Gaia Community: Inspire's Blog tag:gaia.com,2008,:Gaia http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/feed en-us 20 Thu, 29 Oct 2009 03:26:04 GMT Gaia Community: Inspire's Blog Feel Good Philosophy http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-292386 Thu, 29 Oct 2009 03:26:04 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2009/10/feel-good-philosophy <p>I recently started reading <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Truth-About-Everything-Irreverent-Illustrations/dp/1573921106">The Truth About Everything, An Irreverent History of Philosophy</a>.&nbsp; I have to say, for a critique and history of philosophy book, it has been a very (wildly) entertaining read.&nbsp; <br /><br />I found one particular paragraph that stood out to me.&nbsp; Being both the idealist and compulsive categorizer, I often wonder what drivers philosophers to, well.... philosophize.&nbsp; <br /><br />From page 119:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;Philosophers begin by sensing a transcendental need, either in themselves or in others.&nbsp; It is the need, loosely speaking, to feel good, or to feel at one with the world, and it usually stems from a sense of alienation, a belief that one is alone, unwanted, or useless to the world.&nbsp; The philosophers propose to meet this need philosophically.&nbsp; That is, they typically provide sets of arguments, summarized in a doctrine, to the effect that there is no need to worry, because all is one anyway, or something of the sort.&nbsp; Whether or not this kind of quasi-truth therapy works in individual cases, it is by no means a sure-fire cure.&nbsp; After all, it is just <em>talk</em>.&nbsp; It is a set of reasons (or non-reasons) for viewing circumstances differently, but not a chance in the circumstances themselves.&nbsp; Philosophical error occurs when the philosopher confuses this sort of general talk with a change in circumstances.&nbsp; Plotinus, for example, seems at times to think that his various doctrines concerning the emanation from and return to the One not only show how one might become one with the world, but actually create this unity.&nbsp; It is a form of Free Communion: One has only to state it, and it comes about.&nbsp; Would that it were so easy.&quot;<br /><br /></blockquote>What is The Principle of No Free Communion?&nbsp; It&#39;s a philosophy that takes the union of man and universe as its goal and that conceives of this union as something other than the act of doing philosophy itself cannot achieve this goal by philosophical means. <br /><br />The proof?&nbsp; Essentially all philosophy takes the union of man and the universe as its goal, though this project may be expressed in a variety of ways.&nbsp; The union of matter and mind, for example, is essentially the same thing.&nbsp; In aiming for such a union, the philosophy necessarily begins by positing a difference.&nbsp; Man and universe, or matter and mind, must be grasped as distinct if they are to be united.&nbsp; Insofar as philosophy is mere description, it has no power to overcome this difference.&nbsp; It cannot merely state the union, any more than it can state the union of peanut butter and jelly.&nbsp; A possible exception is that philosophy which understands itself, that is, the act of philosophizing, as the union between man and universe.&nbsp; This view, however, leads to absurd statements like &quot;I, Socrates, am god,&quot; which are known to violate familiar syllogisms.<br /><blockquote><br /><br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/philosophy" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'philosophy'">philosophy</a> </p> Jung on Dream Journals http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-287429 Thu, 17 Sep 2009 23:02:27 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2009/9/jung-on-dream-journals <p>The New York Time&#39;s recently featured an article on Jung&#39;s intriguing and much anticipated Red Book.&nbsp; <br /><br /> <div class="asset_container" style="float: none; "> <div class="asset_holding" style="width:240px;float:none"> <img src="http://bbg-aura.gaia.com/photos/54/532553/medium/redbook.jpg" height="240" width="240" /> <div class="asset_caption">redbook</div> </div> </div><br id="ze_clear_142594" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/><strong>The Holy Grail of the Unconscious</strong><br /><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/20/magazine/20jung-t.html?pagewanted=1">http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/20/magazine/20jung-t.html?pagewanted=1</a><br /><br />A quote from Jung on journaling the inner workings of the mind and (possibly) dreams stuck out to me:<br /><br /><blockquote>&ldquo;I should advise you to put it all down as beautifully as you can &mdash; in some beautifully bound book,&rdquo; Jung instructed. &ldquo;It will seem as if you were making the visions banal &mdash; but then you need to do that &mdash; then you are freed from the power of them. . . . Then when these things are in some precious book you can go to the book &amp; turn over the pages &amp; for you it will be your church &mdash; your cathedral &mdash; the silent places of your spirit where you will find renewal. If anyone tells you that it is morbid or neurotic and you listen to them &mdash; then you will lose your soul &mdash; for in that book is your soul.&rdquo; </blockquote><br id="ze_clear_asset_287429" class="ze_clear" style="clear:both"/></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jung" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jung'">jung</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/dream+journal" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'dream journal'">dream journal</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/psychology" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'psychology'">psychology</a> </p> What worry would you like to let go of? http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-286961 Sun, 13 Sep 2009 23:48:52 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2009/9/what-worry-would-you-like-to-let-go-of <p>The thought that time is somehow running out.</p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/QaR" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'QaR'">QaR</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/worry" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'worry'">worry</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/concern" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'concern'">concern</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/letting+go" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'letting go'">letting go</a> </p> The Value of Theoretical Models & Conceptual Maps http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-272042 Sun, 24 May 2009 20:21:18 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2009/5/the_value_of_theoretical_models_and_conceptual_maps <p>What is the true benefit and practical application of uber theories like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_movement">Integral</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral_dynamics">Spiral Dynamics</a>?