Carl-Richard

Why solipsism is not Absolute

111 posts in this topic

On 14/11/2024 at 4:03 PM, Carl-Richard said:

 

Solipsism claims "only my own experience exists; nobody else is conscious". It posits the concept of "my experience" as contrasted to "other people's experience". It therefore deals with the relative. It divides existence into parts (me vs. not me, conscious vs. not conscious), concepts, with relationships between them: me is the opposite of not me, conscious is the opposite of not conscious, only me is conscious and not other people.

Also, behind the concepts of me vs. not me (as an example), lie a ton of assumptions and yet more concepts. How do you identify who is me and who is other people? Through bodies? What is a body? 

@Carl-Richard Good point!

For solipsism to exist first you have to create the concept knowing of there is 'me here' and 'there are others out there'.

And then you have to decide others are not real or imaginary for solipsism to be true. 

So 2 conceptual steps ahead in the mind, nothing related with what spirituality is.


Fear is just a thought

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5 minutes ago, Javfly33 said:

@Carl-Richard Good point!

For solipsism to exist first you have to create the concept knowing of there is 'me here' and 'there are others out there'.

And then you have to decide others are not real or imaginary for solipsism to be true. 

So 2 conceptual steps ahead in the mind, nothing related with what spirituality is.

Definitely.


"It is impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows."

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@Carl-Richard The absolute is a thoughtless unity, intelligence divides, but it is itself the boundary of understanding, thereby other than the absolute intelligence intrinsically in and of itself, is the only other absolute that exists; perception of this is made and broken in a quantum formation to collapse, we have two states at the same time that are also the same. Solipsism albeit an interesting thought experiment I've learned a lot from is an illusion as far as our intellect attempts to carve out edges oblivious to how it's imprisoning itself inside the duality of its self-justification between perceived boundaries. The mind creates, yet intelligence alone illuminates the truth we chase. Truth : intelligence : absolute they all mean the same thing and the only other mirror that binds them is the attempt at unifying them which simultaneously places us into a false duality in as much we unknowingly become defined by the limits of the chase rather than living through its process.

Carl, just some considerations. Does for example intelligence reshape the boundaries of your experience, or merely reveal what lies beneath them? What defines the moment of realization, is it a break in perception or a shift in the mind's capacity? Can the Absolute exist without intelligence to witness it, or does intelligence become the creator by merely perceiving it? 

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On 19.11.2024 at 11:41 PM, Carl-Richard said:

I understand why Nilsi thought you said he was talking gibberish and not what actually you meant to say. It was something about the formulation, I had to double check myself 😄

I think one can do both (meaty and bare bones) depending on what is appropriate for the situation and as long as one is able to go from one to the other on request. Providing a lot of references does give a certain gravitas to what you're talking about ("convergence"), and often it gives added nuance. But of course, it does become confusing when done excessively, so then you have to know your audience and be choosy unless you want to spend a lot of time explaining yourself ("eating the meat" 🥴). Ah, the virtue of balance 😌

That raises the question: who, really, is one’s audience?

The psyche is structured around what Lacan calls the Big Other, an imaginary audience that functions as a projective surface for our desire to be recognized. Writing to an “audience,” then, is never about addressing a concrete entity - it’s about orienting oneself toward a horizon of recognition, a gaze that shapes the psyche and directs one’s intentions.

This is precisely what Nietzsche invokes when he declares, “some men are born posthumously.” In doing so, he conjures an à-venir audience - a future, yet-to-come Other who will recognize him as a prophet. This act is not passive; it is an act of will, a kind of Landian hyperstition, where the mere assertion of this deferred audience creates the conditions for its eventual existence. Nietzsche’s psyche, therefore, is structured around becoming, as eternal striving toward a future beyond the limits of the present.

Contrast this with Donald Trump, for whom the deferred audience has been entirely supplanted by the hyper-present gaze of the media spectacle. For Trump, recognition is no longer an unfolding or a process; it is a constant demand for immediate feedback, an endless loop of instant gratification. This collapses any sense of duration or becoming into the nihilistic flatland of postmodernity - a world without depth, where the present moment reigns supreme, and the Big Other is reduced to the flicker of a screen.

In Trump, the future dies of diabetic shock, succumbing to the infantile bliss of perpetual nourishment. In Nietzsche, we find the ecstasy of becoming and the insatiable thirst for annihilation.

Which world would you rather inhabit? (and please don’t tell me it’s „the golden mean,“ or some such bullshit).

Edited by Nilsi

“Did you ever say Yes to a single joy? O my friends, then you said Yes to all woe as well. All things are chained and entwined together, all things are in love; if ever you wanted one moment twice, if ever you said: ‘You please me, happiness! Abide, moment!’ then you wanted everything to return!” - Friedrich Nietzsche
 

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On 11/21/2024 at 1:02 PM, Carl-Richard said:

It's more illuminating to say the absolute includes the relative, but the relative does not include the absolute. One is all-encompassing, the other is not.

It's true that once we decide to speak, we have to concede that we're using concepts and diving things into parts (relative vs absolute), and the absolute is of course beyond any concept.

However, when we have made that concession and we are willing to use concepts, we do it in a rigorous way, and that is when you should not conflate the relative with the absolute. We have different words for each for a reason.

