowledge. Rather, accessed by being.

It is only knowing which wants and distinguishes.
Being, just is.
Punshhh October 19, 2025 at 06:18 #1019665
Reply to ENOAH
One must leap beyond representation even of the body, to the body itself, if tge end is to arrive at true being.

Yes, but this takes one out of philosophy (thinking) and into mysticism, where thinking is merely a side show, or cogitation after the fact.
And good luck being am without the incessant intrusion of becoming if you were born into human history.

I know, but there are well established schools and methods to do this.
javi2541997 October 19, 2025 at 06:43 #1019668
Quoting ENOAH
The "unreal" is human consciousness or "mind," representations displacing the real aware-ing with desires, emotions, perception, ideas, etc.


So, according to this, our idea or image of reality may be biassed by our perceptions or emotions, which might mean that it is actually non-real, right?

Quoting ENOAH
Being, just is.


How can I be myself without consciousness? My being can exist, but I think the mental concept or awareness of existing is also required.
ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 06:53 #1019669
Quoting Punshhh
Yes, but this takes one out of philosophy (thinking)


Then so be it. To access reality one must be taken out of thinking.

When it comes to metaphysics:

Philosophy is a useful tool for understanding the system of representations of truth; a system we rely upon for its function. But it cannot access real truth. Accordingly, all of its fruits are relative and subject to change. There are no first principles, no categories, no a priori governing principles outside of the system of representation which philosophy is restricted to.

But Mysticism cannot be a useful tool for accessing real truth, because "mysticism," belongs no less to the system of representation which philosophy is relegated to.

So how do we access real truth? Not by representations (knowing), but only by being.

I agree with your point but it appears in its presentation to have missed the fact that it agrees with mine.

Quoting Punshhh
there are well established schools and methods to do this.



Yes there are schools of philosophy. But, as you say, they are necessarily restricted to thinking. How, therefore, can they ever arrive at pure "am" without [I] thinking [and, therefore]?

ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 06:59 #1019670
Quoting javi2541997
which might mean that it is actually non-real, right?


Only our "idea of" is unreal, "we" as in humans organisms/species are real.

Quoting javi2541997
How can I be myself without consciousness?


You already are [yourself] and you already are consciousness. The minute you "step out" (metaphorically) of consciousness to gaze at the images in your head which for humans have evolved into an entire narrative system---that is, if you are born into History, incessantly---you become [the fictional you of representation; the subject, ego, including the so called transcendental ego]
javi2541997 October 19, 2025 at 07:39 #1019673
Quoting ENOAH
Only our "idea of" is unreal, "we" as in humans organisms/species are real.


What about the idea I have of humans as organisms/species? Is it too unreal? Furthermore, if I have something on my mind, I think this has to be real in some parts, because my consciousness has already given it some existence.
Punshhh October 19, 2025 at 07:47 #1019674
Reply to ENOAH
But Mysticism cannot be a useful tool for accessing real truth, because "mysticism," belongs no less to the system of representation which philosophy is relegated to.

The idea of mysticism perhaps, but to a mystic, the practice they follow isn’t necessarily so.

When it comes to “truth” and “real”, the problem is that they are treated as concepts, therefore a result of thinking.

So how do we access real truth? Not by representations (knowing), but only by being.


What is “Real truth”? Perhaps the mystic realises that there isn’t any real falsity, so why is real truth somehow out of reach?

I agree with your point but it appears in its presentation to have missed the fact that it agrees with mine.

Yes, but I was talking about mysticism, in particular.

Yes there are schools of philosophy.

Mystical schools.
unenlightened October 19, 2025 at 11:24 #1019688
Quoting ENOAH
It wasn't about the fruitfulness of Husserls method. On that we agreed. It was about the so called transcendental ego (t ego). Briefly, they supported Husserls Hypothesis that the t ego was the end game in any search for the self, often confused with our real consciousness. I believe that there is no self but a consciousness before [beyond] the self, and that is the real so called t-ego [true /real consciousness; i.e. before a self is constructed by joining history/human consciousness] philosophers and mystics alike are after.


This is not something that can be resolved by any amount of discussion. Go, and find out. Not in a thread or a book, but in yourself, is the answer.

I don't know Husserl's method, and the internet seems reluctant to enlighten me in five minutes, alas. But we old hippies have been on the trail a long time, and looking for the centre of self is very much the game we play. I can give you some tips, and some warnings. No one can tell you, no one can even help you, but do not try to do it alone.

Hello, darkness, my old friend
I've come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence
Paul Simon
Patterner October 19, 2025 at 12:01 #1019692
Quoting ENOAH
"Real" is the aware-ing organism, aware of its drives, feelings, sensations, image-ing etc. Shared by all living organisms in varying degrees
What does "aware" mean that bacteria and archae are [I]aware[/I] of drives, feelings, sensations, image-ing etc.?
Mww October 19, 2025 at 12:45 #1019697
Quoting unenlightened
….in yourself, is the answer.


Absolutely, and from which follows necessarily, it must be done alone.

unenlightened October 19, 2025 at 14:39 #1019708
Quoting Mww
….in yourself, is the answer.
— unenlightened

Absolutely, and from which follows necessarily, it must be done alone.


No. The world of illusion is unlimited, and the harder you look for something, the easier it becomes to imagine you have found it. Meditation absolutely requires a reality check. Ideally the meditation supervisor will patrol the monks practicing zazen with a big stick, and anyone wandering into a dream will be recalled to presence with a sharp blow.

Likewise, one can try a floatation tank for sensory deprivation, but one needs a watcher, because the sense of detachment from the physical world and the body can be terrifying, and hallucination can become nightmare. You must do it, but you need not be alone, and should not be. To try such alone is already to start from a dangerous delusion that you are so special, that no one else can touch you.
ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 15:09 #1019712
Quoting javi2541997
What about the idea I have of humans as organisms/species? Is it too unreal?


Yes, it too is unreal. It is functional, but unreal.
ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 15:11 #1019713
Quoting Punshhh
but to a mystic, the practice they follow isn’t necessarily so.


Agreed. The practice. Not the preceding, corresponding or after thoughts
Punshhh October 19, 2025 at 15:12 #1019714
Agreed. The practice. Not the preceding, corresponding or after thoughts

Agreed, although the practice may colour the thoughts.
ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 15:14 #1019715
Quoting unenlightened
This is not something that can be resolved by any amount of discussion. Go, and find out. Not in a thread or a book, but in yourself, is the answer.


Agreed.

But the "trigger" Mind/History "provides" for us to go and find out, is the discussion.

By analogy, that's why a common idea in Zen, for example, is to burn all the sutras/kill the Buddha after enlightenment.
Punshhh October 19, 2025 at 15:14 #1019716
Reply to unenlightened It has to be done alone in the later stages. Because by that point it is internal.
ENOAH October 19, 2025 at 15:21 #1019717
Quoting Patterner
What does "aware" mean that bacteria and archae are aware of drives, feelings, sensations, image-ing etc.?


In varying degrees depending upon levels of sophistication of the biological infrastructure. Branches reach for sunlight, protozoa "find" food. We startle at a lound bang. All conditioned responses requiring an aware-ing of some degree.