<br /><br />I&#39;ve been thinking about this topic recently, and there were a few Twitter conversations (tweets) yesterday that prompted me too dig deeper:<br /><br /><blockquote><strong>@ericschiller</strong>: How useful are models like spiral dynamics at helping us grow? Or do they just show us the path, but not the steps?<br /><br /><strong>@ericblue</strong>: @ericschiller I&#39;ve thought about that quite a bit. the models are helpful in &#39;showing the path&#39;, or giving you a flashlight in the cave.<br /><br /><strong>@ericblue</strong>: @ericschiller I&#39;ve been thinking of ways to balance theoretical (top-heavy conceptual models) w/ pragmatic use. How can you apply in life.<br /><br /><strong>@NeillGibson</strong>: @ericschiller @ericblue interesting link on spiral dynamics = Rich Carlson&rsquo;s critique of Integral Theory <a href="http://bit.ly/25Syv">http://bit.ly/25Syv</a><br /><br /><strong>@ericblue</strong>: @NeillGibson @ericschiller Good critique of SD, Integral &amp; theories in general @ <a href="http://tinyurl.com/puser8">http://tinyurl.com/puser8 </a>(was my 1st intro to Integral)<br /></blockquote>One very interesting point that came from my last link (<a href="http://www.timboucher.com">Tim Boucher</a>&#39;s critique of Ken wilber back in 2005) was the following:<br /><br /><blockquote><strong>Who needs theories, anyways?</strong><br /></blockquote><blockquote>&quot;My first and probably biggest question about this book and Wilber&rsquo;s work in general is: Why on earth do we need a Theory of Everything? Life already gives us the everything, so what&rsquo;s the use in having a theory <em>about</em> everything? Doesn&rsquo;t the extra layer of theory add also a layer of distance, a separation between us and the everything? Do I need a theory about how locomotion works into the grand scheme of the universe in order to run across a field in spring-time with a dog? Do I need to know the biological mechanisms that control love, sex and attraction to be totally captivated by the sleeping face of the woman I&rsquo;m in love with? I guess I&rsquo;m beginning to feel less and less interested in theory for it&rsquo;s own sake. I find myself drawn increasingly to the approach that fields like <a href="http://www.timboucher.com/journal/2005/07/16/how-does-nlp-work/">Neuro-Linguistic Programming</a> take; they say, &ldquo;we don&rsquo;t have a theory&rdquo; and instead just focus on what works and what doesn&rsquo;t.&quot;</blockquote><br />This is a very good point.<br /><br />Personally speaking, I&#39;m a huge fan of both Integral and Spiral Dynamics.&nbsp; I&#39;m drawn to &#39;theory of everything&#39; models for a variety of reasons.&nbsp; First and foremost, I like the complexity (the intellectual challange) and the simplicity (how does everything work together) at the same time.&nbsp; One challenge though with all these models is that they, of course, don&#39;t truely represent reality as it is.&nbsp; You know, the age old cliche of &#39;the map is not the territory&#39;.<br /><br />I feel in many ways, after much reading and research, that I&#39;m cognitively starting to &#39;get it&#39;.&nbsp; And, while I&#39;m really starting to grok some of these models I&#39;m recognizing (as much as I can) where I&#39;m at on the developmental path (stages, lines, spiral, etc.).&nbsp; Like many predominantly left-brained (I don&#39;t always like that term, but let&#39;s just say analytical) people that are drawn to &#39;conceptual cartography&#39; I&#39;ve observed that my cognitive/intellectual line of development might be slighly ahead of other areas.&nbsp; <br /><br />So, these theories seem to work great for enhancing cognitive lines, but what about emotional, spiritual, moral and others?&nbsp; As much as I love theories, and I am predominantly an idealist, I also have a very down to earth side.&nbsp; I&#39;ve recognized that in order to be truely integral you need to balance theory with some sort of practice and application.&nbsp; It seems that pragmatism and practicality are the answer.&nbsp; I think there is something to be said about <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Praxis_(process)">Praxis</a>: the process by which a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory" title="Theory">theory</a>, lesson, or skill is enacted or practiced.&nbsp; As William James said, &quot;What, in short, is the truth&#39;s cash-value in experiential terms?&quot;. <br /><br />What does this mean about theories?&nbsp; You could argue that they might be a &#39;cognitive burden&#39;, are intellectually top-heavy, a barrier to entry, and a labeling mechanism.&nbsp; Should they be tossed aside?&nbsp; While looking for some answers to this question, I stumbled across a passage in &#39;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Integral-Spirituality-Startling-Religion-Postmodern/dp/1590305272/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1243198259&amp;sr=8-1">Integral Spirituality</a>&#39; by Ken Wilber pg. 38:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;.... you can sit on your meditation mat for decades, and you will NEVER see anything resembling the stages of Spiral Dynamics.&nbsp; And you can study Spiral Dynamics till the cows come home, and you will NEVER have a satori.&nbsp; And the integral point is, if you don&#39;t include both, you will likely never understand human beings or their relation to Reality, divine or otherwise.&quot;<br /><br /></blockquote><div align="left">I think this explanation is practical and makes a lot of sense.&nbsp; All of these complex maps and conceptual models serve a very important purpose.&nbsp; Not only do they help point out where YOU are at on a developmental path (raising consciousness and pushing towards integration), they can also help you understand and effectively adopt the perspective of OTHERS (enabling empathy and compassion).&nbsp; After all, how can you take somebody else&#39;s point of view without <u>fully</u> considering their life situation, values,&nbsp; wants/needs/desires, belief system, and stage of development?&nbsp; <br /><br />-----------------------------<br />For good introductions/summaries of both Integral Philosophy &amp; Spiral Dynamics check out:<br /><br /><strong>Integral Vision Mind Maps<br /></strong><a href="http://eric-blue.com/2008/12/18/integral-vision-mind-maps/">http://eric-blue.com/2008/12/18/integral-vision-mind-maps/</a><br /><strong><br />Spiral Dynamics Mind Map<br /></strong><a href="http://eric-blue.com/2009/05/17/spiral-dynamics-mind-map/">http://eric-blue.com/2009/05/17/spiral-dynamics-mind-map/</a><br /><strong><br /></strong></div></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/integral" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'integral'">integral</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/spiral+dynamics" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'spiral dynamics'">spiral dynamics</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/theories" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'theories'">theories</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/models" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'models'">models</a> </p> Joseph Campbell on Creative Incubation http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-267568 Wed, 22 Apr 2009 05:38:19 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2009/4/joseph_campbell_on_creative_incubation <p>From the Power of Myth with Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers (p.115):<br /><br /><blockquote>MOYERS: You Write in <em>The Mythic Image </em>about the center of transformation, the idea of a sacred place where the temporal walls may dissolve to reveal a wonder.