Seemingly and similarly, but not exactly. I think continual striving towards an ideal that is not attainable is inherent in the human pscyhe. I agree the majority are not aligned into its proper gears toward the ideal. In principle, what I am advocating is humanity need to expedite the majority to do so, i.e. strive toward the ideal.Nick_A wrote:You seem to be advocating Plato's balanced man and I agree. I also agree that the brain is aided through the efforts of meditation, contemplation, conscious attention, detachment, and of course impartial efforts to "know thyself" or have the experience of oneself. How many pursue them?
As I had stated, the majority are not into the gears of the more refined. Rather the majority need psychological crutches to function normally.We may differ in how we understand the limitations of fallen human being. We can just do so much through our own initiative. I believe without help from above in the form of grace we are destined to psychologically turn in circles.
People like Weil, Needleman and other mystics are more refined than the majority, but they are still relying on some form of crutches, albeit subliminally, i.e. grace.
There are a minority of 'fallen human beings' who had been able to pick themselves up without crutches nor grace. e.g. those who picked on the trail of the Buddha. So it is possible for the majority to pick on this trail and they do not have to be Buddhists at all, but merely being human.
I think it is false for Weil (or you) to think, what she is recommending is the only best way and there are no better value effective alternatives.I believe she is right. If she is, all these modern efforts of secular humanism that deny grace become meaningless in the face of the blindness of the human condition. Everything repeats because since we are as we are, everything is as it is."Humanism was not wrong in thinking that truth, beauty, liberty, and equality are of infinite value, but in thinking that man can get them for himself without grace." Simone Weil
Weil's grace may be of the refined nature, but grace-god-theism when taken as the whole package is a liability to humanity.
When we eventually get rid of all traces of grace and god, there will be no opportunity for all theist-based evils at all.
After all, grace and god are fundamentally based on necessary illusions and white lies. It is not a big loss if we get rid of beliefs based on lies in exchange for truth-based principles.