You have come to realizations by reading someone else's opinions and then adopted them as your own. Use your own introspection, otherwise your views mean nothing to me.Immanuel Can wrote:If I take your seriously here, then yours is merely a counsel of quietism and resignation to futility. It's nothing more than amoral solipsism.You cannot change others or their opinions, people have to come to a realization. You can only change yourself: rather than covering up the whole surface of the earth with leather, one can just cover up the soles of one’s feet by wearing leather sandals. Meditation is the only way to do that, through realization (which precludes 'trying').
I say this not because I find it personally frightening or unsettling in some way (I would say "trivial" is a better adjective for it), but because your alleged "ethic" is useless for any society, or any situation at all in which two person are involved -- which is to say, useless for all the situations in which "ethics" are useful at all. For there is no ethical question in a one-person world; ethics comes online only when there is some other person or people in view, and thus we can ask about what we might "owe" them and they might "owe" us to do.
In other words, you haven't "solved" the problems of ethics: you've simply run from them all by trying to deny that they exist. And that "trying" is truly, as you say, "neurotic."
You do not deny anything in meditation. According to Buddhism neurosis is the human condition but not our nature. To put that in religious terms our nature is the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.