&nbsp; What does it mean to have a sacred place?<br /><br />CAMPBELL: This is an absolute necessity for anybody today.&nbsp; You must have a room, or a certain hour or so a day, where you don&#39;t know what was in the newspapers that morning, you don&#39;t know who your friends are, you don&#39;t know what you owe anybody, you don&#39;t know what anybody owes to you.&nbsp; This is a place where you can simply experience and bring forth what you are and what you might be.&nbsp; This is the place of creative incubation.&nbsp; At first you may find that nothing happens there.&nbsp; But if you have a sacred place and use it, something eventually will happen.<br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/campbell" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'campbell'">campbell</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/creativity" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'creativity'">creativity</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/myth" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'myth'">myth</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/meditation" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'meditation'">meditation</a> </p> Kant and the Big Three http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2009:Gaia-252983 Tue, 27 Jan 2009 06:54:32 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2009/1/kant_and_the_big_three <p>Good overview of Kant and the Reenchantment of the world from Wilber&#39;s Marriage of Sense and Soul (pg. 86):<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;Critique of Pure Reason (written in 1781)<br />relentlessly exposed the inadequacies of<br />monological reason to grasp metaphysical<br />truths, and it basically marked the dramatic<br />and historical end of that type of metaphysics.<br />The death of traditional metaphysics: this was<br />the virtually unarguable conclusion of Kant&#39;s<br />first critique.<br /><br />&nbsp; But for Kant, this was just the opening act.<br />He demonstrated that monological reason<br />cannot prove the existence of Spirit, freedom,<br />or immortality. But he also demonstrated that<br />reason could not disprove their existence either.<br />So science was not allowed to do two things:<br />(1) it could not say that Spirit existed; but (2)<br />it most certainly could not say that Spirit did<br />not exist! Kant&#39;s point was that, as he put it,<br />he wanted to demolish knowledge (it-<br />knowledge) in order to make room for faith.<br />Only as objectivistic, positivistic, mono-logical<br />reason stopped trying to get its hands on Spirit,<br />could other types of knowing step in to take up<br />the fight.<br /><br />&nbsp; Thus, in his second critique (Critique of<br />Practical Reason, 1788), Kant attempted to<br />show that where monological reason fails to<br />prove (or disprove) Spirit, dialogical reason can<br />succeed, at least in certain suggestive ways.<br />For if scientific reason (it-rationality) cannot<br />grasp God, dialogical reason (moral, ethical,<br />practical reason) does tend to show us a<br />type&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; of&nbsp;&nbsp; transcendental&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; and&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; spiritual<br />knowledge. Moral reason (not it-knowledge<br />but we-knowledge) can, he believed,<br />operate only under the assumption that<br />Spirit exists, that freedom makes sense,<br />and that there is a type of immortality to<br />the soul. His argument, basically, is that the<br />interior &quot;ought&quot; of moral reasoning could<br />never get going in the first place without the<br />postulates of a transcendental Spirit: the<br />stomach would not hunger if food did not<br />exist. And where monolog-ical it-knowledge<br />can tell us precisely nothing about this<br />spiritual domain, dialogical we-knowledge<br />operates with its postulates all the time1.<br /><br />&nbsp; We can already see that Kant has begun<br />to differentiate clearly the Big Three value<br />spheres (art, morals, and science; I, WE, and<br />IT), and he has dramatically taken spiritual<br />knowledge out of the merely it-domain of<br />science and placed it squarely in the we-<br />domain of moral reasoning and yearning. He<br />wants&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; to&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; limit&nbsp; it-science&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (and&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &quot;it-<br />metaphysics&quot;), but only to make room for<br />&quot;we-metaphysics&quot; and dialogical reason and<br />spiritual faith. Morals, not science, point<br />most clearly to God.<br /><br />&nbsp; What remained to be done was to find<br />some way to integrate this moral we-wisdom<br />with scientific it-knowledge, and in his third<br />great critique (Critique of Judgment, 1790),<br />Kant attempts this integration, in part<br />through the expressive-aesthetic dimension<br />(or art in the most general sense). In other<br />words, he wants to introduce the aesthetic I-<br />domain in order to integrate we-morals and<br />it-science. He wants to integrate the Big Three.&quot;<br /><br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/wilber" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'wilber'">wilber</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/integral" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'integral'">integral</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/kant" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'kant'">kant</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/bigthree" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'bigthree'">bigthree</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/philosophy" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'philosophy'">philosophy</a> </p> Integral Vision Mind Maps http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-242784 Fri, 19 Dec 2008 05:08:38 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/12/integral_vision_mind_maps <p><p style="text-align: left">Originally posted on my main blog <a href="http://eric-blue.com">http://eric-blue.com</a></p><p style="text-align: left"><strong>Overview</strong></p> <p style="text-align: left">Last year I picked up a copy of <a href="http://eric-blue.com/2007/08/18/the-integral-vision/">The Integral Vision</a> by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Wilber" onclick="javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview('/outbound/article/en.wikipedia.org');">Ken Wilber</a>.