Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
- waechter418
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Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
i am because i think (i am) ?
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
The 'me' is only ever awareness aware of the experience. An experience is known only by the awareness in which the experience is arising.Londoner wrote: One of my experiences is a sense of continuity. There is 'me and experience', in that I do not identify myself with any particular experience.
The 'me' is the experience. There cannot be a 'me' having an 'experience' in the exact same moment. The 'me' is the 'experience' in the exact same moment.
To claim I do not identify myself with any particular experience...is still identification with the experience of non identifying. It is seen here that there simply is no 'I' here having an experience - awareness of experience has no I-dentity... the 'I' arises in awareness much like a dream arise at night.. appearances of I come and go in that which does not...there is nothing solid here that can be identified as a single I...except the word which is just an idea...arising in no thing...awareness.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Please note that...Londoner wrote:
As in earlier posts, I do not think it makes sense to talk of existing, your 'IS', as if it was a thing in itself. I agree that 'experience' is nothing in the sense that all words that refer to a category are not (usually) themselves members of that category; thus 'experience' is not the name of an experience. But it is no better to do the same thing with 'is'.
I think I understand what you are saying, but I wonder if you are going to have a problem putting it across with words.
What's being talked about in this thread is NOT about ''your' IS ...I'm always trying to point away from the personal 'is' to the impersonal 'is' of all IS-NESS.
WHAT IS ...is referring to EVERYTHING....EVERYTHING IS THE SAME AS NOTHING, in the sense that if there's just everything then there is nothing...there's is no room in Nonduality for two, ....twoness is always and ever Oneness appearing to itself...only. It can't be any other way. Every 'single' POV starts from the same one place of NOW HERE - NOWHERE...and, it's the same one awareness aware of every single point of view. The views may differ, but that's all, but the awareness in which the view is arising is always and ever the same one ...aware of all difference views.
Thanks for having some understanding of what's being pointed to here. As least you have some handle on this... some of the brick-brats that follow my threads here appear to be completely clueless. So kudos to you.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Doesn't it depend on what is referred to as 'I'?Dontaskme wrote:The 'me' is only ever awareness aware of the experience. An experience is known only by the awareness in which the experience is arising.Londoner wrote: One of my experiences is a sense of continuity. There is 'me and experience', in that I do not identify myself with any particular experience.
The 'me' is the experience. There cannot be a 'me' having an 'experience' in the exact same moment. The 'me' is the 'experience' in the exact same moment.
To claim I do not identify myself with any particular experience...is still identification with the experience of non identifying. It is seen here that there simply is no 'I' here having an experience - awareness of experience has no I-dentity... the 'I' arises in awareness much like a dream arise at night.. appearances of I come and go in that which does not...there is nothing solid here that can be identified as a single I...except the word which is just an idea...arising in no thing...awareness.
It can be argued that what you are is not what you experience, especially because experience is momentary while the presence of awareness itself is enduring. If one used 'I' to refer to their existential presence - that which remains constant and endures change, then it seems very reasonable. What do you refer to as 'I'?
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Am I thinking thought, or is thought thinking me/ 'I'? ...what exactly is this I? can the 'I' in which a thought arises be known by the thought in which it arises? ...no it can't, because thoughts can't know or do anything, they have no independent existence apart from that in which they arise.waechter418 wrote:i am because i think (i am) ?
So what is THAT?...who is knowing and doing? Awareness /source is the only available answer, but this ANSWER cannot be thought about.
Become silent, let go of all thoughts and see what's left, see what's there between every thought...what's left is ''pure awareness'' ..see that thoughts arise in THAT..... and that there is no one making them come or happen...Notice that awareness doesn't go anywhere, and that it's always present. That constant presence is what's being pointed to here. It's a verb, not a noun.
So no 'I' thinking thought here, the 'I' cannot be located, and is why there can be no ''separate I'' thinking.
However, there is an ''I'' but it's not the 'I' thoughts think it is..it/ this 'I' does not belong to any thing. It is the one constant no thing in which all things/idea/thoughts/ concepts ARISE AND FALL
It's all the play of different energies appearing and disappearing in and of / within it's self only.
The one you think you are can negate everything - even key concepts like mind, consciousness, the witness, ultimate subject etc... yet the one that you think you are cannot negate Source: the undying, unborn 'wellspring' that has to 'be'. This one can't be negated because YOU ARE IT
Also, there is no little i or big I here either, these are only pointers used for pointing back to true source...which is I-less.
Last edited by Dontaskme on Sun Nov 06, 2016 9:57 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Please try to kind to yourself. The world is your mirror.Harbal wrote: PLEASE GET FUCKED! I've already read more of your tripe than you deserve.
The mirror can only reflect what you are. The mirror doesn't change, only your expression can change. The mirror can't do anything for you, it only reflects you, only you can polish the mirror. The mirrors advice to you is to smile and know that when you smile the whole mirror smiles with you..
This advice was free.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
I is a thought...it's a thing. That in which things arise is not a thing. Therefore the thing is not really a thing, it's just thinking it is. No thing is doing this.Throng wrote:What do you refer to as 'I'?
Each thing is known in the instant it arises one with the knowing which is no thing. These two dynamics of thing and no thing are the same one pretending to be be two.
