Re: CS>Reality lives !!I think I may have finely found what is real!  And 
somebody was correct earlier, when they said it could be found on the net!

---Begin

Half Empty or Half Full?

The study of Chaos often leads to what we call eureka moments. "Eureka" is an 
expression of triumph upon discovering a startling truth. Archimedes, one of 
the greatest intellects of antiquity, used this expression (literally "I have 
found it!") when he figured out how to determine the purity of gold objects. 

We get closer to this eureka moment when the study of Chaos changes us and 
gives us a new way to examine the world. This transformed perspective lets us 
take something ordinary and familiar, and suddenly see in it all sorts of 
interesting new insights.

For example, let's take a glass and fill it with water to the halfway point. We 
then ask the customary, time-honored question, "Is the glass half empty or half 
full?"

Haven't we all seen this a zillion times? What new insights can we possibly 
squeeze out of this tired old platitude?

As we all know, the glass serves as a metaphor for life, and water represents 
the good things in it. So, seeing the glass as half empty means you're a 
pessimist, because you dwell on the lack in your life. Seeing it as half full 
means you're optimistic, because you focus on the good things in life. Most 
people choose the latter and describe themselves as optimists. In all 
likelihood, this means you, too.

Notice an interesting social phenomenon here. Most people want to be seen as 
optimists, even those who are usually morose and glum. Aren't we just a planet 
full of upbeat, sunny cheerleaders? How interesting! Why do we have such a 
social pressure to be relentlessly optimistic?

Let's look at it from a completely different angle and turn this paradigm 
upside down. Is it always a negative thing to see the glass as half empty? 
Suppose such a perception motivates you to fill the glass - so to speak - 
whereas seeing it as half full leads to complacency. Focusing on the lack in 
one's life can then be a driving force for success. Not so negative now, is it?

Look at the overachievers who accomplish great things in any field. They 
probably started out life with the idea that there wasn't enough water in their 
glass to suit them, so they worked to fill it up. On the other hand, at the 
opposite end of the spectrum, we have the underachievers who dawdle away their 
lives in torpid passivity. Perhaps they do so because their focus is on what 
they already possess, rather than the areas of life that can use some 
improvement.

Another similar idea is to recognize the inherent usefulness of emptiness. In 
chapter 11 of Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu makes the point that the emptiness of a cup 
gives it utility and function. The lower part of the glass that is already 
filled with water cannot accept another drop, and if we remind ourselves that 
this represents life, we quickly see that the empty portion is where all the 
action can take place.

The Taoist/Chaoist concept of emptiness is not a vacuous state of nothingness; 
rather, it is a pregnant void bursting with potentialities. Now we can see how 
this makes perfect sense. The blank pages in the book of your life are where 
the continuing tale of your adventures will be written. These empty pages are 
the place where unlimited possibilities exist. It's where the excitement and 
the joie de vivre reside.

The emptiness is the part that can hold more water (good things). It is what 
makes the glass (life) useful and functional. So why wouldn't we want to focus 
on it? When you think of it this way, doesn't it seem a little odd that most 
people choose to see the glass as half full instead of half empty?

See what's going on here? Even though most of us have heard about the glass 
half filled with water many, many times, in all likelihood it has never 
occurred to us that we can switch the positive and negative perceptions around 
so easily. Evidently there's more to the glass than meets the eyes.

We also need to examine the unspoken assumptions and see how valid they really 
are. For instance, we start out with the unwritten, assumed rule that we have 
two choices, half full or half empty, and we must choose one of them. But must 
we really? Does it really have to be one or the other? Why can it not be both, 
or neither?

Indeed, a glass with water at the halfway point can be seen as both half empty 
and half full. Sometimes it is useful to think of it one way; other times it's 
better to see it the other way. This is a completely accurate description of 
reality, and probably a much better way to conceptualize it than to arbitrarily 
force it into one category or another. By recognizing that the glass can embody 
both descriptions simultaneously, we begin to deal with it from a holistic 
mindset, taking into account every aspect of the object.

