Nice piece of writing, Jufa. Very lucid. Other writing of yours is sometimes opaque to me but this one I understood in its entirety.
The core of it seems to hinge on this:
We have seen how a disagreement escalate from mole hills to mountains because others do not respect others opinions and styles of expression.
I certainly agree with what you say, and it is certainly true that differences in view are the cause of conflict, but I am not at all sure if that can be avoided. Yet, because there is a multiplicity of view, there is also not a monopoly of view, which would be a sort of intellectual fascism, wouldn't it?
There is another potential ramification of 'not stepping up to the plate' and
CONFRONTING what we (you, me, anyone) perceives as a badly formulated idea, and that is that our complacency may allow certain ideas and views to spread, like a virus. With this, and sincerely and without reservations, I say in direct terms and without mincing words: I believe the neo-Buddhist formulations I critique are destructive ideas and they can and will do harm in the persons they infect. I have, in truth, very little negative animus against anyone here and a great part of my shtick is feined anger.
The interesting thing is how an idea-set that once we believed and defended, at another period, is one we no longer accept---we have outgrown it. It is therefore wise to hold to a little humility. One might have to 'eat one's words'.
"If they come for me in the morning and you do nothing, they will come for you in the evening." ---Angela Davis
They will come for her in the morning, and they may come for you in the evening...if both of you are preaching, and inciting, a violent, 'revolutionary' confrontation with the state, and if you desire to unite your urban army with that of other urban armies peopled by romantic, resentful, sons and daughters of the very same structures one is fighting, rather blindly, against. With your example, I would *simply mention* that ideas have consequences in our world, and that sometimes, at least for the sake of an exercise, we have to take a side. In fact, we really do have to take a side. We have to define our values and we have to live those values in the world. And we may even have to fight for our values, even if we are very imperfect people.
Jufa wrote: "Who can teach another the ways of life when life is unconditional and all man's beliefs, acknowledgments, and laws for and of living came to him from the same source of those he sees his reflection in?"
I see this as a sophistry, to be quite honest. You have begun from an idealistic position, almost of a Platonic Absolute, and with that assertion seem to go on to define all possible ideas and choices as relative to your ideal. At least that is what I read. But in actual fact, there may very well be very concrete and real things worth fighting for, and even dying for. If it is true, and I am not saying I believe it true or accept the source from whense it came, that "Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends", what might this mean in our world? What *value* in fact is being talked about? True, this is a mystical quote from a mystical, Christian document and refers, more than anything to the (supposed) Christian sacrifice, but does it have any other, general value? What solid and concrete values do we live for? Or does it all become indistinct and hazy [
'valueless, meaningless'] in a relativistic and dim (fading) light?
With a great deal of (attempted) humor (in the form of a cartoon character I might add, with an 21 inch pecker, yellowing teeth and a messianic mission) I am suggesting that there is a great deal more to be thought about. That 'our traditions' and the intellectual and spiritual work of uncountable generations of men (I mean 'the Occidental Opus') is not to be simply dismissed with an imperious, arrogant gesture
by some young Vandals high on Zen fumes. I have made many different attempts to explain this, indeed all my posts are filled with references to ways that truth, beauty and value have been, can be, and are expressed in our highly perishable world.
I find these 'conversations' facinating when they
RISE to be actual, bona fide, consequential debates and arguments. Unfortunately for me, Dennis doesn't rise...he sinks! ;-)
Jufa wrote: Everything in the known universe, whether consciousness, free will thought, or man himself is a solid mass without inertia until the vibration of movement give purpose to intent.
Shouldn't you have written "Everything in the known universe, whether consciousness, free will thought, or man himself is a solid mass
with inertia [a solid, inert mass] until the vibration of movement give purpose to intent"?
Aren't you trying to say that it is the Idea (whatever in truth this is) that sets in motion?