Alex Jacob wrote:His book is a sort of huge, action-packed, spiritual comic book for the gullible. His book is the prototype in a very real sense for a whole slew of similar fantasies (Carlos Castaneda among them) that have put a huge mark on contemporary alternative spirituality, and made it into an absurd joke.
Alex Jacob wrote:Really, if you wanted to understand where P. Yogananda is coming from and what wares he is selling, you'd have to turn to his interpretation of the Bhagavad-Gita. In short, he presents (in his interpretation of the Bhagavad-Gita) a model in which the soul that is in man incarnated into the material sphere, and the 'yoga' that is presented in the Bhagavad-Gita---the scriptural revelation which in Indian understanding is Divine, revered and elevated---is a map or a toolbox, if you will, for putting all the process of material incarnation in reverse, so that the human soul can free itself from bondage in the material plane. We came into material manifestation through a 'condensation of spiritual energy', and to go back out of it and into or toward our 'true nature' we have to apply a reverse manoeuvre. That is yoga.
In general terms, that is pretty much Indian spirituality in a nutshell.

Alex Jacob wrote:Yet everything that is not precisely your view of reality, and 'ultimate reality' is, eo ipso, lunacy.
I read your ideas, with the concrete wall of certainty that rides along with them, and to me it also looks a little like lunacy.
The funny thing, as I see it, is that whatever your view of 'nirvana' and 'rebirth' might be, it is still going to be a story, but your story is one that, from the look of it, provides you with an arrogant platform from which to judge all other descriptions, all other allusions. You seek for yourself a place to wield your contempt, which is palpable, and one notices a sort of fiery arrogance in your approach that could be called 'unwise'.
David has criticised the populism of branches of Indian religious practice (tantra, etc), and feels that he knows and has access to the truer of all true things. It runs through everything the TBs say and write on this forum. It is a game of 'being right', a kind of one-upmanship, but no one of you ever seems to be able to look at it, and you support each other in your game of winning, asserting your views, prevailing.
Personally, I look at all stories and first note they are stories. There is no way to describe ultimate reality in the sense of a human beings relatedness to his creation, his existence, and his relationship to meaning. And it is exactly in that spirit that I read your stories, which are so important to you, that have intense fervor.
You have so much evangelical certainty.
It is a game of 'being right', a kind of one-upmanship, but no one of you ever seems to be able to look at it, and you support each other in your game of winning, asserting your views, prevailing.
Personally, I look at all stories and first note they are stories. There is no way to describe ultimate reality in the sense of a human beings relatedness to his creation, his existence, and his relationship to meaning.

Alex Jacob wrote:David wrote:
"Buddhism, for example, doesn't subscribe to any of the tenets above, nor do various Vedantic schools of thought, such as Advaita Vedanta. And certainly, a wise Indian would never subscribe to them."
I would say that Buddhism is born of the same mother, though. It arises from he same matrix. Buddhism represents a different thrust, a different set of flavors, that mobilizes the person differently.
Advaitists attack Dvaitists, Dvaitists attack Advaitists, and some bridge-personality comes along who represents a way of bridging the division. (Ramakrishna).
These are word-games, quite often.

Alex wrote:You have so much evangelical certainty.
The funny thing, as I see it, is that whatever your view of 'nirvana' and 'rebirth' might be, it is still going to be a story, but your story is one that, from the look of it, provides you with an arrogant platform from which to judge all other descriptions, all other allusions.
David has criticised the populism of branches of Indian religious practice (tantra, etc), and feels that he knows and has access to the truer of all true things. It runs through everything the TBs say and write on this forum. It is a game of 'being right', a kind of one-upmanship, but no one of you ever seems to be able to look at it, and you support each other in your game of winning, asserting your views, prevailing.
Personally, I look at all stories and first note they are stories. There is no way to describe ultimate reality in the sense of a human beings relatedness to his creation, his existence, and his relationship to meaning. And it is exactly in that spirit that I read your stories, which are so important to you, that have intense fervor.
Alex Jacob wrote:Advaitists attack Dvaitists, Dvaitists attack Advaitists, and some bridge-personality comes along who represents a way of bridging the division. (Ramakrishna).
maestro wrote:IMO Ramakrishna is more hype than substance, that and his mind was configured differently from a normal human being. I find that he does not bring clarity to Advaita or Dvaita, his theatrics make the whole issue more muddled.
I am really surprised that David thinks so highly of him. Had they ever met he would have likely scolded David for his logic worship and attack of feminine and advised him to stop over analyzing and start worshiping Kali to let the divine mother's love clear his mental blocks.

Alex Jacob wrote: I think that all things come to us as stories, David. Things happen to us, we 'see' things, we have realizations, we 'know' things, but it all is turned into a story about that. Especially when it comes to spiritual things, or 'ultimate things', everyone is dealing in story. All ideas are presented as story.
Alex Jacob wrote: Unfortunately, if you really try to find 'real things' of 'real value' in Indian spirituality, you will search long and hard, and in vain. It doesn't really deal in substantial things, it deals with lofty insubstantial things. And yet people glom on to all this insubstantial stuff, elevate it, and really think they are on to something. This love-affair with the insubstantial and unreal is a bane in our cultures.

If there is uncertainty about what precisely we 'see' when we perceive a simple object, how much more complex do things become when we deal with interpretations of 'ultimate reality'.
Alex Jacob wrote:I have a stop-over in Tasmania next week, can't we just talk about it over dinner and drinks?
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