Showing posts with label Buddhist physics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddhist physics. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2026

The Buddha: Why time has direction (Upton)

 
Buddhism better than Judaism for science?
It’s time for our newest installment on Paṭṭhāna — the Buddha’s hyper-precise in-depth teachings on cause and effect. For those not yet up to speed on this series, I recommend reading my previous posts. For the sake of today’s installment, the one on different types of “support” is relevant.

Those who have read the previous one on the three different types of support will remember that one of those three is sahajata paccaya — the condition by which things must always arise at the same time.
 
Paccaya is the Pali word for “cause” or “condition.” Jati is the Pali word for “birth.” Saha means “same” — so sahajata means “born at the same time.”

But Patthana goes further. It also offers us purejata paccaya and pacchajata paccaya. The jata part still means “born,” while pure is Pali for “before,” and paccha is Pali for “after” — so here we have “born before” and “born after” conditions.


Of these two, purejata paccaya, or “born-before condition,” is intuitively far easier to understand. This is a condition whereby the cause arises before the effect. We can think of countless examples in nature where this condition holds:
  • a mother must always be born before her child,
  • the fruit tree must always grow before the fruit,
  • the river must exist before the fish come and swim in it.
In Abhidhamma terms, an example of this condition would be the various types of sensitive materiality that must already exist in order to support the consciousness that arises dependent on them. For example, eye-sensitive materiality must already exist in order for eye-consciousness to arise.

Another example occurs with some objects of attention. For example, eye-consciousness cannot arise without a visual object to cognize. So the visual object, which will be some kind of light or color, needs to already be existing and well established in order for eye-consciousness to arise. The cause comes first; the result comes after.

Pacchajata paccaya, however, is not as intuitive. Here we have the result arising first and the cause coming later. What?! Backwards [retro-] causality? Really? Well, no, not quite. It’s not really as mystical as it might sound.

Pacchajata paccaya is actually a condition whereby something that arises later is the cause for something that arose earlier to keep on existing. For example, there’s rain that falls after a tree already exists and helps keep that tree alive. Another example would be how children may at times give their otherwise exhausted parents a reason to keep on living, or indeed how students might give their weary teacher a reason to keep on teaching. ;-)

In Abhidhamma terms, we see that the consciousness and mental factors support materiality to keep on existing, even though the materiality existed first and the consciousness and mental factors came along later.

Why time has a direction
The truly powerful thing about these two conditions is that
I study without but not within.
they give a direction to time
.

Time, at least in the way we usually think about it, is just a concept. It is something the mind makes up to measure change.

This is easy to understand by choosing any unit of time and thinking about how it is defined.
  • One year = the Earth goes round our Sun;
  • One day = the Earth completes a full rotation on its axis;
  • One second = the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between two hyperfine energy levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom. (Yes, that really is how it came to be defined).
Time is always measured in terms of an amount of change that has happened in that period. Change is what is really happening. Time is the mind’s overlay in order to measure and make sense of the change.

But if time is just a concept, does that mean that we can just choose to freeze or go back or forwards in time? Well, no, because what purejata paccaya and pacchajata paccaya tell us is that some things must always happen first and other things must always happen after.

The flow of change has a direction. It doesn’t just seem to have a direction on a conceptual level. The directionality of time is hard-baked into the building blocks of reality.

So here we have two unassuming conditions having a profound effect on our reality or at least on how we experience it. If reality itself unfolds directionally, what does that tell us about the nature of our own lives?

What things in our lives need to come first? What things must follow after in order to sustain us? Let me know in the comments how you see these two conditions quietly working in daily life and how they are shaping your Dhamma paths.

With metta and gratitude,

Friday, January 23, 2026

Speed limit of light? Light doesn't move


Why light speed is the LIMIT? What Feynman uncovered will COLLAPSE your mind

(Imagine the Physics) Jan. 8, 2026: Ever wonder why nothing can break what Eistein called the "cosmic speed limit"? 🚀 Most people think it's just "Einstein's rule" — but the real answer is WAY weirder.

The speed of light isn't some arbitrary speed limit slapped onto the universe. It's literally built into the structure of space and time itself.