Admittedly, a scientist would be qualified to reply. I'm hypothesizing. Others far more learned in the required fields can provide the corrections. Its nothing special. Mind/History moves by that dialectic.
Mww October 19, 2025 at 19:54 #1019758
Quoting unenlightened
….the sense of detachment from the physical world and the body can be terrifying….


Dunno about all that. With respect to the transcendental ego, it is irrelevant anyway, for whatever that may be, in whatever form it may manifest, it has only to do with the rational being known by a subject as itself.

unenlightened October 20, 2025 at 07:46 #1019858
Quoting Mww
the rational being known by a subject as itself.


Rational being? Speaking of delusional... Let's just say, that if we are ourselves rational beings, and yet we are at war with each other throughout history, then "rationally" we must be possessed by irrational beings that overwhelm us at every turn.
Mww October 20, 2025 at 09:11 #1019865
Reply to unenlightened

I’m not at war. Not even conflicted.

Sorry if you are; can’t help ya.

Tom Storm October 20, 2025 at 10:04 #1019869
Quoting unenlightened
Rational being? Speaking of delusional... Let's just say, that if we are ourselves rational beings, and yet we are at war with each other throughout history, then "rationally" we must be possessed by irrational beings that overwhelm us at every turn.


I see what you mean. But does rational mean level headed and peaceable? It just means capable of reasoning. One so capable can be simultaneously a total cunt. I think Kant (not to be confused with the epithet I just used) argued that our use of reason would eventually lead us to a state of harmony and order, but I’m fairly sure he didn’t think we were there already.
unenlightened October 20, 2025 at 12:40 #1019884
Quoting Tom Storm
But does rational mean level headed and peaceable? It just means capable of reasoning.


Well it's not completely clear. Game theory is founded on something called 'rational self-interest' and if that means 'cunning bastard' then the theory works well enough, assuming there is indeed no honour amongst thieves. But then, we ought to be talking about 'inner cunning cunts' rather than rational beings (possessed by devils).

Quoting Mww
Sorry if you are; can’t help ya.
What a sad state of affairs that is if the best of all of us cannot or will not help his fellows. All hope is lost.

Mww October 20, 2025 at 13:42 #1019897
Reply to unenlightened

Nonsense. You said it yourself, no one can even help you.

Given the thread topic, you’re equivocating the denial of help, with the impossibility of it.



ENOAH October 26, 2025 at 03:41 #1020954
Here’s a relatively safer introduction to this Hypothesis.

What do you believe Mind is?

If it’s a spirit, any entity separate from the body and from energy/matter, then you better show where that entity is because otherwise, you’re a religion.

If you think mind is a function of the brain, then ok, end of the day, discard the function. Focus on the brain, the only reality (along with/as the body).

Not to mention, what’s happening to us is, not only don’t we discard the function, our bodies [are triggered to produce the feelings associated with] believe we are the function. But we aren’t. We’re the bodies.
Mww October 26, 2025 at 14:13 #1021001
Reply to ENOAH

I think mind is a conception, an abstract metaphysical representation based on the idea of complementary pairs.

ENOAH October 26, 2025 at 14:19 #1021004
Reply to Mww Would you consider Mind being a/the process you just described, and "mind" being an example of that representational, binary/dialectical based, process?
Mww October 26, 2025 at 15:02 #1021011
Reply to ENOAH

Personally, I would attribute to reason the process, from which “mind” is one product of it.
ENOAH October 26, 2025 at 15:13 #1021013
Reply to Mww Understood. That would require reason to pre-exist and transcend mind, and to either do same re body, or to somehow be built into body. I think reason is also a process of representations
Mww October 26, 2025 at 15:31 #1021016
Reply to ENOAH

Yes, in order for my thinking to work, reason must be presupposed as a functional condition of the human intellect.

Problem is, even given something as presupposed in the human condition, there is nothing given in the mere presupposition, that it must be reason. As with mind, these pure ideas are only contingent, re: theory-specific, logical starting points, a way to deny to speculation its inevitable descent into self-contradiction.

ENOAH October 26, 2025 at 16:23 #1021026
Quoting Mww
As with mind, these pure ideas are only contingent, re: theory-specific, logical starting points, a way to deny to speculation its inevitable descent into self-contradiction.


Yes, I agree. Likely, we can't help but to speculate; the starting point of all constructions. And yet, like you suggest: end of the day, they never stop being constructions.
Mww October 26, 2025 at 17:13 #1021032
Reply to ENOAH

Well said.
Janus October 27, 2025 at 04:27 #1021119
Reply to Punshhh It is impossible to generalize since we are all unique. Some need a guru, a sangha, an advisor, a wise friend. But these are all things that must be left behind. There is really nothing to be learned, nothing to be gained, nothing to be known, beyond simply becoming able to relax completely and let go, and be yourself without any fear of missing any mark or any truth, or making any mistake.

The deepest illusion, the most profound nonsense that needs to be expunged is the idea that enlightenment consists in finding the Absolute Truth, coming to know the Ultimate Essence of Reality.

Quoting ENOAH
Yes, I agree. Likely, we can't help but to speculate; the starting point of all constructions. And yet, like you suggest: end of the day, they never stop being constructions.


Yep. And obstructions. Just being is not a condition of knowing anything.
Punshhh October 27, 2025 at 07:30 #1021124
Reply to Janus
It is impossible to generalize since we are all unique. Some need a guru, a sangha, an advisor, a wise friend. But these are all things that must be left behind.

Quite, I remember when I met and became friends with a guru at his ashram. I had expressed an interest in meeting him and when he came to sit with me, he was defensive at first which surprised me. Then I realised that most people who approached him in this way wanted him to lift a burden, to somehow solve their problems. Or be someone they can lean on (metaphorically) and somehow leave all their worries behind. When I conveyed to him that I didn’t want anything from him and just wanted to hang out in friendship. He was visibly relieved and we spent a week enjoying the practice of puja, with a sense of fun and humour. During which I realised that there was a complex dynamic of seekers, worshippers, people working through their own spiritual, or mystical processes. All using him as their focus, crutch, motivation. It was very fertile ground and I made some important realisations there.

There is really nothing to be learned, nothing to be gained, nothing to be known, beyond simply becoming able to relax completely and let go, and be yourself without any fear of missing any mark or any truth, or making any mistake.
Yes, to remove the impediments to being yourself, in stillness and joy, or contentment. And yet there is still value, meaning and education to be gained alongside that and work that can be done.

The deepest illusion, the most profound nonsense that needs to be expunged is the idea that enlightenment consists in finding the Absolute Truth, coming to know the Ultimate Essence of Reality.
Yes, but this along with other aims of the seeker are understandable, because one is blind at that stage. Blind in the sense that there is no sense of direction, no goal, no means of attaining one’s perceived goal. One is just trying anything that looks like it might work. This is where a guide is useful, or a school.
I liken this stage to questing, a series of quests that one undertakes and comes to realisations about oneself and the path and the direction of travel. Eventually one reaches a point of stillness, focus and direction*.

What this indicates to me is that this is not a process of intellectual learning, or wisdom as such, but more one of a development in the self. A process in the body, the being.

*Many seekers never reach this point.
javra October 27, 2025 at 20:34 #1021216
This ain’t no place for me to expound on my own philosophical views which I’m working into a treatise
(which could be labeled as analytically philosophical mysticism), but as to this quoted conclusion:

Quoting Janus
The deepest illusion, the most profound nonsense that needs to be expunged is the idea that enlightenment consists in finding the Absolute Truth, coming to know the Ultimate Essence of Reality.


