Nick_A wrote: ↑Mon Nov 30, 2020 11:15 pm
V A
It is because of the unresolved cognitive dissonance that drive [compel] one to speculate on some kind of "greater reality" which will comfort and soothe one's disturbed mind.
You can feel that yourself where you feel comfort with your existing views and discomfort and unease on anything otherwise? Agree?
So why you are sticking to your view is not because it is rational and objective, but rather because it is psychologically more comforting and you have no means to seek alternatives to deal with the very pressing uncompromising cognitive dissonance.
What you speculated, i.e. "a rational conscious purpose for life created by a conscious source" if you reflect deeply is merely pseudo-rational.
But what proof do you have that cognitive dissonance causes a person to contemplate a reality greater than his own? What if it is true but those who haven’t experienced it violently reject it? From Plato’s cave
Theism is a glaring evidence that the existential cognitive dissonance cause a person to contemplate 'a Being no greater can be conceived' so that this greatest Being is able to resolve the cognitive dissonance and relieves immediately all the associated terrible existential pains and sufferings.
It is very common due to a natural 'resistance to change' that some will impulsively [subjectively] reject initially what is novel, new, unfamiliar, they have no experience of, and strange to them.
Btw, you are at present mostly likely rejecting the my views based on a 'resistance to change' and you have dug in the alternative as pressured by the cognitive dissonance.
However there are some who have had the so-called 'experienced of the ONE_ness' but is now rejecting the idea based on critical thinking, rationality and objectivity.
I have personally been a theist for a long time whence I believed God and the oneness that you are now proposing.
However upon critical thinking, I am very convinced rationally and objectively what you are believing, i.e. the ONE, is an impossibility to be real empirically and philosophically.
As I had claimed your state of believing in the ONE [as in Plato's cave] is based on subliminal psychology driven by the cognitive dissonance arising from an inherent unavoidable existential crisis.
[Socrates] And if there were a contest, and he had to compete in measuring the shadows with the prisoners who had never moved out of the cave, while his sight was still weak, and before his eyes had become steady (and the time which would be needed to acquire this new habit of sight might be very considerable) would he not be ridiculous? Men would say of him that up he went and down he came without his eyes; and that it was better not even to think of ascending; and if any one tried to loose another and lead him up to the light, let them only catch the offender, and they would put him to death.
You could just as easily be a person who has had an experience of higher mind or one lacking experience and mocking him to death. You have given no evidence.
A person who has had an experienced is capable of deductive reason while one without experience is limited to inductive reason.
In our attempt to reconcile the inner and outer world, however, we do come up against a very real difficulty, which must be faced. This difficulty is connected with the problem of reconciling different 'methods of knowing'.
Man has two ways of studying the universe. The first is by induction: he examines phenomena, classifies them, and attempts to infer laws and principles from them. This is the method generally used by science. The second is by deduction: having perceived or had revealed or discovered certain general laws and principles, he attempts to deduce the application of these laws in various studies and in life. This is the method generally used by religions.. The first method begins with 'facts' and attempts to reach 'laws'. The second method begins with 'laws' and attempts to reach 'facts'.
These two methods belong to the working of different human functions. The first is the method of the ordinary logical mind, which is permanently available to us. the second derives from a potential function in man, which is ordinarily inactive for lack of nervous energy of sufficient intensity, and which we may call higher mental function This function on rare occasions of its operation, reveals to man laws in action, he sees the whole phenomenal world as the product of laws.
All true formulations of universal laws derive recently or remotely from the working of this higher function, somewhere and in some man. At the same time, for the application and understanding of the laws revealed in the long stretches of time and culture when such revelation is not available, man has to rely on the ordinary logical mind."
