Message from @༺པརབྱར།བསངཇ༻
Discord ID: 426772984045371394
THE "UNSAYABLE" IS JUST A RIFF ON NIHILISM
COMMUNICATION DOES NOT EXIST
Absolutely not
Transcendentalism is connected to what defies the world of opposites
In that sense, Zen is intensely connected to going beyond the opposites
As such it does not belong to naturalist "realism", which is a Nietzschean domain
Language itself is inherently connected to the world of appearances, and hence "realization" cannot be spoken of in any definite terms, I mean this is the alphabet of transcendentalism
THAT IS MORE TROPE THAN PHILOSOPHY
IT WILL END UP AT BACKDOOR DUALISM ANYWAY
Cultivating non dual experience via meditation alone or meditation + koans. Predominantly
Yes, but the dualism and monism also belong to the same category
Even monism, in philosophical terms, does not represent any genuine realization in itself, it is a mere plane of philosophy
The Atma, the Brahman, it also has its own backdoor, which is Naturalism
I'm not a great fan of introducing concepts of non-dualism and dualism in general, because these are merely polemical devices that do not really help
Non-dualism and dualism could in fact easily be explained as one and the same
And then also not - the fundamental problem of philosophy
it's true they don't
But short of hitting each other with sticks what do you wanna do
Nothing really, but Brett is fond of pulling impossible claims, and he just produced another one, namely, that Zen is not transcendentalism
Take this for example "Cultivating non dual experience" this is an instruction which is purely philosophical, it demands elaboration, which leads down the rabbit hole
"Cultivating concentration (of the mind)" this one is more intuitive
If someone asks "what is concentration of the mind" then you can apply the stick if you prefer
But the point is always in getting to work
Or shout
Stick is simply more Zen
still an action either way
But yeah
You're right
So is zen your deal?
It strikes me that Brett accepts so very few Nietzschean concepts and precepts, because he defines himself as Nietzschean (And I do not mean to belittle, I just speak what appears to me)
Interesting thing is that Nietzsche comprehends Buddhism as Phenomenalism which is kind of an interesting take, (and certainly more concise and measured than otherwise), but not entirely acceptable
It kinda works as an overgeneralized description of its methodology.
What grinds my gears is that categorical "imperatives" are still provided as explanations for things which well - demand explanation
People still explain reasoning with itself
Neoplatonism is often used as a backdoor, to use Brett's term, to the "same old" , for example, Catholicism
People still talk of "goodness" in the old way, where it is entirely subject to idiosyncrasies
I saw some spergy academic peer reviewed crap that missed the point in talking about Nagarjuna in concluding that he needed to defend nominalism and I'm like... did you even fucking read his shit?
Academic writing are good because they lead to you references which afterwards you read for yourself
Academic writings on most topics, and in particular Eastern Philosophy, is like a short description of a book on Amazon, you will read it to find what it is about, but then you will dismiss it and read the book for the most part
Wait who talks about categorical imperatives in regards to Buddhism?