If “Absolute Truth” signifies one and the same with “complete conformity to the Ultimate Essence of Reality” (and what else could it cogently signify), then:

There is, first off, a glaring difference between 1) gaining a deep understanding of what Absolute Truth is as that which is to be forever pursued as the imperfect being you will forever be till the time it is obtained in full (together with the deep understanding that it in fact is) and 2) having gained it in full such that it becomes actualized. To illustrate via just one possible path toward it: in Buddhism, wherein Nirvana is just this so-called “Absolute Truth” of perfect and literally selfless being, and wherein all existence is but illusion (maya), there is a massive difference in having actualized an understanding of Nirvana (being Nirvana-actualized in this sense) and actually actualizing Nirvana (being Nirvana-actualized in this later sense). No body-endowed Buddha could ever have been Nirvana-actualized in the later sense while yet embodied within maya (yet needing to eat and drink to sustain one’s life, for one example of desires and attachments yet had), yet all were and are reputed Nirvana-actualized in the former sense (the Dalai Lama as one example).

That given, it ain’t like the understanding of the Absolute Truth is linguistic or else composed of thoughts one puts together. Instead, it is composed of nonlinguistic cognizance which mediates all possible thoughts one might have after the understanding is obtained (and the given human devised linguistic expressions utilized to communicate these thoughts). And, as with many another, once the understanding is had, it can’t be let go of (at least in no easy to conceive means). Even if one can find no practical way of conveying it to others than by means of artistic manifestations within the given culture one finds oneself: William Blake as one non-Eastern example of this.

Thirdly, for the more physicalist beings out there, damn, devoid of any earnest desire upon understanding what Absolute Truth as defined above is, there would be no empirical sciences to speak of. Perfect objectivity of awareness—often mocked as “the view from nowhere”—is precisely being at one with the Ultimate Essence of Reality, is thus Absolute Truth as previously defined. Take away all earnest desire toward a closer proximity to a perfect objectivity of awareness and what remains of the sciences but quackery and snake oils sold for personal material gains without any concern for what in fact actually is. And, here again, there is a mammoth difference between a) the desire to be objective which is requisite for b) being more objective relative to what you would otherwise be, and which would both be utterly impossible to steadfastly maintain with a straight face where complete objectivity to in fact be “the deepest illusion, the most profound nonsense that needs to be expunged”. And no, there can be no dualistic ego, no self, in a state of complete objectivity—for it, conceptually, would completely obliterate all possible senses of otherness, or otherwise it could not be—but then, neither could there at such a conceptual juncture be any “views regarding otherness”. Making the mockery of objectivity a complete stawman, to not say bullshit. To then deny the absolute truth that awaits to be found in a complete/absolute objectivity is to be one's own worst enemy in upholding the validity of scientific knowledge (that of climate change as no exception).

And fourthly, what physicalist out there maintains anything other than that “the Ultmate Essence of Reality” is, in fact, physical matter—thereby maintaining their having already obtained an understanding of what Absolute Truth is. With doublethink to boot if they then go about denying this very state of their convictions.

Imperfect as I am, I find the statement quoted in this post too detrimental to not succinctly comment on it.
Punshhh October 29, 2025 at 06:21 #1021535
Reply to javra I know what you are saying, but there is a problem with the use of truth and knowledge here. These are both things which us mortals experience and work with in this world. Whereas in the nirvana you talk about, they have fallen away, there is direct experience, direct knowing. There isn’t anymore a question of truth or falsity, or knowledge in the sense of having learned, or understood something. It is more direct than that.
There is a whole language in Buddhism developed to talk about and describe these exalted states. Something which has not been developed very much thus far in the Western traditions.
javra October 29, 2025 at 17:19 #1021622
Reply to Punshhh

I agree with what you say. Truths which can be questioned and knowledge in the form of JTB are things that only pertain to dualistic egos. And that which mysticisms world over point to is the culminating end of “being sans dualistic ego that is thereby in pure bliss”. It is not something that can pertain to any dualistic ego (aka empirical ego) but, rather, it can only pertain to the trancendental ego alone.

Take Sufism for yet another example. In most everything a Sufi does and says, the Sufi seems to have an understanding for this potential ultimate end which is simultaneously residing both within and without. In this, the Sufi hasn’t yet actualized this ultimate end for themselves, but retains a deep understanding of it and thereby an alignment to it. As a more concrete example of this, Sufis seek to actualize Fitra (roughly: the “innate nature” with which we’re birthed into this world of being one with the oneness (aka, divine simplicity) of God—again, with divinely simple being being non-dualistic). And—although Sufism and Buddhism rely on vastly different scaffoldings of language, tradition, conceptual understandings, etc.—the parallels between Fitra and Buddha-nature are striking. Both pointing to the same ultimate outcome and the same roundabout means of getting there.

To deny that at least certain Buddhists, Sufis, and many another all hold a deep, non-conceptual understanding of this ultimate truth (here, truth signifying "conformity to that which is real") regarding what is ultimately real—“Nirvana without remainder” for Buddhists, “Oneness with the divine simplicity of God” for Sufis—is, to my mind, to then construe all mystics world over to be utter charlatans. And although Buddhists and Sufis address this ultimate goal and awaiting ultimate end via different linguistic means and different cultural scaffoldings, it always amounts to the same thing: one’s complete conformity to, via which one perfectly becomes one and the same with, an absolutely non-dualistic wholeness of limitless being. And as per my previous post, this very same roundabout definition just as readily applies to (among many another idealized state of being) an absolutely objective awareness—which everyone seeking to be more objective (aka more impartial) approaches in due measure.

This ultimate end to me is, poetically expressed, like the very core of a jewel which can only be perceived by us dualistic egos via its many facets, each facet depicting just one of its many attributes, all of them in fact being perfectly unified in non-dualistic divine simplicity within the core. Here too one can find the same given jewel’s one facet of Plato’s “The Good”, to add just one more commonly known example.

To me, the mystic has understood the jewels core—not via debated conceptualizations but via a type of eureka moment applicable to the transcendental ego within all of us. But, in remaining a dualistic ego embedded within a specific culture which has its own ready existent scaffoldings, the mystic will then utilize the cultural and linguistic scaffoldings of his/her surroundings to navigate the waters of existence toward this very same end.

So yes, this deep inner understanding is neither a questionable truth, nor a debatable conceptualization, nor a JTB (all of which pertain to dualistic egos alone). Nevertheless, such an understanding is all the same one species of knowledge. Which again harkens back to the mysticism to be found in the dictums of the Oracle of Delfi, the mouthpiece for the god Apollo: "know thyself". (More analytically: come to understand the reality and implications of the very core to you as an aware being: that of a transcendental ego.)

Janus October 29, 2025 at 22:57 #1021692
Reply to Punshhh Reply to javra I agree that there is a sense in which experience, everyday, ordinary experience is ineffable—no account or explanation is ever the experience itself. So mystical experience, which is characterized and identified in terms of feelings (even though certain kinds of thoughts are variously culturally associated with those feelings) is really no different than ordinary experience except in virtue of those heightened feelings and sensitivities.