For more information on this subject, log on to the inner net of net i net i ...NETI NETI ....or go to the other virual information field @ noduality.com
Descartes got it wrong when he said I think. Because I is only a thought., and thoughts can't actually think, they only think they can...which is more thought. Descartes left out one very important aspect of the whole dynamic and that was ''nothingness'' ..and he probably did this for one very good reason, and that being..what can the mind do with nothing
Last edited by Dontaskme on Sun Nov 06, 2016 10:10 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Dontaskme wrote:Consciousness is self-evident by association / experience. But this does not relate to a single ''separate self'' who is the ''thinker'' ''knower'' ''experiencer'' or ''doer'' simply because of the infinite regress problem. Life is a happening without doubt, the proof is already evident in the manifestation of the body and it's automatic functioning. But life for a 'separate self' is an illusion for the reason the self cannot be located, probably because it is everywhere at once.Ginkgo wrote:
What you have here is known as Cartesian materialism. It is also know as the homunculus argument. That is to say, there is a single place in the brain where all thoughts come together to give rise to a self, or a viewer. This just begs the question, "how is the homunculus conscious of the show in the Cartesian theatre?" It is a fallacious argument because it involves and infinite regress.
So how does the sense of 'I exist' arise? ..........This extract may explain it better .... >
'' If the concept of number (or of discrete quantity) is postulated before zero (or the zero-point) and infinity (or the infinite state) are contemplated, then the idea of zero (or of the zero-point) and the idea of infinity (or of the infinite state) are (necessarily) categorized as numbers (or quantities) and as "entities" that are intrinsically two, and (thus) non-identical to one another-as if zero (or the zero-point) is, by definition, at the beginning and infinity (or the infinite state) is, by definition, at the end.
To invent number, human beings did not begin with zero (as a discrete number) and, then, start counting forwards-nor did they begin with infinity (as a discrete number) and, then, start counting backwards.
Rather, to invent number, human beings first invented the ideas of "point of view" (or of "localized" and separate "self'-identity), and of the "other" (or "not-self'), and of "difference" (or "objective quantity").
Only after number was already invented-based on the original invention of "point of view" (or "localized" and separate "self', or ego-"I") and of "object" (or "difference", or "not-self")-did human beings invent the ideas of zero and infinity.
Thus, originally, human beings mistakenly superimposed the idea of number onto the ideas of zero and infinity-and, as a result, human beings have struggled with the irrational paradoxes of that false superimposition ever since.
However, if the original error is understood and the false superimposition thus removed, contemplation of the "root"-ideas of zero (or the zero-point) and infinity (or the infinite state) can serve the human "root"-intuition of the Intrinsically egoless and indivisible Self-Nature, Self-Condition, and Self-State of Reality Itself.''
As far as I can see this has absolutely nothing to do with the cogito, In fact it makes absolutely no sense at all. Where did you get this extract?
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Life just IS, is doesn't have to make sense. Who would it have to make sense for...who is the other life?Ginkgo wrote:
As far as I can see this has absolutely nothing to do with the cogito, In fact it makes absolutely no sense at all. Where did you get this extract?
Life appears out of no thing. A tree does not have to remember or intellectualise it's existence, in order to be, it's just appearing, and no thing is making it appear.
Last edited by Dontaskme on Sun Nov 06, 2016 10:15 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
By things you mean "thoughts" here, I suppose.Dontaskme wrote: That in which things arise is not a thing.
A materialist would say that the thing in which thoughts arise is a living brain.
Some thoughts can arise in AI too, I was told.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
We all have only one life. I was just wondering where you got the extract.Dontaskme wrote:Life just IS, is doesn't have to make sense. Who would it have to make sense for...who is the other life?Ginkgo wrote:
As far as I can see this has absolutely nothing to do with the cogito, In fact it makes absolutely no sense at all. Where did you get this extract?
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
One life is living all lives, there is no 'we'Ginkgo wrote:
We all have only one life. I was just wondering where you got the extract.
The extract is from the book ''The Aletheon'' by Adi Da Samraj
PS..thanks for reading the extract.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
No problem. If you are talking about plural "lives" then "we" as a possessive pronoun would be appropriate.Dontaskme wrote:One life is living all lives, there is no 'we'Ginkgo wrote:
We all have only one life. I was just wondering where you got the extract.
The extract is from the book ''The Aletheon'' by Adi Da Samraj
PS..thanks for reading the extract.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
But didn't you say:Dontaskme wrote: when you smile the whole mirror smiles with you..
Maybe if you weren't constantly contradicting yourself you would have more credibility.The mirror doesn't change, only your expression can change.
And its price reflects its value.This advice was free.
Re: Questions about Descartes ''I think therefore I am''
Well the brain is known to be that which processes each thought, just as a computer is the processor of information imputed into it, but the actual ''what ever'' thought/information IS... imputing itself into a brain and then outpouring as knowledge known is unknowable...because all knowledge is illusory ...only known as it appears to be from it's invisible source.duszek wrote:By things you mean "thoughts" here, I suppose.Dontaskme wrote: That in which things arise is not a thing.
A materialist would say that the thing in which thoughts arise is a living brain.
Some thoughts can arise in AI too, I was told.