⚠️WARNING: This channel is not officially connected to Richard Feynman or his estate. It's here to share his incredible way of explaining physics with a new generation who never got to learn from him directly. This is not his voice — it's a tribute to his teaching style, created purely for education and inspiration. No impersonation intended, just deep respect for one of history's greatest teachers.

🙏 All content created to inspire, educate, and encourage reflection. This channel follows YouTube’s monetization policies, including clear labeling of synthetic media. This channel has no official connection to Richard Feynman, his estate, or Caltech. It is composed of independent educators using AI technology to make Feynman's teachings more accessible. What the channel does: Transform Feynman's lectures and writings into engaging video format using AI voice synthesis, staying faithful to his original words and style. What it does not do: Claim this is actually Feynman speaking, add our own theories, or misrepresent his ideas.
 
This journey starts with Newton staring at our Moon and realizing something wild: It's FALLING (sideways making an ellipsis) right now. It is constantly falling toward Earth (but missing because it's moving sideways). That single insight kicked off a 400-year avalanche of discoveries about how the universe really works. ⚡ Then came a total accident: Astronomers noticed Jupiter's moons were running 8 minutes late sometimes. Instead of blaming their math, one guy (Rømer) had a crazy idea: What if light takes TIME to travel? Boom! "Speed of light" discovered by accident, while studying gravity.

🧠 Fast forward to Einstein, who breaks everyone's brain by proving that the faster we move, the slower TIME flows for us. Not as a feeling — it does so literally. Our clock ticks more slowly. Distances shrink. The universe reshapes itself around us to keep light moving at exactly the same speed no matter what. This has been TESTED.

✅ Particle accelerators prove it. GPS satellites depend on it. (They'd fail without Einstein's corrections). Cosmic rays streaming through our atmosphere show it. The universe doesn't care about our common sense; it plays by different rules.

💡 Feynman's genius was showing how these discoveries connect, how confidence in one law helps us discover the next. How asking the question, "Why are Jupiter's moons wrong?" led to finding light speed, how each breakthrough creates an avalanche of new ones.

Ready for a brain rewiring? Let's go. ⚡ 💬 QUESTION: What breaks the brain more, that Jupiter's moons revealed light speed or that time literally slows down when we move? Ever thought about why GPS actually works? Let us know what hit differently!

👇 📚 GO DEEPER: Want to explore this? 📖 "Six Not-So-Easy Pieces" by Feynman — the relativity chapters are 🔥 📖 "The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. 1" — Chapters 7-9 (gravity), 15-17 (relativity) 📖 "The Character of Physical Law" — Chapter 4 is a masterpiece 📖 Free access to all lectures: feynmanlectures.caltech.edu.

⚠️ DISCLAIMER: This channel is not officially connected to Richard Feynman or his estate. It is here to share his incredible way of explaining physics with a new generation who never got to learn from him directly. This is not his voice; it's a tribute to his teaching style, created purely for education and inspiration. No impersonation is intended, just deep respect for one of history's greatest teachers.

🙏 Every video is carefully researched from his published works and lectures. This channel is independent, unofficial, and driven by one mission: keeping Feynman's legacy alive for curious minds everywhere.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

FREE: The 'Higher Doctrine' (Abhidhamma)

 
Unraveling the Mysteries of Mind
and Body through Abhidhamma
AUTHOR: Sayalay Susila
EDITOR: Dhr. Seven (Wisdom Quarterly)
FOREWORD: Pa-Auk Tawya Sayadaw Bhaddanta Accina
Namo Tassa Bhagavato Arahato Sammāsambuddhassa
("Homage to the Exalted, the Worthy, the Supremely Self-Awakened One").

INTRODUCTION
Unravelling Abhidhamma
"Mind leads the world" (Dhp 1). Is this really true? Only when we understand how the mind works will we truly know. Mind is something close to us yet very far away. Mind is the culprit behind all of our unwholesome karma (thought, speech, deed), yet it is also the director of all of our skillful, wholesome behavior, deeds that soothe the heart.

The study of Abhidhamma helps us gain an understanding of how the mind works, which is essential for us to lead happy and blameless lives. In Abhidhamma, the ultimate realities of mind and matter that make up this so-called "living being" are seen to be an impersonal stream of consciousness-moments and infinitesimally small particles that continuously arise and pass away utterly dependent on causes and conditions.