 

The contents of the frame are relative. If you make claims about the contents (e.g. "other apes are merely NPCs"), you are in the relative.

 

That's conventional metaphysics (materialism), rather than science. Nevertheless, I'm not really a "conventional scientist" either. For example, I think psychic phenomena have legitimate scientific evidence. But I'm also quite comfortable with conventional science, e.g. the "role" of the brain (without assuming a materialists metaphysics), i.e. the brain seems to correlate with (not cause) certain phenomena (some thoughts, perceptions, sensations, etc.). But these are also just statements about the relative.

 

Speaking has rules and boundaries.

 

As a side note, what is funnily implicated by your conceptual nihilism is that there is no difference between apes being NPCs and apes being conscious in their own right, so again, we contradict solipsism.

What I am saying is you think there is a boundary between insanity and sanity. I will state this, unless you are willing to go insane, you will never understand what I am saying.

The reason people tell you that you cannot use language is because language is bound by sanity. Stop trying to be sane to understand Reality. Reality is BOTH sane and insane. If it wasn't those mental expressions couldn't exist. 

Look at this cartoon.

In it Johnny Bravo is God, trapped in a dream thinking he is human. Now he is still not completely unlimited because he still has a form, but his mind is dreaming things up based on his thought. What I am saying is...Reality is just a bunch of mental thoughts at play. And you are a thought with the ability to think. 

So notice the language used in this episode, Notice how its the same in Spirituality. You are being told that the people in your dream aren't real. What you don't seem willing to admit, is that YOU ARE ABSOLUTE. This means if something doesn't appear, it doesn't exist. Take the Dream analogy and make it absolute. Make it TOTAL. Extrapolate from there and you will discover what is going on.

Also lastly....watch this video by Leo.

https://www.actualized.org/insights/extra-insights-about-good-intentions

Now answer me THIS!!! Does this sound SANE to you? If a human asks God why rape exists at all if God is good? If they want the truth God will say....I have never created anything bad. 

To understand God at all, you have to throw away sanity and embrace insanity. You need to be a SANE INSANITY to understand God.

Edited by Razard86

You are a selfless LACK OF APPEARANCE, that CONSTRUCTS AN APPEARANCE. But that appearance can disappear and reappear and we call that change, we call it time, we call it space, we call it distance, we call distinctness, we call it other. But notice...this appearance, is a SELF. A SELF IS A CONSTRUCTION!!! 

So if you want to know the TRUTH OF THE CONSTRUCTION. Just deconstruct the construction!!!! No point in playing these mind games!!! No point in creating needless complexity!!! The truth of what you are is a BLANK!!!! A selfless awareness....then that means there is NO OTHER, and everything you have ever perceived was JUST AN APPEARANCE, A MIRAGE, AN ILLUSION, IMAGINARY. 

Everything that appears....appears out of a lack of appearance/void/no-thing, non-sense (can't be sensed because there is nothing to sense). That is what you are, and what arises...is made of that. So nonexistence, arises/creates existence. And thus everything is solved.

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5 hours ago, Razard86 said:

What I am saying is you think there is a boundary between insanity and sanity. I will state this, unless you are willing to go insane, you will never understand what I am saying.

The reason people tell you that you cannot use language is because language is bound by sanity. Stop trying to be sane to understand Reality. Reality is BOTH sane and insane. If it wasn't those mental expressions couldn't exist.

"The psychotic drowns in the same waters in which the mystic swims with delight" - Joseph Campbell.

The mystic does not shun sanity. He holds both sanity and insanity. You don't shun language just because you discover a part of yourself beyond language.

Being troubled, chaotic and ungrounded is not a sign of wisdom, not a sign of maturity, not a sign of awakening. It's a sign of change and potentially a transition into the former.

So no, conflating the relative with the absolute is not excused.

Edited by Carl-Richard

Intrinsic joy is revealed in the marriage of meaning and being.

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5 minutes ago, Carl-Richard said:

The psychotic drowns in the same waters in which the mystic swims with delight" - Joseph Campbell.

The mystic does not shun sanity. He holds both sanity and insanity.

 


I AM itching for the truth 

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On 22/11/2024 at 10:14 AM, Javfly33 said:

@Carl-Richard Good point!

For solipsism to exist first you have to create the concept knowing of there is 'me here' and 'there are others out there'.

And then you have to decide others are not real or imaginary for solipsism to be true. 

So 2 conceptual steps ahead in the mind, nothing related with what spirituality is.

Either peoples are conscious, either they are not.

Something that seems to be conscious doesn't mean it is.

Edited by Will1125

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6 minutes ago, Will1125 said:

Either peoples are conscious, either they are not.

Something that seems to be conscious doesn't mean it is.

Im not saying people are conscious. 

People do not have consciousness.

Consciousness has people. 

 


Fear is just a thought

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On 24.11.2024 at 6:12 AM, Carl-Richard said:

The psychotic drowns in the same waters in which the mystic swims with delight" - Joseph Campbell.

The mystic does not shun sanity. He holds both sanity and insanity. You don't shun language just because you discover a part of yourself beyond language.

Being troubled, chaotic and ungrounded is not a sign of wisdom, not a sign of maturity, not a sign of awakening. It's a sign of change and potentially a transition into the former.

So no, conflating the relative with the absolute is not excused.


Very good, wise. Thank You. I need it now and ever I suppose…

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