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Yes, arbitrarily means that we chose our conceptual creations. We can't possibly claim that our concepts are objectively or absolutely true. I put in in bold because this is an important distinction.
I think this is so firstly because of the viewpoint of the observer, which is chosen by the observer and determines the truth of the observation. The same thing looks differently when the viewed from a different viewpoint. And, as far as the human experience is concerned, there is a limitless number of viewpoints and truths. One can pick one's truth--arbitrarily.
But, more importantly, I think it is impossible to determine truth by analysis alone because the reality we analyse is in an ultimate state of unity, inseparability or synthesis. Analysis is antithetical to synthesis. Reality, as it really is, in its holistic oneness, can only be experienced. It cannot be analyzed and still be what it really is. Any analysis fragments the inseparable whole and it no longer is what it really is.
Reality, in its ultimate isness, can only be experienced, and is being experienced, in the pure, unconceptualized experience, when we experience the unified whole, which some of us call God, in its undivided wholeness. Then we experience the unitive love that keeps the godly whole unified.
Our thoughts can't grasp IT, but we can and do experience IT in the pure, unconceptualized experience.
Thinking is overrated, and the pure experience is underrated. That's what I think!![]()
Now to the big existential questions: What is right thought? Is there such a thing as right thought? And, if there is, how do we derive it?
Given that our analyses are relative to the viewpoint of the observer, and that there is a virtually unlimited number of viewpoints and truths, which viewpoint is good or right? Which is the best, and how do we determine it?
I think there is no "best" viewpoint, although some of them are worse than others. I think the basis for analytical thinking should be the opposite of analytical thinking: intuition!
If, in the the pure, unconceptualized experience of reality, we experience reality as it really is, as an undivided and indivisible whole, then it seems best to immerse ourselves in that holistic experience, and act directly, intuitively and spontaneously, right from the depth of the experience. This is also know as intuition, and intuition is the opposite of reason. When we use intuition as the basis for our reasoning, then we can't go too wrong.
According to the teachings of the Buddha, there are four "Rights." They are:
Right Consciousness
Right Thought
Right Action
Right Livelihood
The sequence is important. First comes Right Consciousness. Right Thought arises from Right Consciousness, and Right Action from Right Thought.
The Right Consciousness, on which everything is based, is the consciousness, awareness and experience of reality as a wholistic whole. The wholistic whole, as it really is, cannot be grasped very well by the logical intellect, but in can be experienced or intuited in the pure experience of reality. In it we experience how things really are. If we immerse ourselves in the pure experience, and think and act directly from that awareness, then we can't go too wrong.
Intuition and reason are diametric opposites, they are the opposite poles of the human intellect. Reasoning from the depth of intuition bridges and balances these opposites, and unites the two poles of intelligence. This is unified or holistic intelligence, also known as wisdom.
"O men, seek ye wisdom, for wisdom is more precious than gold."
-BOOK OF PROVERBS
I can’t write you into relevance. Let your actions make it so. - LNWell isn't that a catch all?
Sort of like a man with enough cord hanging himself in an alien thing like a distant psyche ... mental distance from the emotional point?
“Beyond our ideas of right-doing and wrong-doing, there is a field. I’ll meet you there.
When the soul lies down in that grass, the world is too full to talk about.
Ideas, language, even the phrase ‘each other’ doesn’t make sense any more.”
― Rumi
Yeah, meet you there!![]()
I think, at times, we have already been there! - LN