Cory Duchesne wrote:Fujaro wrote:Cory Duchesne wrote:We are not separate entities who are processing our own thoughts - rather, we literally are the very thought process which we try and separate ourselves from.
Then your body is not a part of you since your body doesn't equal to the thought process.
It does actually. The activity of your biological organism generates the thought process. So ultimately the body and the thought process are one. Kill the body and you kill the thought process.
OK, I agree on this one, the body generates the thougt process. Without the body there is no thought process. And that's all there is to it really. The body constitutes the self in exactly this way. I call my body plus the thought it generates 'me' and though that's not the same as describing the universe as a whole, it is a very usefull labeling. For instance when you're crossing a road, this labelling helps you to get to the other side in one piece.
Cory Duchesne wrote:And if by this you mean that there is only one thought process, please put it to the test and tell me which number I am thinking of right now.
I didn't mean to imply such a thing.
OK, you have no connection to my thought process. In other words, our bodies and thought processes are distinct in certainly this sense.
Cory Duchesne wrote:For if there are no separate thought processes, this would necessarily mean you have direct access to all thought.
I didn't mean to say what you think I said. What I meant was that the division between the thinker and the thought is false. The thinker doesn't make his thoughts. The thoughts make the thinker.
I agree on the fact that there's no homonculus inside the flesh, there's no Cartesian theater. But as you said, the body generates the thought. I am the body and the thought. So with 'I', I don't mean a little man inside. So you should agree on it when I say "I have thought this or that" that the I (call it the thinker) has generated a thought.
Cory Duchesne wrote:Fujaro wrote:Cory Duchesne wrote:Yes, it's true that we want and can call the result our own unique decision, but that doesn't mean such a conclusion has much meaning. What I find exceedingly more meaningful is to attribute who we are (we are a result of some process) to the totality of all processes.
And what is the gain from this insight that identity-separation doesn't exist?
If everybody were to apply it, we would see the end of war, pollution, loneliness, violence and emotion, the end of overpopulation, etc.
Here's where we differ in opinion. You make a very big claim from an unsubstantiated assumption. Have you any further proof for the claim that who we are can be attributed to the totality of all processes in any usefull way other than as an interacting entity with the environment?
Cory Duchesne wrote:Fujaro wrote:The all is one mantra doesn't seem to equate to new 100% succesful cancer therapies, so far.
I'm not trying to undermine science. People who are suited for it, should still do science.
But do you acknowledge that the average lifetime of human populations the last two centuries has seriously been lengthened by big technological and scientific advances achieved by personal human endeavour, strong will, perseverence and determination? In other words that the concept of 'I' is crucial in it?
Cory Duchesne wrote:Fujaro wrote:Cory Duchesne wrote:Why don't you identify with everything?
I won't easily fit in with kid cancer, for one thing. What therapies would there be without these 'delusional human' agents called scientist, who on basis of 'false' conceptions of identity as a vehicle to accomplish something, strive to battle disease.
Being enlightened shouldn't stop a person from practicing science, if that's what he's good at.
So far (in this posting, that is) then, we only disagree on the big claim you're making about the path to make the world a better place.
Cory Duchesne wrote:Fujaro wrote:Your idea that identity-awareness is delusional relies on the presumption of an unchangeable, undivisible, absolute truth.
Have you any evidence to present here that that is a coherent concept in accordance with reality?
I think a good place to start is understand how boundaries don't objectively exist. The evidence for this very apparent. If you can understand this point, then the rest might be clear to you.
I don't agree on this point. As we have agreed on above, there are boundaries that are extremely usefull (i.e. distinctiveness of 'me' and 'you' for instance). Here you seem to confirm that identity-awareness is delusional whereas in the above we agreed on the negation of that. When you use the word 'objectively' you refer to some platonic absolute truth without any evidence for its existence. You first should explain that objective knowledge (nothing less than absolute knowledge that is) has any meaning whatsoever. Can we test it to be objective? That's a rather wild claim. Since you are making a claim that's both counterintuitive and inconsistent with your own statements I suggest you elaborate on this 'obvious' and 'objective' issue.