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Originally Posted by Dolazy The discussion is about veganism in a subjective reality. Your seem to argument from the objective reality perspective. This would be helpful if this thread really were about veganism and health, but it is more about the theory of subjective reality and how veganism fits in. |
Ah, okay, got it.
I surf multi-tabbed in Firefox and lost track of which thread I was in. Sorry for crapping up the thread.
To add something of value to this thread...
If your subconscious is a result of your past conscious choices and experiences, and how you interpret them, I don't think conscious or subconscious would make much of a difference from a subjective viewpoint. If it comes into your relative, be any means, it can only be there because you brought it there.
However, I'm noticing two issues within veganism; one being an unethical treatment of animals and the second being excess and waste. The suffering caused to animals by the eating of meat could be reduced by veganism, but excess and waste isn't really a vegan-only issue. But I guess either way it would be dealt with by a subjective reality system just as any other issue would.
The funny thing is though, from a subjective view point, is that trying to convert others to veganism isn't really trying to change another's subjective reality. You're still dealing with yourself since other people are just a manifestation of your own reality.
Arguments arise from two conflicting realities "is so," "is not," "is so," "is not." From a subjective viewpoint, it would be only one reality, your own. So the conflict would be within yourself. Am I getting this right?
So then, how does one deal with inner conflict in a subjective reality system? Would the answer be to raise the awareness (of veganism in this case) within yourself so that it would be made manifest elsewhere in your reality?