In this mindset, we can see that asking about the glass being half full or half 
empty is just like asking about the nature of light. Is light composed of 
particles or waves? Well, the true answer is that light embodies properties of 
both particles and waves. Sometimes it is useful to think of it one way; other 
times it's better to see it the other way. This is a completely accurate 
description of reality, and probably a much better way to conceptualize it than 
to arbitrarily force it into one category or another.

Now let's look at the flip side. How can we say that the glass is neither half 
full nor half empty? First, we note that both descriptions can only be 
perfectly accurate in theory, and never in reality. When you pour water into 
the glass, no matter how careful you are and what precision tools you use, you 
will never hit the exact halfway mark. If you are very lucky, you can get to 
the point where you're only a few molecules off, over or under. Thus, the glass 
is never truly half full or half empty. Its state can only be described 
approximately.

The second factor is the Chaoist concept of constant change. Nothing remains 
static. Nothing. As soon as any water gets into the glass, evaporation begins. 
At any given moment, the glass is releasing water molecules into the air. In 
fact, if we wait long enough, the glass won't just be half empty - it will be 
empty, period!

For some of us, the water goes away even more quickly, because we have 
imperfect glasses with hairline fractures, where water seeps out at an alarming 
rate. This means the good things in our lives never seem to last. You manage to 
get a great job, only to be downsized; you buy a new car, only to discover it's 
a lemon; and so on.

In the face of this dynamism, where the only question is how quickly water goes 
away, we need to take action. If we remain inactive, then it's a certainty that 
the good things in life will soon disappear, never to return. What we want is a 
constant stream of incoming water to replenish the water lost to evaporation 
and possible leakage.

Let's explore a little further. What does the glass look like from a Zenarchist 
perspective?

Zen Discordianism recognizes the illusory nature of reality and the ultimate 
emptiness of the material world. Thus, when confronted with the choice of half 
empty or half full, the Zen Discordianism may answer "neither," because the 
water doesn't really exist, nor does the glass.

This may seem far out, but in at least two respects the Zenachist practitioner 
is right. First, both the glass and water are transient. We have already noted 
that the water will eventually be gone, either when the glass breaks (the end 
of your life) or before. The glass may last somewhat longer than the water, but 
we know it will eventually be shattered into pieces and no longer exist as a 
container. Like the ephemeral flame of a candle, life flickers into existence 
for a while, and then gets snuffed out without much fanfare. In truth, it can 
claim no more permanent reality than the candle flame.

The second factor affirming the Zenarchist perspective is our understanding of 
the most fundamental level of reality, as revealed through quantum physics. At 
the sub-atomic level, we see that what we think of as solid matter is mostly 
empty space. The solidity of matter that we perceive is merely the macroscopic 
manifestation of energy and information patterns. In this perspective, the 
water is indeed illusory, and so is the glass.

Now that we have sampled the Zenachist perspective, we will naturally want to 
explore the Chaoist perspective as well. This is an interesting challenge in 
view of everything we have talked about so far. We seem to have left no stone 
unturned in discussing all the different ways we can approach the glass. What 
other insight can the Sacred Chaos provide us that hasn't already been said? 
How can a true Discordian sage answer the question in a way that transcends all 
other answers on the subject?

The sage does not answer. Instead, he takes the glass, drinks from it, and 
relishes the thirst-quenching and refreshing water. He puts the glass back down 
and remains quiet, perhaps with a smile on his face, as others scramble to 
revise their estimation from half full to quarter full, or half empty to 
three-quarters empty.

The sage knows that the essence of life is to be lived, not debated. The glass 
and water serve one purpose admirably well, and that is to slake thirst. Trying 
to decide if it is half full or half empty does absolutely nothing to further 
that purpose. If anything, it gets in the way and delays the ultimate objective 
of drinking fully and deeply.

Eris is beyond mere words. Discussing the glass can never replace the 
experience of drinking from it; describing the various perspectives will never 
get you closer to the actual act of savoring the water. Thus, the sage wastes 
no effort on intellectualization; he cuts to the chase.

Eureka!

---END

Yours in health,
James Allison


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jack Dayton 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, November 03, 2002 4:34 PM
  Subject: Re: CS>Reality lives !!


    Say WHAT?

    Jack