Damn Judy, I am only working on one cup of coffee here!  Let me see if
I can make an intelligible response!

> Coming back to this, because I think it's an
> important point: If Unity consciousness is as
> MMY defines it, and if he's in Unity consciousness,
> it isn't *up* to MMY, independently of nature,
> whether to perform siddhis.  It's nature's call.
> 
> So it wouldn't really be a falsifiable standard
> after all.

I think he has already thrown his hat in to the ring of demonstrating
student's flying for marketing purposes. So it seems like nature has
spoken on this and just hasn't delivered the goods.  He has used the
impression of science for his marketing and even revealed his strategy
in his "Science of Being".  So it seems like it is too late for him to
claim that nature just doesn't want him to blow people away and gain
millions of followers by demonstrating something amazing. 

Maybe it was never meant as a falsifiable standard even though it was
presented that way.  I may have been giving MMY too much credit for
being sincere about his interest in proofs and testing.

Erwin Schroedinger's quote is interesting.  If my single cup of coffee
brain can wrap around this multiple cups of coffee question...

I don't buy his conclusion.  He seems to be jumping levels of
existence unnecessarily.  He starts with theory, determinism, goes to
personal experience, free will, and then lapses into poetry.

I don't think his conclusion is logical at all, it is just put
together out of his imagination.  It sounds beautiful, but it is not
how I think of it.  When he is doing science he may be the man, but in
his forays into philosophy he just sounds like an old-school Chopra.  

We psychologically experience our free will acting as well as the
determined parts of our habits and the effects of past actions and
experiences coming into play and interacting with our will.  Trying to
drop a bad habit puts this in our face clearly.  As far as deciding if
the universe has some designs on our personal actions, this is an area
for philosophical speculations. Identifying our sense of "I" with the
"I" controlling the motion of the atoms is more poetry than
philosophy.  Not that poetry is bad, I love it.

So how do you understand it?




--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "curtisdeltablues"
> <curtisdeltablues@> wrote:
> >
> > > Another wrinkle: what exactly does "able to do
> > > the siddhis" actually mean in the context of
> > > Unity consciousness?  Does it really mean "on
> > > demand"?
> > 
> > This ends up in the broader question of free will and determinism in
> > general in any state of consciousness.  Nice point about the paradox.
> > 
> > I recognize, and others have pointed out, that MMY is unique in his
> > perspective of siddhis.  Many other teachers claim they are
> > impediments to growth, or at lest distractions.  But in his system
> > they serve a much more interesting role for me.  They are indications
> > that one has gained certain masteries over the laws of nature.  I
> > think they are important to distinguish "higher" states from just a
> > flowery description of what ordinary, aware people are walking around
> > in every day.  Since he does demonstrate siddhis at their incomplete
> > hopping level, I can't see why he would not show the real deal.  I
> > think it was commendable of him to use the performance of siddhis as
> > tests of consciousness.  It gives a falsifiable standard.
> 
> Coming back to this, because I think it's an
> important point: If Unity consciousness is as
> MMY defines it, and if he's in Unity consciousness,
> it isn't *up* to MMY, independently of nature,
> whether to perform siddhis.  It's nature's call.
> 
> So it wouldn't really be a falsifiable standard
> after all.
> 
> And yes, it's all very much wrapped up in the free
> will/determinism paradox.  I don't personally
> have any problem with the idea that my sense of
> free will is an illusion--that is, my "small 
> self"'s sense of free will.  I think we assume
> we have free will because we're dimly intuiting
> that the Self has free will.
> 
> I think I've posted this quote from Schroedinger
> here before, but it's germane to this discussion:
> 
> Erwin Schroedinger, in an essay called "The I That Is God,"
> wrote:
> 
>    ...The space-time events in the body of a living being which
>    correspond to the activity of its mind, to its self-conscious or
>    any other actions, are...if not strictly deterministic at any
>    rate statistico-deterministic....Let me regard this as a fact, as
>    I believe every unbiased biologist would, if there were not the
>    well-known, unpleasant feeling about "declaring oneself to be a
>    pure mechanism."  For it is deemed to contradict Free Will as
>    warranted by direct introspection....
> 
>    Let us see whether we cannot draw the correct, noncontradictory
>    conclusion from the following two premises:
> 
>    (i)  My body functions as a pure mechanism according to the Laws
>    of Nature [determinism].
> 
>    (ii)  Yet I know, by incontrovertible direct experience, that I
>    am directing its motions, of which I foresee the effects, that
>    may be fateful and all-important, in which case I feel and take
>    full responsibility for them [free will].
> 
>    The only possible inference from these two facts is, I think,
>    that I--I in the widest meaning of the word, that is to say,
>    every conscious mind that has ever said "I"--am the person, if
>    any, who controls the "motion of the atoms" according to the Laws
>    of Nature.
>






------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Everything you need is one click away.  Make Yahoo! your home page now.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/AHchtC/4FxNAA/yQLSAA/UlWolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

To subscribe, send a message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Or go to: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
and click 'Join This Group!' 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to