The "deep inner understanding" is not really an understanding at all but a heightened feeling. To qualify as an understanding it would have to be capable of precise articulation, which thousands of years of documented attempts show cannot be done.

So instead of the physicists "shut up and calculate" we have "shut up and experience". Note, I don't deny that poetic language can evoke such experiences, but evocation and explanation or understanding are very different things.
javra October 30, 2025 at 00:08 #1021713
Quoting Janus
The "deep inner understanding" is not really an understanding at all but a heightened feeling.


Nope. When we get something, when something clicks with us, there may be emotions also experienced, but the thing that clicks--the deep inner (to the transcendental ego) understanding--is not the emotions that accompany. And it cannot always be easily articulated via the words currently available to us. It, however, is one of the more potent ways in which new insights make sense to us. It is one very important and pivotal type of understanding.

Quoting Janus
To qualify as an understanding it would have to be capable of precise articulation,


When it comes to the understanding of what I previously poetically referenced as the jewel's core that all mystics are aware of, I agree that current English language (more specifically, current English terms) are insufficient to address it. But this can, or at least could, be remedied via the introduction of new terms into the English language--at least so far as philosophical enquiry is concerned. This just as a plethora of philosophers throughout history have done. Terms that could parallel what Reply to Punshhh was saying about Buddhist language and terms. And, at such a juncture, the understanding can then well be articulated in precise rational/analytical philosophical means.

Quoting Janus
which thousands of years of documented attempts show cannot be done.


Never say never. For one thing, it prevents any progress being made in realms such as this. As one parallel example, same can be said of what beauty is--no one has yet satisfactorily explained it despite being investigated for millennia. To say it therefor can never be satisfactorily explained terminates all enguiries into it. I much rather prefer keeping an open mind in fields such as this.
Janus October 30, 2025 at 00:19 #1021718
Quoting javra
Nope. When we get something, when something clicks with us, there may be emotions also experienced, but the thing that clicks--the deep inner (to the transcendental ego) understanding--is not the emotions that accompany.


You can believe that if you want to—the point is that you cannot logically or empirically demonstrate it. That shouldn't matter if you feel a conviction—why do you need to convince others of it?

Quoting javra
But this can, or at least could, be remedied via the introduction of new terms into the English language--at least so far as philosophical enquiry is concerned


I don't see how new terms are going to help support something which cannot be logically or emprically demonstrated.

Quoting javra
Never say never. For one thing, it prevents any progress being made in realms such as this. As one parallel example, same can be said of what beauty is--no one has yet satisfactorily explained it despite being investigated for millennia. To say it therefor can never be satisfactorily explained terminates all enguiries into it. I much rather prefer keeping an open mind in fields such as this.


I cannot even begin to imagine how a precise measure, or actually any measure, of beauty could be discovered. I personally believe there are degrees of aesthetic quality, that some works are better, more profound or more beautiful than others, but I have no illusions that I could ever demonstrate it such that any unbiased interlocutor would be rationally constrained to agree.

My mind would be open if I could begin to imagine a way or if someone could show me the way. But experience shows that no one can.


javra October 30, 2025 at 00:26 #1021719
Quoting Janus
You can believe that if you want to—the point is that you cannot logically or empirically demonstrate it.


I cannot logically or empirically demonstrate that you are human (rather than, say, an AI program). Its called the problem of other minds. That mentioned, do you mean to tell me that all you experience are intense emotions and no moments of eureka where something novel clicks with you? I'll believe you if you so say, but most humans are not like that and know it.

Quoting Janus
That shouldn't matter if you feel a conviction—why do you need to convince others of it?


It's called philosophy. Same reason you're bothering trying to convince me of your felt convictions.

Quoting Janus
I don't see how new terms are going to help support something which cannot be logically or emprically demonstrated.


It's called reasoning. But OK, you don't see how.

Quoting Janus
I cannot even begin to imagine how a precise measure, or actually any measure, of beauty could be discovered.


You are not the measure of all things (nor I, nor anyone else). Contra Pythagorean mindsets. EDIT: Besides, I did not mention "the measuring of beauty" but its "satisfactory explanation"; we have a satisfactory explanation of physiological pain (sorta - since it can be far more psychological then physical in at least some) but don't have the foggiest notion of a "precise measure" for it - e.g., as in whose pains are in fact greater.
Janus October 30, 2025 at 00:39 #1021724
Quoting javra
I cannot logically or empirically demonstrate that you are human (rather than, say, and AI program). Its called the problem of other minds. That mentioned, do you mean to tell me that all you experience are intense emotions and no moments of eureka where something novel clicks with you? I'll believe you if you so say, but most humans are not like that and know it.


In principle you could indeed empirically demonstrate that I am human—all you would have to do is meet me face to face. The so-called "problem of other minds" is something else. A conversation should demonstrate that I am minded even if I'm an idiot (face to face if this conversation is not sufficient to allay your skepticism).

Quoting javra
It's called philosophy. Same reason you're bothering trying to convince me of your felt convictions.


You misunderstand—I'm not trying to convince you of my felt convictions.

Quoting javra
It's called reasoning. But OK, you don't see how.


Reasoning, if it is good is simply valid. Valid reasoning can support all kinds of whacky beliefs. You also need sound premises. Premises based on accurate empirical observation are sound——they can be checked. Premises based on mathematical or logical self-evidence are sound. If you see how some other method for determining premises can be demonstrated to be sound I'd love to hear about it.

Quoting javra
You are not the measure of all things (nor I, nor anyone else). Contra Pythagorean mindsets.


I have nowhere claimed to be the measure of all things. If someone else can imagine how a precise measure of beauty can be achieved, or even what such a purported method would look like, then I'm open to hearing about it. In all my reading and discussion I've never encountered any such thing. I'd be very happy to encounter a demonstrably precise measure of beauty——it would be a revelation.
javra October 30, 2025 at 00:55 #1021728
Quoting Janus
The so-called "problem of other minds" is something else.


The problem of other minds cannot be resolved by looking at other humans face to face. This due to Cartesian doubt which Descartes introduced: e.g. if something looks like and acts like a duck, it might be an elaborate automaton. Same with something that looks like and acts like a human. Etc.

Quoting Janus
You misunderstand—I'm not trying to convince you of my felt convictions.


Well, truth be told, neither am I.

Quoting Janus
Reasoning, if it is good is simply valid. Valid reasoning can support all kinds of whacky beliefs. You also need sound premises. Premises based on accurate empirical observation are sound——they can be checked. Premises based on mathematical or logical self-evidence are sound. If you see how some other method for determining premises can be demonstrated to be sound I'd love to hear about it.


Of course. Start with optimal but yet fallible certainties and then build them up until you obtain a coherent outlook that also has optimal explanatory power. As to examples of such sound premises: Can you in any way evidence via justifiable alternatives that you as an aware being are not ontically occurring as such whenever you are in any way aware of anything? Not a logical tautology but a mere observations that, in the absence of justifiable alternatives, become rather difficult if at all possible to rationally doubt (and emotional doubts don't count for much here). So, if no justifiable alternatives can be found to the veracity of this proposition, then this is one small (even if bedrock) example of a sound premise that's neither based on empirical observations via the physiological senses nor based on maths or formal logics.

