I suspect in the mood you're in at the moment,
anything I could say would only piss you off
more, so I'll just note that from my perspective,
it appears you misread just about everything
I wrote.


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Llundrub" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Llundrub" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> wrote:
> > Judy, I think you take the high road with regards to TM philosophy
> > because it's what you're most comfortable with. 
> 
> Not sure what you mean by "take the high road."
> Not sure what you're getting at in this post
> generally, but I'll make what comments I can.
> 
> 
> ------I think you define perfectly what 'taking the high road' is, 
better than any amount of explanation I could provide.  Lines such 
as, 
> 
> "Finally, the term I'd use would be "metaphysical
> system" rather than "philosophy."  It's also
> important that the TM metaphysics has a
> systematic experiential component, which
> distinguishes it from a philosophy per se."  
> 
> 
> Actually, the former three paragraphs before the above quote were 
all pretty, 'high-roadish.'
> I mean, that you need to tell us, many of whom are MIU grads and 
such, what Maharishi's system is is sort of like preaching to the 
choir?  Or maybe more like preaching to the molested little boys of 
the choir?
> 
> 
> > Now think about this.  If the philosophy wasn't simple and easy 
to 
> > understand could you really be such an expert on it? That is, 
could 
> > any of us?
> 
> Well, I dunno.  In the first place, I don't consider
> myself an "expert."  But whatever degree of mastery
> I've achieved, I've probably studied MMY's teaching
> more thoroughly than any other.  Maybe I could be as
> knowledgeable about others if I studied them as much.
> 
> -----Whether you consider yourself a expert is not really true. You 
obviously consider yourself an expert since you can say such things 
as,
> 
> "The term scientists use for neat theories is
> "elegant."  I think MMY's teaching (Advaita
> plus Yoga) is incredibly elegant."
> 
> It shouldn't need much explanation that if you think that 
Maharishi's system is elegant that means that you also know what 
inelegant systems look like. Moreover, you even describe elegance in 
the next paragraph (which I won't quote). Thus assuming that you are 
ipso fact the judge and jury of philosophical systems, or an expert, 
at least of their various levels of elegance ;)
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > Considering this stupefying simplicity, could it be anything 
> > besides a bit too simple?
> 
> I'm not sure it's all that easy to understand once
> you get beyond the basics, first (based on the
> amount of misunderstanding floating around); and
> second, I'm not sure simplicity--such as it may be--
> is a negative characteristic when it comes to
> philosophy.
> 
> ----Again, you said you didn't consider yourself an expert but you 
then say that there's a lot of "misunderstanding floating around."  I 
wonder if you ever had the Forest Academy on Vedic Science where 
Maharishi discussed the difference between Vedic Cognition and 
Vedanga Cognition?  
> 
> 
> The term scientists use for neat theories is
> "elegant."  I think MMY's teaching (Advaita
> plus Yoga) is incredibly elegant.
> 
> One way of defining "elegance" in this context
> would have to do with the proportion of theory
> to its explanatory value.  TM theory has, it
> seems to me, a tremendous amount of explanatory
> value contained in a relatively small collection
> of premises.
> 
> Finally, the term I'd use would be "metaphysical
> system" rather than "philosophy."  It's also
> important that the TM metaphysics has a
> systematic experiential component, which
> distinguishes it from a philosophy per se.
> 
> ----There can be no elegance with regards to an oversimplified 
collection of tenets regarding life, its nature, or its solutions.  
There is no Occam's razor with regard to the summum bonum of 
existance.  Paradox cannot be reconciled, and finding Maharishi's 
system to be advaita disregards the other aspects of Maharishi's 
teachings such as heavy reliance on Yagyas for solving the 
various 'problems' of life.  As you should well know the advaita of 
Maharishi is Advaita Vedanta, or the advaita of where the Vedas leave 
off. That advaita presupposes that the vedas themselves are not in 
fact the solution to the problems of like, and hence moksha or 
liberation begins once the Veda ends. 
> 
> This "metaphysical" advaita that you ascribe to Maharishi, is odd 
considering that Maharishi, has never even used the word advaita in 
anything he ever spoke. If I am mistaken then please give us the 
quote. 
> 
> 
> Over to you...dunno if I've addressed what you
> were getting at.
> 
> ----Frankly I forget as well, at this point.  Oh yeah, I suggest 
that the reason you agree with maharishi at all is because like a 
coloring book, Maharishi's system of Vedic restructuring is so vague 
and simple as to let you fill in all the color until it truely 
becomes you. 
> 
> And I think you have done an admirable job with that.  
> 
> I think it would be an incredibly liberating option for you 
personally to get a divorce from it, and then find true love again 
with another, and then realize that all that you really loved was the 
colors from within.
> 
> Personally, I am only really about liberation.  All the fancy 
houses, gigantic penile monuments, gigantic penile crowning 
adventures, huge spurting yagyas and other phallic overkill I can 
perform myself, on a scale I can live with. 
> 
> Maybe being a woman, you are attracted, however, to the grandious.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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