I have always been curious about the realities of life and
existence. I used to read and document the views and comments of my favorite
writers on specific concepts or topics and then delve into what they had said
for hours, even days.
The philosophical definition of “reality” is “something that
exists independently of ideas concerning it.” Considering this definition one
could assume that the sunset is the “reality” and a painting of it is what we
make of it.
Here are my notes of what some writers have painted of
“reality”.
David Spangler -
The universe is ultimately the manifestation of non-physical, non-material
possibilities, and the dominant view of science now is how much we don’t really
know about the nature of reality. On atomic and sub-atomic or quantum level,
reality is a joint creation or product of the participation of observer and
observed. Reality is continually co-created. We perceive only what we think or
believe we can perceive. The world is as hard as we wish it to be, or as open,
fluid and expanding as we can embody.
Chogyan Trungpa -
The human potential for intelligence and dignity is attuned to experiencing the
brilliance of the bright blue sky, the freshness of the green fields, and the
beauty of the trees and mountains. We have an actual connection with reality
that can wake us up and make us feel basically, fundamentally good. The problem
is that when we begin to realize that potential goodness in ourselves we often
take our discovery much too seriously. We might kill for goodness or die for
goodness, we want it so badly. A genuine sense of humor is having a light
touch, not beating the reality into the ground but appreciating reality with a
light touch. The discovery of basic goodness is the realization that we can
directly experience and work with reality, the real world that we are in.
Susan Howatch – We
live in the world of movement, of change, which is reflected in the words
“past”, “present”, and “future”, but beyond this world is another world to
which we are inextricably linked but which we can only dimly perceive. This
world is kingdom of values, the absolute values of goodness, truth and beauty,
and it is these unchanging values present in our changing world of time and
space, which reflect the other world, ultimate reality, which is beyond space
and time.
Rick Fields - For
the ordinary man whose mind is checkerboard of crisscrossing reflections,
opinions, and prejudices, bare attention is virtually impossible, his life is
thus centered not on reality itself but on his ideas about it.
Hugh Prather – What
an obsured amount of energy I have been wasting all my life trying to figure
out how things “really are” when all the time they weren’t. There are no
absolute for something so relative as human life. The measure of communication
is trust. Insofar as I hide any feeling or experience, I separate myself from
knowledge of reality and the love of others.
Gary Zukav - Quantum
physics was born of an intense and cumulative effort to understand the nature
of physical light. It is possible to build a device that reveals wave-like
nature of light that causes light to produce phenomena that can only be
produced by wave. It is also possible to make a device that detects particles
of light, as though they were tiny pellets, and to measure the force of the
impact of each particle. Yet it is not possible for light to be described as a
wave phenomenon at the same time. In other words, it is not possible to
describe the nature of light – literally, the shape of physical apart from the
experimental apparatus that is used to determine it, and this depends upon the
intention of the experimenter.
The dependency of the form of physical light upon the
intention of the experimenter reflects in a limited but accurate manner the
dependency of the form of non-physical light upon the intentions of the soul
that shapes it, just as the nature of physical light itself reflects in a
limited but essentially accurate way the nature of the light of the universe.
The true human condition in its most perfect form has no secrets. It does not
hide, but exists in clear love.
Allan Watts - Intelligence is not a separate, ordering
faculty of the mind, but a characteristic of the whole organism-environment
relationship, the field of forces where in lies the reality of a human being.
Nature is a field of relationships rather than a collection of things. If the
fundamental energy and impulse of the universe were not blissful, the whole
system would have ceased long ego.
Elizabeth Heich -
We are able to shift our consciousness into the past or into the future at
will. In other words, we are able to experience the past and the future as
present. And with the same case we can free ourselves from the hindrance of
space and move our consciousness to any place we wish. In this condition there
is no “here” and no “there” but only omnipresence. For past and future – here
and there – are only different aspects, different projections of the one and
only reality, the eternal omnipresent.
Buddhism -
Considers “I” an idea of incorrect perception of reality. The teachings deal
with truths which go entirely beyond the merely rational, unfolding a
transcendental vision of reality which altogether surpasses all our usual
categories of thought. There is a belief that we have the capacity to penetrate
directly to the heart of reality.
Ray Grigg - There
is mystery because there is not-knowing
Yet beneath each knowing is the next not-knowing
So each knowing deepens the mystery
Yet even in knowing there is the mystery of
knowing
Well said as a conclusion!
To be continued….
No comments:
Post a Comment