Quoting Janus
I have nowhere claimed to be the measure of all things. If someone else can imagine how a precise measure of beauty can be achieved, or even what such a purported method would look like, then I'm open to hearing about it. In all my reading and discussion I've never encountered any such thing.


You have claimed that you can't imagine it being ergo it can't be. Which directly implies that your current imagination is the measure of all things that can be fathomed. Besides, I never stated "measure of beauty" but a "satisfactory explanation of beauty". We have a satisfactory enough explanation of physiological pain but no idea of how to accurately measure it; e.g., whose pains are greater in an objective means of measurement.
Janus October 30, 2025 at 01:04 #1021733
Quoting javra
The problem of other minds cannot be resolved by looking at other humans face to face. This due to Cartesian doubt which Descartes introduced: e.g. if something looks like and acts like a duck, it might be an elaborate automaton. Same with something that looks like and acts like a human. Etc.


I don't take such implausible, merely non-contradictory, possibilities seriously. For me, in order to doubt I have to have some good reason to doubt. For me, if someone claims that they know, or even could somehow come to know, the secret to "life, the Universe and everything" I think I have good reason to doubt their veracity or the soundness of their judgement.

Quoting javra
You have claimed that you can't imagine it being ergo it can't be.


No I haven't claimed that at all. I've merely claimed that if I can't imagine it, and no one has ever been able to tell me what it looks like, then I have no good reason to believe in it. I am not saying I cannot be mistaken—I'm merely addressing what I believe and don't believe, or doubt and don't doubt, and the reasons why I believe or doubt. Isn't that what we are all doing here?

javra October 30, 2025 at 01:18 #1021738
Quoting Janus
I don't take such implausible, merely non-contradictory, possibilities seriously.


I get that. Neither do I. Nevertheless, that is the problem of other minds in philosophical circles. Back to the point though, there is no currently known logical or empirical means to prove that another entity which looks and acts like a human actually has a mind. The same exact problem becomes more prominent in the bizarrely persisting issue of whether non-human lifeforms have minds. Chimps? Rats? ... Ameba? And as a few others do, I do maintain that if its a lifeform, it has a mind - this as per the book Mind in Life.

Quoting Janus
You have claimed that you can't imagine it being ergo it can't be. — javra

No I haven't claimed that at all.


OK. I might of been a bit unfair. In which case my bad. You have however claimed a parallel to this for satisfactory explanations of what mystics understand, which is what the analogy of beauty was all about to begin with, basically saying that if it hasn't been done so far, then it just can't be done. Here's the quote:

Quoting Janus
The "deep inner understanding" is not really an understanding at all but a heightened feeling. To qualify as an understanding it would have to be capable of precise articulation, which thousands of years of documented attempts show cannot be done.


Notice, also, that you affirm it not to be an understanding but a heightened feeling as though this were fact, rather than best current presumption.
ProtagoranSocratist October 30, 2025 at 01:35 #1021746
Quoting ENOAH
And good luck being am without the incessant intrusion of becoming if you were born into human history.


"Becoming" does directly contradict "I am".

I believe the main attempt of buddhist religion/philosophy is to strip you of everything except the true ego, at at least as you have defined it (pure consciousness)?

Anyways, buddhist meditation made a lot of sense to me in the goal of doing away with anything extraneous or superfluous, but I eventually realized that you cannot change yourself, and therefore, you cannot become enlightened.
Janus October 30, 2025 at 01:42 #1021752
Quoting javra
Back to the point though, there is no currently known logical or empirical means to prove that another entity which looks and acts like a human actually has a mind.


Not "prove", no. But I would say that it is established beyond reasonable doubt that humans and other entities are minded. What exactly it means to be minded is another wrinkle in the fabric, as is now being shown by the controversies over whether LLMs are minded or not.

Quoting javra
The "deep inner understanding" is not really an understanding at all but a heightened feeling. To qualify as an understanding it would have to be capable of precise articulation, which thousands of years of documented attempts show cannot be done.
— Janus

Notice, also, that you affirm it not to be an understanding but a heightened feeling as though this were fact, rather than best current presumption.


You were right to pick me up on that—I was just expressing my view. I do believe, on the basis of what seems to me to be reasonable logic, that anything that could count as understanding, should be able to be articulated or demonstrated definitively in action—such as technical abilities, for example.
javra October 30, 2025 at 01:44 #1021753
Reply to Janus Cool. :up:
Punshhh October 30, 2025 at 07:11 #1021780
Reply to Janus
So mystical experience, which is characterized and identified in terms of feelings (even though certain kinds of thoughts are variously culturally associated with those feelings) is really no different than ordinary experience except in virtue of those heightened feelings and sensitivities.

There are plenty of documented cases, although they are mainly from the east (there are some in the Christian tradition and also shamanistic traditions) and are all regarded as anecdotal, when it comes to philosophy. One encounters the problem of provability, which can’t be provided*.
Also the documented experiences are often different to ordinary experience, including revelation.

The "deep inner understanding" is not really an understanding at all but a heightened feeling. To qualify as an understanding it would have to be capable of precise articulation, which thousands of years of documented attempts show cannot be done.

Again it has been done, it’s just not verifiable. Or as James Randi demonstrated, produced on demand.
We don’t need to go down the rabbit hole of just what precise articulation means.

Let me explain how it is articulated in Eastern traditions. If you look at the statue of Shiva in this article you will see that he is standing on a little man, lying on his side and yet trying to look up. In turn they are both standing atop the petals of a lotus flower.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nataraja

Now there is a rich, complex and precise language and teaching describing and articulating what this deity represents in the Hindu tradition. What it depicts is a being who has subjugated his lower self, the self incarnated into the physical world, with all that entails, animals passions, avarice, greed etc etc. This is the little man, They are both standing on a lotus flower which represents the thousand petalled lotus of the crown chakra, the highest chakra of the seven chakras in the human body(again, there is extensive literature on this). This indicates that the being has fully awakened the crown chakra and is inhabiting a more subtle divine world, of which the physical world is a pale reflection. The little man looking up is his incarnate self trying to get a glimpse of this world.

If you look at any Hindu, or Buddhist religious art work you will see this iconography in almost all of them.


cannot even begin to imagine how a precise measure, or actually any measure, of beauty could be discovered. I personally believe there are degrees of aesthetic quality, that some works are better, more profound or more beautiful than others, but I have no illusions that I could ever demonstrate it such that any unbiased interlocutor would be rationally constrained to agree.

Actually beauty has been quite well explained, although I won’t go into that here as it’s a distraction from the OP, in terms of evolutionary conditioning to distinguish between mating partners, to find the better mate, the faculty was developed in most larger animals.

*It would be impossible to prove God exists even if he/she came down and tapped you on the shoulder and introduced himself.
Punshhh October 30, 2025 at 07:24 #1021781
Reply to ProtagoranSocratist
Anyways, buddhist meditation made a lot of sense to me in the goal of doing away with anything extraneous or superfluous, but I eventually realized that you cannot change yourself, and therefore, you cannot become enlightened.