So the study of Abhidhamma helps the mind shed the painful illusion of there being an “I,” a permanent self persisting through all experiences.

Most of the problems of life spring from ignorance and craving associated with this “I” and the self-centeredness that is its offspring. When the mind understands that there is, in an ultimate sense, no such “I,” it will let go of intense clinging.

The truth sets us free. To be more precise, knowing-and-seeing what is ultimately true sets us free. Life’s problems suddenly evaporate. All becomes light. We awaken to truth and are freed from all forms of suffering.

This can be accomplished through a thorough study of Abhidhamma and practical meditation experiences.

The Abhidhamma Pitaka is one of the "three baskets" (tipitaka), the three divisions of the Buddha’s teachings. Abhidhamma is a combination of two terms, abhi ("higher, special, sublime") and Dhamma ("universal truth or teaching"). Therefore, Abhidhamma is the "higher teaching" of the Buddha or the "Doctrine in ultimate terms."

This Dhamma is grounded in observable truth and reality one is able to directly experience. It is not a faith or belief system. It is not a metaphysical "theory," as some portray it, but rather a systematic explanation and guide to how it is possible for earnest meditators to directly know-and-see, finally culminating in enlightenment (bodhi).

All physical and mental phenomena are fully classified and explained in the system of Abhidhamma. That is why the Theravada Buddhist tradition regards the Abhidhamma as the most perfect exposition on the true nature of existence, realized by the penetrative wisdom of a supremely enlightened ene.

Truth
Ven. Dr. Pa Auk Sayadaw
According to Abhidhamma philosophy, there are two types of truth. The first is conventional truth (sammuti sacca), which refers to ordinary concepts, such as “tree,” “house,” “human,” “you,” “me,” “person,” “body,” “being,” and so on. Such concepts are closely linked to language, culture, and conditioning.

We assume that these concepts are objective realities, that they actually exist. They seem to exist, yes, but if we were to examine these concepts closely, we would find that they in no way exist as irreducible entities. Why? They can be broken down into smaller and smaller components.

For example, if we discern the Four Elements (the characteristics of matter) in the body, the “body” breaks down into innumerable, infinitesimal particles (kalapas). If we further analyze these particles, they also break down. We find that each particle contains eight inseparable elements or characteristics:
  1. earth (solidity),
  2. water (cohesion),
  3. fire (temperature),
  4. wind (movement),
  5. color,
  6. smell,
  7. taste,
  8. nutritive essence.
These elements are the final, irreducible components of matter (material existence). By penetrating conventional truth with wisdom, we can eventually realize ultimate truth.

Ultimate truth (paramattha sacca), according to Abhidhamma, means something that cannot be further broken down or subdivided into smaller components. It is a final and irreducible part of existence, which exists by reason of its own intrinsic nature (sabhāva).

For example, the earth-element in our human bodies, as well as in other animate things, exists with its intrinsic nature of hardness or softness, whereas the fire-element exists with its intrinsic nature of heat or cold. While a body is conventional truth, the elements that make up the body are the final, irreducible components of its existence, and no amount of analysis can break them down any further.

Of these two types of truth, Abhidhamma deals primarily with ultimate truth.

This book is divided into three parts. The first describes ultimate truths. In Abhidhamma, ultimate truth is fourfold:
  1. Consciousness (conditioned phenomena)
  2. Mental factors (conditioned)
  3. Matter (conditioned)
  4. Nirvana (unconditioned).
The first three of these ultimate truths comprise the totality of conditioned existence. Together, consciousness and mental factors are what we conventionally call the “mind” on the one hand. Matter, on the other hand, is what we conventionally call the “body.”

The successive coming together of mind-and-matter is what we conventionally call “I,” a person, human being, animal, or whatever the case may be.

The concept “I” is a conventional truth, whereas consciousness, mental factors, and matter are ultimate truths. These three ultimate truths are conditioned dhammas (phenomena) produced by causes and conditions, subject to radical change, dissolution, constant fading away, and are hurtling toward destruction.

They are subtle and profound dhammas that cannot be seen with the ordinary eye. However, they can be discerned by a mind well trained in concentration and insight.

Nirvana (nibbana), the fourth ultimate truth, is unconditioned. That is to say, it is not produced by any cause or condition. Therefore, it does not change. Nirvana can be experienced here and now.