&nbsp; I recently decided to re-read the book, and created a comprehensive book summary highlighting the key pieces of information in the book.&nbsp; The book summary is presented in the form of mind maps for each chapter.</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Why am I doing this?</strong></p> <p style="text-align: left">I first stumbled upon <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_philosophy" onclick="javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview('/outbound/article/en.wikipedia.org');">Integral Philosophy</a> a couple years ago, and quite honestly became hooked.&nbsp; Since that time, I&rsquo;ve read a wide variety of books and have engaged in the exciting and often daunting task of trying to build a comprehensive and well-informed worldview (or map).&nbsp; There are a number of good intro books that people recommend for first diving into Ken Wilber&rsquo;s work (e.g. A Brief History of Everything).&nbsp; Regardless of which book you pick, the fact is for most people (myself included) this is a vast and complex topic.&nbsp; Distilling a philosophy/worldview/framework into a small but useful text is difficult to say the least.</p> <p style="text-align: left">I&rsquo;ve personally found The Integral Vision to be the best intro into Integral.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a short, but powerfully-information packed book that definitely does justice to such an interesting and complex topic.&nbsp; My hope is that others who are just getting into Integral Theory/Philosophy will benefit from the mind map summaries.&nbsp; My advice would be to get the book, and use the maps as a study or reference guide to help the information sink in.</p> <p style="text-align: center"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/integral_vision_mindmap.jpg"><img style="border: 1px solid #c0c0c0" class="size-full wp-image-615 aligncenter" src="http://eric-blue.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/integral_vision_mindmap.jpg" alt="" title="integral_vision_mindmap" width="500" height="192" /></a></p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Overview</strong></p> <p style="padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Overview%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Overview.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Chapter 1</strong></p> <p style="text-align: left; padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Chapter_1%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Chapter_1.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Chapter 2</strong></p> <p style="padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Chapter_2%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Chapter_2.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Chapter 3</strong></p> <p style="padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Chapter_3%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Chapter_3.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Chapter 4</strong></p> <p style="padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Chapter_4%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Chapter_4.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Chapter 5</strong></p> <p style="padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Chapter_5%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Chapter_5.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Chapter 6</strong></p> <p style="padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/projects/mindmapviewer/display.cgi?mmap_url=http%3A%2F%2Feric-blue%2Ecom%2Fdownload%2Fintegral%2FIntegral_Vision_-_Chapter_6%2Emmap&amp;format=flash" target="_blank">View Online</a> (Flash) | <a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/Integral_Vision_-_Chapter_6.mmap">Download Map</a> (MindManager)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><strong>Entire Book Summary </strong></p> <p style="text-align: left; padding-left: 30px"><a href="http://eric-blue.com/download/integral/integral_vision_summary.zip" onclick="javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview('/downloads/download/integral/integral_vision_summary.zip');">Download</a> (2.0MB Zip)</p></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> </p> Buddha on Understanding http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-241756 Mon, 15 Dec 2008 05:48:05 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/12/buddha_on_understanding <p>From the <em>Science of Oneness</em> by Malcolm Hollick (p 163).<br /><br />Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh explains:<br /><br /><blockquote>The Buddha ... said that in order to understand, you have to be one with what you want to understand. ...<br /><br />The French language has the word comprendre, which means to understand, to know, to comprehend.&nbsp; Com means to be one, to be together, and prendre means to take or to grasp.&nbsp; To understand something is to take that thing up and to be one with it.&nbsp; The Indians have a wonderful example.&nbsp; If a grain of salt would like to measure the degree of saltiness of the ocean, to have a preception of the saltiness of the ocean, it drops itself into the ocean and becomes one with it, and the perception is perfect. ...<br /><br />Understanding means to throw away your knowledge.&nbsp; You have to be able to transcend your knowledge ... The technique is to release.&nbsp; The Buddhist way of understanding is always letting go of our views and knowledge in order to transcend. ... That is why I use the image of water to talk about understanding.&nbsp; Knowledge is solid; it block the way of unerstanding.&nbsp; Water can flow, can penetrate.<br /></blockquote><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/buddha" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'buddha'">buddha</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/knowledge" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'knowledge'">knowledge</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/understanding" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'understanding'">understanding</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/oneness" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'oneness'">oneness</a> </p> Hierarchies and the Birth of AQAL http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-234668 Mon, 17 Nov 2008 06:10:15 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/11/hierarchies_and_the_birth_of_aqal <p>Wilber makes reference to the birth of AQAL (All Quadrants, All Levels) in his work <em>The Marriage of Sense and Soul - Integrating Science and Religion</em> (pg. 63):<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;<em>It is fascinating that both premodern religion and modern science have a defining hierarchy, and both of them are composed of enveloping nests of increasing embrace (development that is envelopment).&nbsp; And yet, these two major and extremely influential hierarchies never quite agree with each other.&nbsp; Tantalizingly, they seem to talk about the same thing (a graded series of realities), yet their major terms never really match up.