You can open yourself to the possibility that a development within yourself can result in enlightenment. Provided your evolutionary stage of development has reached that point of awakening.
We cannot know if people did actually reach enlightenment during the heyday of the Buddhist and Hindu religions, when they wrote their teachings down. Or if it represented a goal of their practice. We really don’t know how things were back then.
Punshhh October 30, 2025 at 08:02 #1021787
Reply to javra
Take Sufism for yet another example. In most everything a Sufi does and says, the Sufi seems to have an understanding for this potential ultimate end which is simultaneously residing both within and without.
Yes, Sufi’s have developed a good language for expressing these things. I remember the first spiritual book I read when a teenager, Autobiography of a Yogi. On reading it, I had an intuitive understanding and familiarity with what was being described.


To deny that at least certain Buddhists, Sufis, and many another all hold a deep, non-conceptual understanding of this ultimate truth (here, truth signifying "conformity to that which is real") regarding what is ultimately real—“Nirvana without remainder” for Buddhists, “Oneness with the divine simplicity of God” for Sufis—is, to my mind, to then construe all mystics world over to be utter charlatans


“Truth signifying “Conformity to that which is real” is an appropriate way of using the term truth in this area of discussion. And yes, I agree that there are people who have this deeper understanding. But there is a subtle distinction to be made here, which is I think the cause of confusion when addressing this topic. It might not be appropriate to describe it as an understanding, yes there is an understanding. But an understanding which does not entail thought as produced in the brain. It is a more subtle understanding in which, communion (presence), witness (to bear witness to something), recognition and familiarity play more formative roles. It is the thinking in the brain which attempts to articulate this experience, in our “dualistic” world. Hence when the experience is conveyed, it is done via thinking, language and intellectual understanding. Which is quite different from how understanding manifests in the subtle realm.

This ultimate end to me is, poetically expressed, like the very core of a jewel which can only be perceived by us dualistic egos via its many facets, each facet depicting just one of its many attributes, all of them in fact being perfectly unified in non-dualistic divine simplicity within the core.

Nice imagery.

To me, the mystic has understood the jewels core—not via debated conceptualizations but via a type of eureka moment applicable to the transcendental ego within all of us. But, in remaining a dualistic ego embedded within a specific culture which has its own ready existent scaffoldings, the mystic will then utilize the cultural and linguistic scaffoldings of his/her surroundings to navigate the waters of existence toward this very same end.

Very much so, although “eureka moment” implies some kind of strained, extreme moment. It is not always like this, it might be a subtle distinction meeting a memory, met with a sigh, or seem to always have been that way, with no real knowledge of when it became so. Or knowing through doing, in which the mind is not really all that involved.

javra October 30, 2025 at 16:22 #1021846
Quoting Punshhh
Yes, Sufi’s have developed a good language for expressing these things. I remember the first spiritual book I read when a teenager, Autobiography of a Yogi. On reading it, I had an intuitive understanding and familiarity with what was being described.


It's nice to hear.

Quoting Punshhh
“Truth signifying “Conformity to that which is real” is an appropriate way of using the term truth in this area of discussion. And yes, I agree that there are people who have this deeper understanding. But there is a subtle distinction to be made here, which is I think the cause of confusion when addressing this topic. It might not be appropriate to describe it as an understanding, yes there is an understanding. But an understanding which does not entail thought as produced in the brain. It is a more subtle understanding in which, communion (presence), witness (to bear witness to something), recognition and familiarity play more formative roles. It is the thinking in the brain which attempts to articulate this experience, in our “dualistic” world. Hence when the experience is conveyed, it is done via thinking, language and intellectual understanding. Which is quite different from how understanding manifests in the subtle realm.


I think I fully agree. I’ll share something with you and would be grateful for your general feedback.

In my attempts at analytically approaching this issue among many others, in my own writings I make the distinction between “allo-understanding” and “proto-understanding”. Allo-understanding is the “grasping the meaning of” that which is other relative to you as transcendental ego—and is thereby a dualistic understanding. Examples include the understanding of any concept, idea, or paradigm (all of which are other than one as transcendental ego which is aware of these other). Proto-understanding, which is far more difficult to properly articulate, on the other hand, is fully non-dualistic comprehension. Difficulties in articulating it stem from the fact that the moment it becomes contemplated via concepts or else analyzed via language it is no longer pure proto-understanding but, instead, becomes a potential allo-understanding of that which in fact is proto-understanding—this since here one thinks via a duality between the transcendental ego as the subject of awareness, one the one hand, and its concepts, etc. as the objects of its awareness on the other. That briefly mentioned, possible examples of proto-understanding include immediate awareness of momentarily being, for one example, psychologically certain or else in any degree psychologically uncertain as a transcendental ego, this among many other possible experiences of the transcendental ego per se. These "states of being" being that which one as transcendental ego momentarily is. Importantly, such that there is no duality whatsoever between the transcendental ego as the subject of awareness which is aware of its very own being as the object of its awareness: both subject of awareness and object of awareness are here perfectly unified into an undifferentiable, non-dualistic whole. And this non-dualistic (auto-)awareness is perpetual to the transcendental ego. More complexly, all humans will typically hold a proto-understanding throughout our adult life of being a human earthling—rather than of being, for example, an extraterrestrial alien (to not specify even more absurd alternatives)—hence, will hold this very understanding in manners fully devoid of conceptualizations of it, verbalization, or any form of thought whatsoever. Not until this issue is brought into explicit conscious awareness—such as by being asked what one is or else by reading a science fiction novel or seeing such movie wherein one can’t help but associate with human earthlings over extraterrestrial aliens—that this constantly held proto-understanding can become an allo-understanding.

So roughly expressed, the mystic does not gain an allo-understanding of what I’ll here again term “ultimate truth” but, rather, a very profound proto-understanding of it, at which juncture everything more or less clicks into place in terms of the transcendental ego’s (and not necessarily the empirical ego's) understanding of being and of the existence in which being per se is embodied. A profound proto-understanding which, to here make use of traditional western shamanistic poetry, then serves as the bone upon which all flesh and skin of the mystic (to include all thoughts and allo-understandings) becomes attached.

In parallel, be it addressed as Nirvana, the divine simplicity of God, a complete henosis with “The One”, etc., I verbally then interpret this ultimate reality yet to be actualized to be constituted of limitless and, hence, infinite proto-understanding that is perfectly devoid of all allo-understanding (more broadly, infinite pure being that is perfectly devoid of all existence, i.e. that which stands out)—thereby being pure bliss which is divinely simple and hence utterly nondual (I’ll add to this, in which one comes to fully know oneself as pure being (this in a non-JTB sense of knowing)).

Though I’m not sure whether what you intend by “subtle understanding” translates into the roughly sketched appraisal of what I’ve just outlined as "proto-understanding", I’d again like to hear your input on the matter.

Quoting Punshhh
Nice imagery.


Thanks. :smile:

Quoting Punshhh
Very much so, although “eureka moment” implies some kind of strained, extreme moment. It is not always like this, it might be a subtle distinction meeting a memory, met with a sigh, or seem to always have been that way, with no real knowledge of when it became so. Or knowing through doing, in which the mind is not really all that involved.


The "eureka moment" doesn't to me necessarily imply a straining so much as a revelation, a realizing of new deep understandings regarding what has always been which, as such, could effortlessly come about unexpectedly. (Archimedes was reputedly casually taking a bath when his eureka moment struck. :smile: ) But, yes, I fully agree that there are a vast array of paths toward this same possible outcome.