Secularism being only concerned with reactive life in the world is unconcerned with the conscious potential for our inner life which is an attribute of objective human meaning and purpose. It becomes hostile to deductive reason since it blocks itself from it. I thank the powers that be that impartial conscious contemplation and its tool of deductive reason, though outside of the mainstream, is still alive in the world
So in reality only the person who has had a direct experience can know. Of course it is true that the experience can devolve into eikasia or sheer conjecture but this doesn’t deny the experience
As mentioned in the past I was theist and then 'thought' I have had experiences of the higher mind, cosmic consciousness or greatest intelligence. But relying on critical thinking, I have realized the truth, i.e. there is no such 'higher mind'.
Btw, deductive reasoning is just a method of logic and is independent from experience.
What is critical for any conclusion to be realistic, all the premises within deductive and inductive reasoning must be based on experience and philosophical reasoning.
You relied on deductive reasoning and you think your premise 1 or 2 is based on direct experience of the greater mind or the ONE, but the point is your direct experience which is subjective is not verified and justified to be real. Try putting your deductive reasoning on paper and if you scrutinize your premises, they are not verified and justified to be real.
It is the same with the schizo or the mentally ill who claimed he experienced God, the ONE and the ALL of reality and insists what he experienced is the most real.
Note this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIiIsDIkDtg where the guy claimed he experienced GOD and Jesus but it turned out he suffered from
temporal epilepsy and was subsequently cured medically. V R Ramanchandran explained the basis of false claim from the neuroscientific perspective.
You have overlooked what I referenced from Kant.
Suggest you read them again.
Kant stated the desperate would use deductive reasoning [syllogism] to reify - based on pseudo-rationality - what is illusory into objective reality, i.e. as real.
What is most practical is, we have the faculty of critical thinking which is better used to explore whatever reality-there-is on the basis of the empirical and the philosophical to optimize the individual's well being and therefrom contribute to the well being of humanity.
This is not a theory, but a practice carried by Buddhism and other spirituality since >2500 years ago.
But Again you ignore the limitations of critical thinking. When built on a foundation of prejudice, it loses its value. The dialectic can lead us to contradictions which if viewed impartially can open us to the truth beyond opinions which can be remembered by intuition.
The essential of critical thinking has an open valve to ensure no prejudice, dogmatism and bigotry, i.e. self-corrective.
Critical thinking is the analysis of facts to form a judgment.[1] The subject is complex, and several different definitions exist, which generally include the rational, skeptical, unbiased analysis, or evaluation of factual evidence. Critical thinking is self-directed, self-disciplined, self-monitored, and
self-corrective thinking.[2] It presupposes assent to rigorous standards of excellence and mindful command of their use. It entails effective communication and problem-solving abilities as well as a commitment to overcome native egocentrism[3][4] and sociocentrism.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_thinking
1930
"Many people think that the progress of the human race is based on experiences of an empirical, critical nature, but I say that true knowledge is to be had only through a philosophy of deduction. For it is intuition that improves the world, not just following the trodden path of thought. Intuition makes us look at unrelated facts and then think about them until they can all be brought under one law. To look for related facts means holding onto what one has instead of searching for new facts. Intuition is the father of new knowledge, while empiricism is nothing but an accumulation of old knowledge. Intuition, not intellect, is the ‘open sesame’ of yourself." -- Albert Einstein, in Einstein and the Poet – In Search of the Cosmic Man by William Hermanns (Branden Press, 1983, p. 16.), conversation March 4, 1930
Einstein believed in a universal God [like Spinoza] and was thus entrapped subliminally by the existential cognitive dissonance as highlighted by Kant;
They are sophistications not of men but of Pure Reason itself.
Even the wisest of men cannot free himself from them.
After long effort he perhaps succeeds in guarding himself against actual error; but he will never be able to free himself from the Illusion, which unceasingly mocks and torments him.
CPR A339 B397
That was why Einstein could not [he resisted] contribute to the discovery of the theories of Quantum Mechanics [no ONENESS] which weird behaviors has been proven and currently generate extensive utilities for Information Technologies, AI and elsewhere.