&nbsp; Clearly, if we could find some way that these two hierarchies were genuinely related to each other, we would have teken an important step toward the hoped-for integration of premodern and modern.<br /><br />In researching this problem, I did an extensive data search of several hundred hierarchies, taken from systems theory, ecological science, Kaalah, developmental psychology, Yogachar Buddhism, moral development, biological evolution, Vendanta Hinduism, Neo-Confucianism, cosmic and stellar evolution, Hwa Yen, the Neoplatonic corpus - an entire specturm of premodern, modern, and postmedern nests.&nbsp; After I had collected several hundres hierarchies, I tried grouping them in various ways, and I eventually noticed that, without exception, they all fell into one of four major types.&nbsp; These (are the) four types of hierarchies - which I call the four quadrants...</em>&quot;<br /></blockquote><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/aqal" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'aqal'">aqal</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/wilber" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'wilber'">wilber</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/integral" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'integral'">integral</a> </p> Rudolph Steiner on Patience and Progress http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-231229 Sun, 02 Nov 2008 19:41:39 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/11/rudolph_steiner_on_patience_and_progress <p>I&#39;ve been meaning to dig deeper into Rudolph Steiner&#39;s works since I first became aware of him a few years ago.&nbsp; Steiner is an intriguing character for a number of reasons.&nbsp; He was a passionate polymath, being interested and well-versed on a wide range of topics, accomplished philosopher and lecturer, founder of an alternative education system (Waldorf), and expert on esoteric matters (having founded Anthroposophy).<br /><br />I was at the book store the other week, saw a book on his life and works, and decided to pick it up.&nbsp; While reading the book, I saw reference to one of his famous works: <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=_NefgmQffiEC&amp;printsec=frontcover&amp;dq=knowledge+of+the+higher+worlds&amp;ei=rP4NSZeSEZCEswOHroi8Cg"><em>Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment</em></a>.&nbsp; I&#39;ve been briefly skimming the book (thanks to Google Books) and found 2 great passages that resonated with me.&nbsp; Steiner discusses the importance of patience with respect to the pursuit of knowledge (pg. 31).<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;<em>... no student should spend more time and strength upon these exercises&nbsp; than he can spare with due regard to his station in life and to his duties; nor should he change anything for the time being, in the&nbsp; external conditions of his life through taking this path.&nbsp; Without patience no genuine results can be attained</em>.&quot;<br /></blockquote><br />AND<br /><br /><blockquote><em>&quot;When the student seeks the path leading to higher knowledge in the way described in the preceeding chapter, he should not omit to fortify himself; throughout his work, with one ever present thought.&nbsp; He must never cease repeating to himself that he may have made quite&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br />considerable progress after a certain interval of time, though it may&nbsp; not be apparent to him in the way he perhaps expected; otherwise he can lose heart and abandon all attempts after a short time.&quot;</em><br /></blockquote><br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/philosophy" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'philosophy'">philosophy</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/quotes" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'quotes'">quotes</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/tips" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'tips'">tips</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/patience" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'patience'">patience</a> </p> Emerson on Time http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-223482 Tue, 30 Sep 2008 03:51:33 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/9/emerson_on_time <p>From &quot;No Boundary&quot;:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;These roses under my window make no reference to former roses or to better ones; they are for waht they are; they exist with God today.&nbsp; There is no time for them.&nbsp; There is simply the rose; it is perfect in every moment of its existence.... But man postpones or remembers; he does not live in the present, but with reverted eye laments the past, or heedless of the riches that sourround him, stands on tiptoe to foresee the future.&nbsp; He cannot be happy and strong until he too lives with nature in the present, above time.&quot;<br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> </p> Nietzsche, Eternal Recurrence, and Integral Time http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-213197 Mon, 18 Aug 2008 02:41:37 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/8/nietzsche_eternal_recurrence_and_integral_time <p>Nietzsche and Integral Philosophy.... 2 of my favorite topics.&nbsp; I&#39;m in the middle of reading the latest issue of the <a href="http://integral-review.org/current_issue/index.asp">Integral Review</a>, and found a great passage from Nietzsche on recurrence:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;What, if some day or night a demon were to steal after you into your loneliest loneliness and say to you: &ldquo;This life as you now live it and have lived it, you will have to live once more and innumerable times more; and there will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy and every thought and sigh and everything unutterably small or great in your life will have to return to you, all in the same succession and sequence--even this spider and this moonlight between the trees, and even this moment and I myself. The eternal hourglass of existence is turned upside down again and again, and you with it, speck of dust!&rdquo; Would you not throw yourself down and gnash your teeth and curse the demon who spoke thus? Or have you once experienced a tremendous moment when you would have answered him: &ldquo;You are a god and never have I heard anything more divine.&rdquo; If this thought gained possession of you, it would change you as you are or perhaps crush you.&quot;<br />(Nietzsche, 1974, p. 273)<br /></blockquote><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/nietzsche" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'nietzsche'">nietzsche</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/integral" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'integral'">integral</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/time" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'time'">time</a> </p> George Carlin's Last Interview http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-200752 Wed, 25 Jun 2008 06:07:02 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/6/george_carlins_last_interview <p>Cross-posted from my <a href="http://eric-blue.com/blog/" title="Eric Blue's Blog">main blog</a>:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.psychologytoday.com/">Psychology Today</a> recently posted the <a href="http://blogs.psychologytoday.com/blog/brainstorm/200806/george-carlins-last-interview">last known interview with George Carlin</a> (interviewed on 6/13/2008).