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| A thought came to us last night as some friends and I were discussing the whole concept of subjective reality, and I'd like the group's take on this. The thesis was essentially this: Nothing exists outside your conscious awareness until you bring it into your consciousness. (That, as I understand, is basically the foundation of SR, though if my interpretation is wrong, please call me on it because I may have it incorrect.) That said, there is such a thing as a shared SR; the world, gravity & other laws of physics and so forth. My environmentally-conscious friend said that, in her view, SR had the potential to be extraordinarily damaging to the environment. She explained that if we use a lot of fossil fuels (eg: gasoline) and throw a lot of stuff away, once the fuel is burned and the stuff is thrown out it ceases to exist in our minds and we don't give it another thought. But the green house gas (GHG) emissions and stuff that's thrown out pollutes the shared SR, impacting the rest of the world to a detrimental effect. It may not be in our consciousness anymore, but it still exists in shared SR. Western societies have been essentially living in this paradigm for years, burning fossil fuels relentlessly and throwing away stuff willy-nilly without giving it a second thought. The result has been a spike in GHG emissions, associated global warming and a sea of garbage. Then she got up and had another chip with cheese dip, leaving us with question marks over our collective heads. Whaddya think? Can a literal interpretation of SR be the cause of real environmental degradation?
__________________ LTPP |
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| I don't think you are quite getting SR. Steve explains it really weird in my opinion. I came across the idea before I read on this blog so I'm not subject to the same confusion lol. I explain SR like so: Awareness is a fundamental aspect of reality just like mass, space, time, energy etc. Awareness is a thing in itself, what it is like to see or hear or feel cannot be reduced to a set of simpler parts. Fundamentals like mass, space and the like are necessarily subjective experiences because they can only be known in terms of the senses. In order for awareness to manifest (physically at least) complex information systems such as the brain are needed, meaning that there are necessary features about the world. Specific constants of nature that have allowed for the formation of planets and life must exist for the world to consistent within these aspects of reality. So, in other words, space, time, energy and consciousness are the same (non-duality or SR) So, when you say SR may be the cause of global warming you're also saying that energy and matter is causing global warming. Thats just what reality is. The cause of global warming according to some is our own actions. SR is not the cause of global warming. Last edited by Mr.Mustache : 12-09-2007 at 09:55 PM. |
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I think steve has already answered this. He says," meat eaters are the biggest enemy this planet has ever seen." By avoiding meat you can solve 99% of the environment related problems. All other things like fossil fuels are excuses to avoid the guilt feelings by the Meat eaters. |
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| You and your friend may, in fact, have the wrong idea about SR. I don't think SR causes things like pollution and CO2 to cease to exist in our minds. OR does, because it causes us to feel no connections to these things or the effects of these things and our own actions on the environment. Objective Reality is really the standard way of thinking that makes us all feel utterly seperated and dissassociated, and, if we really feel that way, why would we even bother to think about the other 7-9 billion people on the planet? |
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And deforestation is primarily caused by the demand for meat.
__________________ Best, Dan Linehan |
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| One more link on the connections between meat eating & global warming, the UN report Livestock's Long Shadow: LEAD digital library: Livestock’s long shadow - Environmental issues and options Really, if you consider that it takes 16 pounds of grain to make 1 pound of meat, and you think about all the fuel used in raising & shipping the grain, let alone all the other factors (see above report or at least the executive summary), it's obvious that meat consumption is a huge part of the problem. Not the only part, and maybe not exactly 99%, but a huge part nonetheless. |
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Your friend is playing the perpetrator-victim game in a reality where that cannot exist. If it's all you there is no perpetrator, there is no victim, but in SR we can always pretend there is one if we want.