Janus October 30, 2025 at 22:18 #1021946
Quoting Punshhh
There are plenty of documented cases, although they are mainly from the east (there are some in the Christian tradition and also shamanistic traditions) and are all regarded as anecdotal, when it comes to philosophy. One encounters the problem of provability, which can’t be provided*.
Also the documented experiences are often different to ordinary experience, including revelation.


It seems we agree there are plenty of documents attempting to describe or interpret mystical experiences. We also seem to agree that such experiences are different than ordinary experience. As to revelation, I'd say that classing something as revelation is a kind of interpretation of mystical experience and that the very idea of direct knowledge (noesis) is the idea of revelation.

The idea of enlightenment is an idea of revelation. This is not to deny that there can be different notions as to what revelation consists in?is it, for example from a God, or a universal consciousness, or an inner self or soul experiencing anamnesis?

Quoting Punshhh
Again it has been done, it’s just not verifiable. Or as James Randi demonstrated, produced on demand.
We don’t need to go down the rabbit hole of just what precise articulation means.


I don't see it as a rabbit hole, but a clear distinction between what can be described in a way that anyone can understand, as is the case with narration of ordinary experiences, and what cannot. I say mystical experiences are in the latter category?the best that can be achieved is an interpretation, usually heavily conceptually mediated by some traditional religious context or other. It is this conceptual dependency on cultural and religious contexts which leads me to think the idea of direct knowing is unsupportable.

I am very familiar with Eastern traditions of thought?for more than thirty years I was fascinated by Zen, Sufism, Advaita Vedanta, Daosim and Buddhism generally. I also studied Steiner, Gurdjieff, Theososphy and the Western Hermetic tradition and read the works of mystics Meister Eckhardt, Jacob Boehme, Theresa of Avila, Valentin Thomberg and others. I also meditated pretty much daily for more than twenty years. I have thought about these things from every angle I could imagine.

I see direct knowing in the sense of 'being familiar with' as applying to both everyday experience and mystical experience, but this kind of knowing is not a discursive knowing?that is nothing propositional is known. So, when people say they know God exists, or that karma is real, or that there is an afterlife or rebirth, I have no doubt they are confusing the 'knowing that' of propositional knowledge with the direct knowing of acquaintance, of felt experience that we all enjoy every day. Of course we do need to learn to attend to that experience, and for me that is the value of meditation, which I say can be, in principle, constantly practiced?it is not confined to being in a particular posture.

As soon as we try to talk about these things, in any way other than via an allusive language meant to evoke, as soon as we imagine that we are accessing some real knowledge (in the propositional sense) we go astray. But it seems we just can't help ourselves?we can't help imagining that propositional metaphysical knowledge must be possible.

Quoting Punshhh
Now there is a rich, complex and precise language and teaching describing and articulating what this deity represents in the Hindu tradition.


Of course precise descriptions of fictional entities are possible, but they have no ground other than imagination.

Quoting Punshhh
This indicates that the being has fully awakened the crown chakra and is inhabiting a more subtle divine world, of which the physical world is a pale reflection. The little man looking up is his incarnate self trying to get a glimpse of this world.


I think this is a terrible idea. It, and other ideas about "higher realms" being more important than this life are a large part of the problem, and offer no real solution to the human condition at all. I have come to see the whole idea of salvation or spiritual liberation as being, ironically, a narcissistic obsession with the self and a bolster for elitism.
Punshhh October 31, 2025 at 06:30 #1022025
Reply to javra
I’ll share something with you and would be grateful for your general feedback

Yes, I relate to your definitions here and my next point was going to be about what you refer to here;
More complexly, all humans will typically hold a proto-understanding throughout our adult life of being a human earthling—rather than of being,

Which I was getting ready to explain myself. I would add that this proto-understanding is shared with all plants and animals and we can learn a lot from communing with nature.


So roughly expressed, the mystic does not gain an allo-understanding of what I’ll here again term “ultimate truth” but, rather, a very profound proto-understanding of it, at which juncture everything more or less clicks into place in terms of the transcendental ego’s (and not necessarily the empirical ego's) understanding of being and of the existence in which being per se is embodied.

Again I agree and would add another system I use a lot, the idea of orientation. So the clicking into place is like focussing a lense. Or like an astrolabe, we are like a combination lock, a combination of a number of parts which when aligned allow the clear passage of light. This is built upon a foundational belief* of the idea that we are already at our destination (enlightenment), there is not really any extension in time and space and that all that is required is to re-orientate in subtle ways.

In parallel, be it addressed as Nirvana, the divine simplicity of God, a complete henosis with “The One”, etc., I verbally then interpret this ultimate reality yet to be actualized to be constituted of limitless and, hence, infinite proto-understanding that is perfectly devoid of all allo-understanding (more broadly, infinite pure being that is perfectly devoid of all existence, i.e. that which stands out)—thereby being pure bliss which is divinely simple and hence utterly nondual (I’ll add to this, in which one comes to fully know oneself as pure being (this in a non-JTB sense of knowing)).


I don’t think we can presume any of these ideas about the nature of Nirvana, God, or a deeper reality. These can only be taken on faith, on trust so to speak, of what sages have written down the ages. There must be something in common in the form these descriptions take, as they are all similar and follow a common pattern. But I choose not to define it myself, because It may be a consequence of human nature, ie a reflection of something in us. As such we may be idolising something about ourselves.

What does the abbreviation JTB represent?

* I don’t hold any beliefs in the traditional sense, only those that are required to live a life in the world.
javra October 31, 2025 at 06:41 #1022027
Quoting Punshhh
Yes, I relate to your definitions here and my next point was going to be about what you refer to here;

"More complexly, all humans will typically hold a proto-understanding throughout our adult life of being a human earthling—rather than of being,"

Which I was getting ready to explain myself. I would add that this proto-understanding is shared with all plants and animals and we can learn a lot from communing with nature.


It's good to hear, and yes, I'm in agreement.

Quoting Punshhh
Again I agree and would add another system I use a lot, the idea of orientation. So the clicking into place is like focussing a lense. Or like an astrolabe, we are like a combination lock, a combination of a number of parts which when aligned allow the clear passage of light. This is built upon a foundational belief* of the idea that we are already at our destination (enlightenment), there is not really any extension in time and space and that all that is required is to re-orientate in subtle ways.


Very nicely said.

Quoting Punshhh
I don’t think we can presume any of these ideas about the nature of Nirvana, God, or a deeper reality. These can only be taken on faith, on trust so to speak, of what sages have written down the ages. There must be something in common in the form these descriptions take, as they are all similar and follow a common pattern. But I choose not to define it myself, because It may be a consequence of human nature, ie a reflection of something in us. As such we may be idolising something about ourselves.


Fair enough.

Quoting Punshhh
What does the abbreviation JTB represent?


Ah. Justified True Belief.

Thank you for your feedback!
Punshhh October 31, 2025 at 07:12 #1022029
Reply to Janus
This is not to deny that there can be different notions as to what revelation consists in?is it, for example from a God, or a universal consciousness, or an inner self or soul experiencing anamnesis?

Yes, we are in the dark on this issue, all we have are the accounts from people who claim to have experienced revelation. I include myself, as I have experienced something which I interpreted as revelation. But I withhold judgement as it might just aswell be something innate in the human condition that I experienced in a peculiar way.