&nbsp; Whether or not your a fan of George&#39;s comedy is beside the point.&nbsp; This interview is hands down one of the best I&#39;ve read in a while, and gives some great insights into Carlin&#39;s history, personality, and creative process.<br /><br />From the article:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;Ten days ago, on Friday, June 13th, 2008, I had the extraordinary privilege of talking to George Carlin. As far as I know it was the last in-depth interview he gave before he passed away yesterday at age 71. Originally it was slated to run as a 350-word Q&amp;A on the back page of Psychology Today. But I was so excited to talk to him&mdash;and he was so generous with his time&mdash;that I just kept on going. By the end I had over 14,000 words.<br /><br />On stage, George Carlin came across as a grouch, often vulgar and sometimes misanthropic. But with me he was patient and warm, happy to talk through the minutiae of his creative process and eager to share stories about his childhood, his evolution as a comic, and his influence. What struck me most was the joy in his voice as he talked about the wonderful feeling he got in his gut while writing. I was also moved by the gratitude he expressed for his mother, who he said &ldquo;saved&rdquo; him and his brother&mdash;leaving her bullying, alcoholic husband when George was just two months old, getting a job during the worst years of the Depression, and raising two boys on her own.&quot;<br /></blockquote><br />One particular Q&amp;A that stuck out to me was <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Koestler">Arthur Koestler</a>&#39;s influence on Carlin&#39;s work.&nbsp; I&#39;m only partially familiar with Koestler&#39;s works, but I&#39;m assuming the book he&#39;s referring to is the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Act-Creation-Arkana-Arthur-Koestler/dp/0140191917/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1214372777&amp;sr=8-2">Act of Creation</a> (now officially on my reading list).<br /><br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;You asked me to remind you to tell me about Arthur Koestler.<br /><br />That was another impact. I was doing nightclub comedy down in the Village. I was down there in &rsquo;63, &rsquo;64, and my friend told me about Arthur Koestler&rsquo;s book about the act of creation and it had a section on humor.<br /><br />He was talking about the creative process. There was an illustration on the panel that showed a triptych. On the left panel, there were these names of artistic pursuits. There were poets, painter, composer. And one of them was jester. I was only interested in the jester. What he said about each of these, he said these individuals on the left hand side can transcend the panels of the triptych by creative growth.<br /><br />The jester makes jokes, he&rsquo;s funny, he makes fun, he ridicules. But if his ridicules are based on sound ideas and thinking, then he can proceed to the second panel, which is the thinker&mdash;he called it the philosopher. The jester becomes the philosopher, and if he does these things with dazzling language that we marvel at, then he becomes a poet too. Then the jester can be a thinking jester who thinks poetically.<br /><br />I didn&rsquo;t see that and say, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I am going to do,&rdquo; but I guess it made an impression on me. I was never afraid to grow and change. I never was afraid of reversing my field on people, and I just think I&rsquo;ve become a touch of each of those second and third descriptions and I definitely have a gift for language that is rhythmic and attractive to the ear, and I have interesting imagery which I guess is a poetic touch. And I like the fact that most of my things are based on solid ideas, things I&rsquo;ve thought about in a new way for me, things for which I have said &ldquo;Well, what about this? Suppose you look at it this way? How about that?&rdquo; And then you heighten and exaggerate that, because comedy&rsquo;s all about heightening and exaggerating. And anyways I guess I was impressed that there was another thing from my early life that probably at least influenced me to some level.&quot;<br /></blockquote><br /><br />On a parting note, I think George&#39;s thoughts on death are appropriate:<br /><br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;The most unfair thing about life is the way it ends. I mean, life is tough. It takes up a lot of your time. What do you get at the end of it? A Death! What&rsquo;s that, a bonus? I think the life cycle is all backwards. You should die first, get it out of the way. Then you live in an old age home. You get kicked out when you&rsquo;re too young, you get a gold watch, you go to work. You work forty years until you&rsquo;re young enough to enjoy your retirement. You do drugs, alcohol, you party, you get ready for high school. You go to grade school, you become a kid, you play, you have no responsibilities, you become a little baby, you go back into the womb, you spend your last nine months floating &hellip;and you finish off as an orgasm.&quot;<br /><br />&mdash;<br /><br />George Carlin <br /></blockquote><br />R.I.P.<br /><br /><br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/philosophy" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'philosophy'">philosophy</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/humor" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'humor'">humor</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/carlin" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'carlin'">carlin</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/rip" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'rip'">rip</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/life" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'life'">life</a> </p> The Value of an Integral Perspective http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-196031 Sun, 08 Jun 2008 04:46:02 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/6/the_value_of_an_integral_perspective <p>Whether it be Integral or some other comprehansive philosophical framework or mental model, there is something to be said for the theories that help us to grasp with better understanding the world around us.&nbsp; I recently wrote an article on my main blog (<a href="http://eric-blue.com/blog/2008/04/want_to_remember_everything.html">Want to Remember Everything You&#39;ll Ever Learn?</a>) about Piotr Wozniak, a Polish Renaissance Man of sorts, who developed an algorithm and software product to help people learn and retain knowledge at amazing levels.