The Buddha's path-of-practice is gradual (progressive) training in higher virtue, higher concentration, and higher wisdom. TO BE CONTINUED
  • Unravelling the Mysteries of Mind and Body Through Abhidhamma (PDF)
  • To order a physical copy of the latest edition, email Bro Low at janaka.low@gmail.com
  • sayalaysusila.net/dhamma-gallery/books
  • EDITORIAL NOTE: When the nun asked me to edit the first edition of this book, which is based on her very popular PowerPoint presentations, I did so thinking the final version would be run by me. It was not. Many hands contributed, often undoing much of the consistency I put in place. It went back and forth so often that I left it to her to leave it a mishmash. But here the standard American (rather than British) grammar is restored as is the choice of translated Pali and Sanskrit terms. These are minor issues but important to any editor. Much was fixed by the time of our third edition but imperfectly so.
INWARD PATH PUBLISHER, Penang • Malaysia. Originally published in Inward Journey Book Series (2005), an imprint of Inward Path Publisher for FREE distribution. This newly revised edition 2012 is published to support the establishment of Appamada Vihari, an International Meditation Center, where Sayalay Susila is the abbess. An Inward Wisdom Book. Published by INWARD PATH PUBLISHER. 14 Phuah Hin Leong Road, off Burma Road, 10050 Georgetown, Penang, MALAYSIA, P.O. Box 1034 General Post Office, 10830 Georgetown, Penang, MALAYSIA.
  • email: ijbook@inwardpath.org
  • inwardpathpublisher@gmail.com
  • inwardpath.org
Text copyright © Sayalay Susila 2005-2012. Layout and design copyright © Inward Path Publisher 2005-2012. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner, any form, or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher and author. Perpustakaan Negara Malaysia cataloguing-in-publication data Sayalay Susila, 1963, Unravelling the Mysteries of Mind & Body Through Abhidhamma/Sayalay Susila. ISBN 978-983-3512-03-4.1. Abhidharma.   2. Dharma (Buddhism).   3. Mind and Body-Religious aspects--Buddhism.  I. Title. 294.3824. Cover design and book layout by Sunanda Lim. Printed in Penang, Malaysia.

Friday, October 24, 2025

Magic? Woman can see without eyes


Woman who can see without her eyes leaves Danny Jones speechless | Dalia Burgoin
(Danny Jones Clips) Oct. 17, 2025: Can humans really “see” while blindfolded? This episode shows Dalia Burgoin—a psionic woman who demonstrates mindsight vision under test-like conditions.

Special abilities or autism?

👁️‍🗨️ We take a walk-through what mindsight claims to be, how this session is set up, and what to watch for if curious and skeptical. See Dalia attempt tasks without visual input, while the ground rules are explained, potential cues, and the exact steps used to reduce bias.

There's no hype—just a clear look at the method and the results.

What's covered?
  • What “psionic” and “mindsight” mean in plain English
  • Why blindfold testing matters (and common pitfalls)
  • What counts as a real “hit” vs. lucky guess
  • How attention, memory, and pattern recognition might influence outcomes
  • Where claims like this fit within broader ESP and perception research
Whether a believer, skeptic, or just curious, let’s have a fair, transparent walkthrough designed for everyday viewers—no advanced science degree required.

By the end, know how to evaluate demonstrations like this and what questions to ask next.

🧪 Enjoy balanced, easy-to-follow breakdowns of unusual human abilities?

COMMENTARY
 
Living Enlightenment (Fraud)
Young students of fraudulent Indian sex cult guru Nithyananda also demonstrated this ability and reported to us that they really did learn this ability. They did not seem to regard it as "magic" but rather as a normal human capacity that can be learned. The physically blind need not be blind, just as a man may make sounds and learn (by the brain restructuring itself with consistent practice) echolocation. Those children showed us this ability at Wisdom Quarterly and displayed it in front of hundreds of faithful Hindu onlookers at the now defunct Nithyananda Ashram on the outskirts of Los Angeles County East.