I say mystical experiences are in the latter category?the best that can be achieved is an interpretation, usually heavily conceptually mediated by some traditional religious context or other. It is this conceptual dependency on cultural and religious contexts which leads me to think the idea of direct knowing is unsupportable.

Agreed, it should only be taken as raw experience, for study within a personal framework of mystical enquiry, by people who have a serious interest and predisposition for this kind of endeavour.

I see direct knowing in the sense of 'being familiar with' as applying to both everyday experience and mystical experience, but this kind of knowing is not a discursive knowing?that is nothing propositional is known. So, when people say they know God exists, or that karma is real, or that there is an afterlife or rebirth, I have no doubt they are confusing the 'knowing that' of propositional knowledge with the direct knowing of acquaintance, of felt experience that we all enjoy every day. Of course we do need to learn to attend to that experience, and for me that is the value of meditation, which I say can be, in principle, constantly practiced?it is not confined to being in a particular posture.

Agreed, I think it is important when considering such study and practice to adopt a rigorous philosophical, self critical, sceptical stance. Develop a deep humility and be very critical of any beliefs one begins to hold.

As soon as we try to talk about these things, in any way other than via an allusive language meant to evoke, as soon as we imagine that we are accessing some real knowledge (in the propositional sense) we go astray. But it seems we just can't help ourselves?we can't help imagining that propositional metaphysical knowledge must be possible.

Perhaps this why it is called esoteric. It is incumbent upon the practitioner to have a rigorous approach so as to learn to navigate these distractions etc.
But propositional knowledge is not necessarily required, why would it be, it is only something to be found in the heads of people. It is something within human nature, part of what mysticism entails is to break out of this straight jacket.

Of course precise descriptions of fictional entities are possible, but they have no ground other than imagination.
There are accounts of it happening to real people too.

I think this is a terrible idea. It, and other ideas about "higher realms" being more important than this life are a large part of the problem, and offer no real solution to the human condition at all. I have come to see the whole idea of salvation or spiritual liberation as being, ironically, a narcissistic obsession with the self and a bolster for elitism.

You make a good point here, it is unfortunate that such ideas along with religion are so amenable to corruption, especially for political purposes and control of populations. When it comes to solutions to the human condition, prophets have tried to offer guidance, like Jesus for example. But it is only really applicable in prehistoric and medieval cultures. Although we mustn’t omit the very real legacy left in our cultures by the moral codes offered by these religions. One only need imagine the last couple of thousand years if religions hadn’t developed to realise how self destructive and exploitative human nature can be. We may well observe it’s destructive nature over the next few years.
ProtagoranSocratist October 31, 2025 at 16:56 #1022084
Quoting Punshhh
Provided your evolutionary stage of development has reached that point of awakening.
We cannot know if people did actually reach enlightenment during the heyday of the Buddhist and Hindu religions, when they wrote their teachings down. Or if it represented a goal of their practice. We really don’t know how things were back then.


If I may, i have some questions:

-what kind of evolution are you referring to, the mythical rebirth cycles of buddhism, maybe something easier to grasp that you think is fundamental to enlightenment?

-what do the ancients have to do with any of this? Weren't their canons created because they knew they would die? So how can transcendental-ego practices be off limits?
Punshhh October 31, 2025 at 17:17 #1022088
Reply to ProtagoranSocratist
If I may, i have some questions:

Of course.
what kind of evolution are you referring to, the mythical rebirth cycles of buddhism, maybe something easier to grasp that you think is fundamental to enlightenment?

No not evolutions as given to us in religious ideology. Rather any actual evolution that is going on. This is on the assumption that there is a spiritual, or other, dimension. Something that we can’t verify. But we can verify that evolution and natural growth processes go on in organisms, using science and the spiritual teachings passed down to us state that we are evolving souls (in most cases). It is this evolution, if it is actually going on, that I’m referring to. So the idea is that one will only reach enlightenment when one’s soul has reached the point of development where it is ready to (through natural developmental processes) undergo that transformation.

The ancients produced the canons which these traditions either rely on, or refer to. There is the New Age movement which has come up with modern ideas about this. But on the whole spiritual and mystical movements rely on historical teachings. I can’t really comment on phenomenological ideas as I haven’t studied that field.
Janus October 31, 2025 at 21:27 #1022143
Punshhh November 01, 2025 at 08:36 #1022212
Reply to ProtagoranSocratist Apologies, I missed these two questions, thinking there were only two questions.

Weren't their canons created because they knew they would die? So how can transcendental-ego practices be off limits?


Firstly we don’t know why their cannons were created, it would seem to me that they were organising into religious movements. Which would require formal teachings to be written and disseminated.

Regarding transcendental practices, the way I see it is that if a being is ripe for the development of enlightenment, they would naturally be drawn to institutions where it is facilitated. The implication being that people joining these institutions who aren’t ripe, so to speak, will not achieve enlightenment. The conclusion being that people cannot force enlightenment, which I agree with.
ENOAH November 08, 2025 at 02:16 #1023767
Quoting Punshhh
The conclusion being that people cannot force enlightenment, which I agree with


I agree with you, that you cannot force "enlightenment." However, I would vary from what seems to be implied in your suggestion that one must be ripe for enlightenment, or find institutions that facilitate it. These would involve the ego, an agent actively seeking/desiring enlightenment.

My suggestion is that enlightenment is an awakening to the fictional nature of that agent. The so called transcendental ego, remains, nevertheless, the ego. Enlightenment neither involves, nor happens to that agent. The ego, mind, and human history have displace the human's natural being. Enlightenment is a shedding of that displacement. It is an emancipation from the fictional narratives restructuring reality for humans.
Punshhh November 09, 2025 at 06:47 #1023998
Reply to ENOAH
However, I would vary from what seems to be implied in your suggestion that one must be ripe for enlightenment, or find institutions that facilitate it.

Let me qualify that, I meant to be ripe on one’s soul (or equivalent). Not that the institutions facilitate this ripeness. But rather enable the flowering if the soul is ready.

My suggestion is that enlightenment is an awakening to the fictional nature of that agent. The so called transcendental ego, remains, nevertheless, the ego. Enlightenment neither involves, nor happens to that agent. The ego, mind, and human history have displace the human's natural being. Enlightenment is a shedding of that displacement. It is an emancipation from the fictional narratives restructuring reality for humans.

Yes, I agree entirely, but I would caution that we really don’t know the processes involved here. All we have to go on is scripture. So we are always approximating something we don’t know, that is hidden from us.

I take it that by ‘transcendent ego’, you mean an equivalent to the soul?
ENOAH November 09, 2025 at 07:11 #1024001
Quoting Punshhh
So we are always approximating something we don’t know, that is hidden from us.


Yes

Quoting Punshhh
by ‘transcendent ego’, you mean an equivalent to the soul?


I'm taking it, that that's what those who pursue the phenomenological reduction are after--something like the soul.

But I'm suggesting that the transcendental ego is not that "thing" like a soul. That the phenomenological reduction falls short of the mark. That thing like a soul is beyond even the transcendental ego, the latter which is just the last trace of ego beyond the Subject perceiving itself as an object perceiving, i.e. as an "ego." That the thing like a soul is entirely egoless, unconcerned with perceiver/perceived/perception. That in that respect, the thing is only the "perceiving."