&nbsp; His quote on learning really has me thinking about the value of mental frameworks:<br /><br />Piotr Wozniak:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;<em>The problem of forgetting might not torment us so much if we could only convince ourselves that remembering isn&#39;t important. Perhaps the things we learn &mdash; words, dates, formulas, historical and biographical details &mdash; don&#39;t really matter. Facts can be looked up. That&#39;s what the Internet is for. When it comes to learning, what really matters is how things fit together. We master the stories, the schemas, the frameworks, the paradigms; we rehearse the lingo; we swim in the episteme</em>.&quot; </blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/integral" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'integral'">integral</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/paradigm" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'paradigm'">paradigm</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/learning" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'learning'">learning</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/mental+model" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'mental model'">mental model</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/quote" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'quote'">quote</a> </p> Fingers and Toes Making Friends with Each Other http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-168911 Wed, 27 Feb 2008 06:53:05 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/2/fingers-and-toes-making-friends-with-each-other <p>I wanted to take a minute and share what I&#39;ve been working on recently.&nbsp; <br /><br />I&#39;ve spent the last couple weeks setting up my new personal wiki.&nbsp; My ultimate goal is to use a wiki, and other open source applications/tools, to act as a personal knowledge manager and learning aid.&nbsp; I&#39;ve also been evaluating a fantastic extension called Semantic MediaWiki (or SMW).&nbsp; SMW essentially &quot;upgrades&quot; the capability of a wiki, which really is blobs of inter-related text by adding semantic meaning to various items in each page.<br /><br />I figured I&#39;d experiment and make a real-world application.&nbsp; Since I was a teenager, I&#39;ve been intrigued by dreaming, and lucid dreaming in particular.&nbsp; And, starting last year, I experimented with keeping a consistent dream journal for about 4 months.&nbsp; I managed to import all of the data into my semantic wiki and can now run some pretty elaborate searches on the dream actors, location, clarity/type (lucid or not), and major objects or themes in the dream.&nbsp; With just 4 months of data it&#39;s shown some interesting patterns and has started to give me insight into some of the dreams.&nbsp; I&#39;ve decided to keep up with the dream journal habit, and we&#39;ll see what interesting things I can discover.<br /><br />Now.... what&#39;s with all the finger and toe mention?&nbsp; I was searching for some lucid dream related articles a few minutes ago and came across this bizarre/interesting post on somebody who was having a lucid dream and decided to take acid (while he was in the dream, of course).<br /><br />Here is an excerpt to think about:<br /><br /><blockquote><em>&quot;I can&#39;t stop feeling like my life is a dream, that everyone I know is actually just a personality dreamt up by my own mind, that even my own self is an imagination, and that really there is nothing at all, nothing whatsoever, except for this one mind with no dimensions and no time that dreams up life to escape the horror of its utter isolation. I think I now understand the meaning of the Zen phrase &quot;I alone am the world-honored one.&quot; <br /><br /> Now I think that it must be truly horrible to be God, to be IT! Nothing else beyond you or apart from you, no help, no world, no god to pray to, no nothing except your own self. Maybe he couldn&#39;t take it and blew himself up into fragments just so he&#39;d have some company and something to do for a while, and that&#39;s what our universe is. Maybe we are so frantic to live this life because we&#39;re terrified of the truth, that we are all that is, and we are ALONE! We are fingers and toes making friends with eachother, making up stories and dramas so that we don&#39;t have to think about the terrible eternal nothingness.&quot;<br /><br /></em>Source: http://www.yahooka.com/forum/51459645-post1.html<br /></blockquote> </p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/lucid" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'lucid'">lucid</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/dream" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'dream'">dream</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/journal" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'journal'">journal</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/reflection" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'reflection'">reflection</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/zen" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'zen'">zen</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/trip" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'trip'">trip</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/alone" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'alone'">alone</a> </p> Consensual Reality: The Importance of Subjectivity http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2008:Gaia-163102 Wed, 06 Feb 2008 23:47:38 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2008/2/consensual_reality_the_importance_of_subjectivity <p>&quot;A tree is a tree -- although its meaning to the man who views it (&quot;the truth&quot;) depends upon his relationship to it.&nbsp; Does it give him fruit or shade, or is it an obstacle in his path&quot;<br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; -- <em>Surveying Kierkegaard</em>, Homer and Buhler, 1969<br /><br />While reading <em>Monsters and Magical Sticks</em>, the following quote and exerpt on reality stuck out at me.<br /><br />&quot;Scientists who study human behavior have argued, and continue to <br />argue, as to what constitutes &quot;reality&quot;; if there is a reality, why a reality, <br />and...ad nauseam. In spite of this debate, one general consensus has <br />come into being: There exists a &quot;consensual reality.&quot; As the name <br />implies, it refers to a consensus, or general agreement, as to what to call <br />certain things and how generally we should respond to those things. We, <br />at least in our society, generally agree that a chair is a chair, and what we <br />can do with a chair (careful...). <br /><br />We know that we can&#39;t, at least at this point in our development, flap <br />our arms and fly. We all agree that a beach is a beach, a tree is a tree, etc. <br />In a very narrow sense, we might state that consensual reality is primarily <br />a function of conscious processes: that is, I see a tree and accept the <br />object as a tree. Unless one of us is marching to a very different <br />drummer, you would agree that a tree is just that&mdash;a tree. Thus, we have <br />consensual agreement as to the reality of that tree. However, our <br />individual response to that tree may be more important than our <br />agreement.