Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
seeds wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 9:36 pm
Belinda wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 8:13 pm
Thanks seeds . But my mother, while I was in her womb and for a few months after I was born ,was the same person as myself, that's to say she was wholly and solely immanent in my life as a young infant.I did not see her as other than me until I developed a little more.
It's not that my metaphor can't be wrong,...
...however, how can anyone make a point via metaphor if you're simply going to ignore the structure of the metaphor?
The metaphor had
nothing to do with the relationship you had with your mother
"after you were born" out of her, for it (the metaphor) was fully (and only) referencing the time you spent within her womb.
Furthermore, regardless of how you now say (in retrospect) that you did not see her as "other than you" until you developed a little more,...
...the literal truth of the matter is that as a fully born infant, you were indeed separate from her,...
(as in a permanently fixed and wholly autonomous [mind-based] "I Am-ness")
...regardless of how you now picture the situation from the perspective of your advanced age.
Please tell me that you're not the type of philosopher who sees no difference between the mind and the body.
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But it was not a metaphor it was an actual illustration of self + other.
Come on now, Belinda, it was indeed a metaphor that suggests that the (fetus-to-parent) relationship that we once had with our mother when we were momentarily encapsulated within her womb,...
(with our material body being Immersed, surrounded, and literally created from the living fabric of her very being)
...is (metaphorically speaking) the exact same relationship that our eternal souls have with the
greater SOUL of this universe.
For, just as in the case of our human mother, our (yet to be fully born) eternal souls (minds with accompanying
"agents"/"I Am-nesses") are momentarily immersed, surrounded, and literally created from the living fabric of God's very being.
Why do you think Christian metaphysics (as archaic and limited as it may be) insists that a human must experience
"two births" (one of water, and one of the spirit) in order to awaken (be "delivered") into the higher context of reality that resides above and outside of this lower context of reality?
Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
My contention is the baby in the womb scenario illustrates immanence of the mother not transcendence of the mother.
If you were being more open to the metaphor's obvious implications, then you would realize that it illustrates both.
For clearly, the baby
(the fetus) is literally surrounded and immersed within the living fabric of its mother's being, which is representative of the mother's pure and total
immanence,...
...while the mother's higher level of consciousness and surroundings
transcend that of the fetus
' level of consciousness and surroundings.
And that's because, in truth, the mother's living conditions, true outer appearance, and, again, higher level of consciousness are situated (presented/playing out) in a context of reality that resides above and outside of her womb.
In other words, the mother has awakened into - and is functioning in - a higher (transcendent) context of reality (and consciousness) of which the fetus is yet to be born into,...
...while at the same time still being
wholly immanent to the fetus by reason of the fact that, again, the fetus is completely immersed within - and surrounded by - the living fabric of the mother's very being.
And the point is that the same thing loosely describes God's transcendent status relative to us.
Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
Detachment from the placenta is not definitive of separation from the mother .
Wrong, it is most definitely definitive of separation from the mother.
And it (the baby's mind/I Am-ness/soul) has one more
"placenta" (the human body) to detach from in order to experience its second and final birth and thus awaken into the higher context of reality where its true (and eternal) form (the same form as God) will finally be revealed.
Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
Unless a newborn is fostered he will die without his mother.
The body will die, but not the eternal soul.
That's why abortion is such a tragedy, for it negates the manifestation and emergence of a new eternal soul into existence.
And that's because in order for a new soul to be formed out of the fabric of God's living essence, it (the soul) must undergo the process of the
first birth (of water).
Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
I am the sort of philosopher who sees the body and the mind as two aspects of the same----not identical -with, but two aspects. Not identical but two ways we view the same event. For instance the neuroscientist views the event from the point of view of body, while the psychologist views the same event from the point of view of mind.
And I am the sort of philosopher who sees the human neuroscientist and the human psychologist as being the metaphorical equivalent of two amoebas in a drop of water who are utterly clueless as to how they and the drop of water came into existence.
Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
I am the sort of philosopher who believes, concerning living animal systems, that mind cannot exist without body and body cannot exist without mind.
Yes, the inability to fathom how mind could exist without a material body is a problem for those who are not awake enough to realize that the entire universe is one great mind, and that the stuff from which material bodies are formed is "mind-stuff."
The bottom line is that the vast majority of humans are under the thrall of an
"illusion" that is so perfectly designed and executed that it fools them into believing that it somehow created itself by accident.
It's simply a demonstration of how the "Master Artist" has managed to purposely hide her brushstrokes.
Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 am
I believe that quantity and quality of brainmind varies among species.
Yes.
And once the quantity and quality of "brain-mind" reaches a certain level, it crosses a threshold and joins (becomes a member of) the highest species of being in all of reality - the same species of being as God.
"...And the Lord God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us..." -- KJV
Funnily enough, what I am suggesting is pretty much what
"Christianity" is suggesting in its extremely roundabout way (as in "...He that hath ears to hear, let him hear..."), otherwise, enjoy the illusion.
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