bill...that's your theory...and yours alone!..merle
Mike, Good question and the answer is 'no'. Experience does not have to be dualistic (subject/object). It can be holistic, and in fact holistic experience IS Buddha Nature. Dualistic experience (I am experiencing a beautiful sunset)is not pure experience. It's a post-processing of the experience by your discriminating mind - your intellect. It's forced into a dualistic framework and often subjected to judgements and categorizations. ...Bill! --- In [email protected], "mike" <uerusuboyo@...> wrote: > > > Bill!, > > Aren't experiences also illusory in the sense that an experience requires > someone to have the experience? > > Mike > > > > > > --- In [email protected], "Bill!" <BillSmart@> wrote: > > > > Joe, > > > > Right, sort of. > > > > To be a 'rationalist' is to be someone who depends on rationality which is > > clearly illusory. > > > > As someone who practices zen which is based entirely on experience I would > > hope I would be an 'experientialist' - or a 'realist'. > > > > ...Bill! > > > > > > > > --- In [email protected], "Joe" <desert_woodworker@> wrote: > > > > > > Bill!, > > > > > > I'd say the concept may be rational, although there is not an empirical > > > demonstration or proof of existence of such a being. > > > > > > We know too that various Doctors of the Church did their darnedest along > > > rational lines, chief among them Augustine. > > > > > > --Joe > > > > > > > "Bill!" <BillSmart@> wrote: > > > > > > > > I don't see anything rational about the concept of God at all...Bill! > > > > > >