&quot;<br /><br /></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/reality" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'reality'">reality</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/subjectivity" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'subjectivity'">subjectivity</a> </p> The Undiscovered Self http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-114207 Mon, 03 Sep 2007 17:14:39 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2007/9/the_undiscovered_self <p>Jung on the state and religion:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;All mass movements, as one might expect, slip with the greatest ease down an inclined plane made up of large numbers.&nbsp; Where the many are, there is security; what the many believe must of course be true; what the&nbsp; many want must be worth striving for, and necessary, and therefore good.&nbsp; In the clamour of the many resides the power to snatch wish-fulfillments by force; sweetest of all, however, is that gentle and painless slipping back into the kingdom of childhood, into the paradise of parental care, into happy-go-luckiness and irresponsibility.&nbsp; All the thinking and looking after are done from the top; to all questions there is an answer, and for all needs the necessary provision is made.&nbsp; The infantile dream-state of the mass man is so unrealistic that he never things to ask who is paying for this paradise.&nbsp; The balancing of accounts is left to a higher political or social authority, which welcomes the task, for its power is thereby increased; and the more power it has, the weaker and more helpless the individual becomes&quot;.<br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jung" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jung'">jung</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/individuation" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'individuation'">individuation</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/belief" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'belief'">belief</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/self" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'self'">self</a> </p> The Conjunction http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-114022 Mon, 03 Sep 2007 01:04:15 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2007/9/the_conjunction <p>&quot;In the beginning God created one world (unus mundus).&nbsp; This he divided into two - heaven and earth.&nbsp; Beneath this spiritual and corporeal binarius lieth hid a third thing, which is the bond of holy matrimony.&nbsp; This same is the medium enduring until now in all things, partaking of both their extremes, without which it cannot be at all, nor they without this medium be what they are, one thing out of three.&nbsp; The division into two was necessary in order to bring the &quot;one&quot; world out of the state of potentiality into reality.&nbsp; Reality consists of a multiplicity of things.&nbsp; But one is not a number; the first number is two, and with it multiplicity and reality begin&quot;</p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jung" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jung'">jung</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/creation" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'creation'">creation</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/integration" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'integration'">integration</a> </p> Potentialities: Borne Along the Stream of Time http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-110322 Mon, 20 Aug 2007 04:48:25 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2007/8/potentialities_borne_along_the_stream_of_time <p>Jung&#39;s commentary on The Golden Flower:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;Now and then it happened in my practice that a patient grew beyond himself because of unknown potentialities, and this became an experience of prime importance to me.&nbsp; In the meantime, I had learned that all the greatest and most important problems of life are fundamentally insoluble.&nbsp; They must be so, for they express the necessary polarity inherent in every self-regulating system.&nbsp; They can never be solved, but only outgrown.&nbsp; I therefore asked myself whether this outgrowing, this possibility of further psychic development, was not the normal thing, and whether getting stuck in a conflict was pathological.&nbsp; Everyone must possess that higher level, at least in embryonic form, and must under favourable circumstances be able to develop this potentiality.&nbsp; When I examined the course of development in patients who quietly, and as if unconsciously, outgrew themselves, I saw that their faces had something in common.&nbsp; The new thing came to them from obscure possibilities either outside or inside themselves; they accepted it and grew with its help.&nbsp; It seemed to me typical that some took the new thing from outside themselves, others from inside; or rather, that it grew into some persons from without, and into others from within.&nbsp; But the new thing never came exclusively either from within or from without.&nbsp; If it came from outside, it became a profound inner experience; if it came from inside, it became an outer happening.&nbsp; In no case was it conjured into existence intentionally or by conscious willing, but rather seemed to be borne along the stream of time.&quot;<br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jung" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jung'">jung</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/quotes" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'quotes'">quotes</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/potentiality" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'potentiality'">potentiality</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/change" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'change'">change</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/growth" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'growth'">growth</a> </p> Nature, Personality and Actualization http://eric-blue.gaia.com Inspire tag:gaia.com,2007:Gaia-109599 Fri, 17 Aug 2007 06:54:12 GMT http://eric-blue.gaia.com/blog/2007/8/nature_personality_and_actualization <p>More Jungian wisdom:<br /><br /><blockquote>&quot;To the extent that a man is untrue to the law of his being and does not rise to personality, he has failed to realize his life&#39;s meaning.&nbsp; Fortunately, in her kindness and patience, Nature never puts the fatal question as to the meaning of their lives into the mouths of most people.&nbsp; And where no one asks, no one need answer.&quot;<br /></blockquote></p> <p> <b>Tags:</b> <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/wisdom" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'wisdom'">wisdom</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/jung" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'jung'">jung</a>, <a href="gaia.com/blogs/tags/actualization" rel="tag" title="See all blog entries tagged 'actualization'">actualization</a> </p>