Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Jun 15, 2019 8:48 am
But, Seeds, the brain pertains to the body. Human minds are shaped by the specific cultures in which they are nurtured. If human bodies become extinct there would be no vehicles to carry human cultures.
Tell that to roydop. He’s the one that thinks it would be a good thing if humans go extinct.
Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Jun 15, 2019 8:48 am
Your picture, above, portrays the Eye as a fixed central point.
Unfortunately, B, I am unable to create a static illustration that can show the dynamic relationship that the Eye of God’s mind has to the multifarious features of the universe...
...(I leave that to the imagination of the viewer).
Belinda wrote: ↑Sat Jun 15, 2019 8:48 am
If you believe in the old pre-Newtonian doctrine of centrality, you are behind the times. This is not bad in itself, of course, but you need also to take account of the huge leap in understanding which is relativity.
Come on now, Belinda, the picture...
...is just an extremely fanciful metaphor that tries to depict the human body (more specifically, the human brain) as being a “seed-like” phenomenon that is momentarily held within the fully-fruitioned (adult version) of that which it is the seed of (God).
It is derived from my own personal perspective of a Berkeleyan-ish form of idealism that sees the universe as being the mind of God, with the human mind being its inwardly conceived embryo...
...(as you should well know by now based on our numerous discussions).
Nevertheless, for the sake of clarification,...
...to understand the point of the illustration, you need to view the “potential” held within the human brain in kind of the same way that you view the potential held within an acorn...
However, instead of being limited to producing just one measly oak tree, the potential held within the human brain can eventually yield a full-blown universe (just like its progenitor has done).
Now, of course, just as the metaphor implies, for any of that to take place, the seed...
(or, in this case, the seed’s inner-potential in the form of the human mind and its conscious agent, aka the “soul”)...
...must be delivered (as in birthed) from the confines of its “husk” and out into the openness of the “garden” where it can then blossom into the full “image and likeness” of its parental entity.
(By “garden” I am, of course, referring to the transcendent context of “true reality” that allegedly exists above and outside of the corporeal bounds of the universe.)
Once again, Belinda, we have discussed this many times over the years.
And it’s not that I expect you to accept my wild ideas, but more of me being gobsmacked as to why you would try to associate them with some silly nonsense about a pre-Newtonian doctrine of centrality.
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