__________________ --There's nowhere to go, nothing to do. My blog which I haven't updated in a long time. |
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| Dharma's words make more sense to me than most, here and on his very interesting site, which I've just had a quick look at. Thanks Dharma, and everyone else. I think that beyond all the words about self, subject and object, manifestation, etc. the deeper point is that no-one knows, or very few do and they tend not to talk about it, and if they do they will tell you that words won't describe it anyway in such a way that you can say "Ah, yes, I've got it now. I'll tell that to all my mates". You don't understand it, do you? Be honest, now. I don't either. I could be dreaming writing this, some universal thing could be manifesting me, dreaming me dreaming this. There could be multiple universes, there could be one. We could all be embarrassed one day to find that the reductionists had it right all along (I doubt that though). Slight detour here, but on your site, Dharma, you say that "like attracts like" is an easier way of saying “that which is like unto itself is drawn”. Easier to say it may be; the same it is not. Dharma's main point, to me, is that our thinking something isn't going to make it real or not real. This - mean, that it will - is a misunderstanding of various ideas like karma. At some level, of course, if you put energy into defining things a certain way (I am happy / not happy) then you get what you invest in, and just possibly we can levitate or do other fun tricks. But on another level, you're just flotsam on the cosmic lake, and your thoughts (I'm happy / not happy) are created by the lake, along with meat, grain, Las Vegas... There is a long tradition that as we develop consciousness of reality we also gain 'supernatural' powers, siddhi in Sanskrit, and spiritual teachers traditionally warn the disciple that these are a trap for the ego if you get too invested in doing stuff with them. It's not necessarily a sin, because often sin doesn't feature in the philosophy, it's just that now you've gone down a side road, off the spiritual path, away from discovering more about reality - or rather, from becoming more real. Steve writes about how we must empty ourselves of our social programming so that it doesn't control us - fine - and then there's space to fill ourselves up with our new, self-chosen programming. Typical programmer. The traditional teachings about how to know self and universe differ: just keep emptying. Everything you create to shove in its place is only useful in so far as it acts as an emetic for some other stuff (and many personal development tools are valid in that way). When you're completely empty, you ARE, and questions of who manifested whom are of such great amusement to you that you laugh all the way to the end of time. This is the sad thing about getting it the wrong way round: instead of learning to appreciate how mysterious the universe is and developing humility about how incredibly bad we are at knowing it or ourselves, instead of recognising that knowing It will require some kind of new consciousness and getting on with our meditation, instead of sitting with silence and peace, we often just grasp at the idea of having more control over our destiny. Instead of the real potential of the ancient spiritual teaching, we take the message that we're getting nearer to becoming gods. And there's always someone ready to tell you you've been kept back from being godlike by your social conditioning (overlooking the fact that this progress towards godlike control of the world is one of its major features). Steve is a modern fakir. He's manifesting millions of dollars as a sideshow. That's ok, just as it's ok to stand and gawp. And he's right, only you can choose to develop, and whether you'd do that better subscribing or unsubscribing. He makes no bones about that, God bless him. That trick is obviously quite easy, by the way, Steve, if you're allowed to invest even the first cent that may or may not have been drawn to you by your intention:everyone knows money makes money. I mean, can't you at least play with some different levels of reality, or something physical (what, you're telling me money isn't physical?). You say one of the reasons you chose money for the experiment is because it's easily measured. Try manifesting a grain of rice - or a single coin - and use a tape measure. I'm not saying it can't be done, but at least I'd be impressed. Hey vliss! Quote:
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Oh, SR and the environment - I would hope the SR concept brings more reverance to the environment which is similar to becoming humble and not looking to control the world, or become god like in a sense. Our ego selves are not to become more detacted from what is not in our imediate awareness. If you toss litter by the side of the road and pretend to forget about it, as an application of Steve's SR idea, then that is not (I hope) what he meant. That tossing of litter even if it happened years ago is still part of you. Our awareness has memory, that memory is part of your SR. How you feel about those memories is what can change but anything from the past is still part of how you got to where you are now, every little bit. If you were saw the tree fall in the forest and heard the sound, that is part of you subjective reality. That is a different take on the "if a tree falls in the forest and no one is there, did it make a sound?" |
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LEAD digital library: Livestock’s long shadow - Environmental issues and options Quote:
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This is even better: Spirulina's Environmental Advantages |
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Selective Logging Causes Widespread Destruction Of Brazil's Amazon: Study Monbiot.com » Are You Paying to Burn the Rainforest?
__________________ Best, Dan Linehan |
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Actually, deforestation accounts for about 20% of the carbon dioxide emissions released in the world according to the Union of Concerned Scientists, whom I would trust a lot more than whatever propaganda website you got your facts from. I am not arguing that deforestation is a problem. I am saying that fossil fuel use is a much bigger problem that isn't as easily reversed. |
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