Subscribe (@dannyjonesclips) for more deep dives into perception, performance, and the edge of human potential. 📢 #Parapsychology #Mindsight #DaliaBurgoin

Friday, May 2, 2025

Simulation: Gravity is fake, says science

If fall rate exceeds terminal falling speed, ship will move down as levitation occurs like coaster
Clearly, gravity is fake. We are not pulled down so much as pushed, except for this cat. ;,)

Monday, May 20, 2024

Vesak/Buddha Day: holy Buddhist holiday


Two years ago, Nepalese Buddhists in Los Angeles had a large celebration.
Dhammakaya has a giant Thai Buddhist temple in Los Angeles (City of Azusa) like Bangkok.

Vesak: The most important Buddhist holiday?
(ReligionForBreakfast) May 16, 2024: Vesak is celebrated by millions of Buddhists around the world. A day commemorating the birth, awakening, and final nirvana (parinibbana) of the Buddha. Special thanks to @gunnertravel for his Singapore footage.
Vesak is also called "Buddhist Xmas"
  • 0:00 Intro
  • 2:08 Unknown Historical Origins of Vesak
  • 3:10 Vesak Rituals and Practices
  • 6:06 Buddhist Modernism and Vesak
  • 9:57 Growth of Vesak
Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images and Reuters. Subscribe to Sacred & Profane's newsletter: eepurl.com/gjbzuX. Join on Patreon: religionforbreakfast. One-time donations: paypal.me/religionforbreakfast... Sign-up for mailing list to be notified of online classes: classes.religionforbreakfast....

Ultimate things
What is the point of details, of the minutiae, if scholars can't speak accurately? Vesak (Vesakha, Visakha, Wesak, Buddha Day, Buddha Purnima Jayanti) is a thrice blessed day in Theravada Buddhism.

It was under the same full moon on this day, in three different years (about 2,600 years ago), that
  1. Siddhartha Gautama was reborn in the human world,
  2. became the Buddha or the "Awakened One," and
  3. passed into final nirvana.
Neither buddhas nor arhats "die," for they have transcended birth-and-death and attained to the "deathless state" known as nirvana. When ordinary, unenlightened people die, they are always reborn. People may die, but they are certain to be reborn.

Where they are reborn depends on their karma, and that rebirth they endure is instantaneous. (Even allowing for Vajrayana or Himalayan Esoteric Buddhism's 40 days in the Bardo or "intermediary state" between rebirths, one has still gone from this plane to rebirth into that intermediary state, only to be reborn elsewhere 40 days later.

At the instant of passing away from this world and this part of the human plane, one immediately arises in another plane, rarely on this one again. One is reborn (reappears, rearises) in the subtle form of a spontaneously-born (born without parents) gandhabba. (This may look like an "immortal soul" to anyone who cultivates the dibba cakkhu or "divine eye" because it didn't die at death, but it is no such thing; it is a transient assemblage of the Five Aggregates). From there one is likely to be reborn as a (deva), because there are many devic planes, or as a ghost (peta) because there are many hungry ghosts or a being elsewhere in the downfall because most humans most of the time, in history, do not behave keep, namely keeping the Five Precepts, but live in such a way that they go from darkness to darkness unless they have heeded the teaching of a spiritual teacher. The Buddha was extraordinary because he was a teacher of the path to heaven AND the path to the end of all rebirth and suffering. Followers may choose either route, even selecting to engage in the karma that brings one back to the human plane.

But a fully enlightened person or arhat has overcome all of this, and with the end of all rebirths, there is an end to all further suffering. The Buddha is an arhat, a consummate one, so it is very wrong and misleading to loosely say that his passing into final nirvana is "death." We die, our passing away is death, but that term does not apply to those who have made an end of death and rebirth, which is what awakening (bodhi) is.
  • One should understand and always bear in mind that in Buddhism there are two truth, conventional and ultimate, and they should never be confused. Things may sound strange, paradoxical, or impossible, but the solution is usually that someone has switched from talking in a normal, customary manner (as happens in the sutras) to using terms in their abstract, ultimate sense. This flips the whole world around, and people reading about Buddhism without bearing this in mind might suddenly misapprehend and think, "The Buddha said so." The Buddha was very good about keeping the conventional conventional and the ultimate ultimate. Ultimate language and phrasing are characteristic of the Abhidharma ("Higher Doctrine" or the "Dharma in Ultimate Terms"). To make this concrete is very easy nowadays because most of us have learned about physics. A car is solid, conventionally speaking; we can all see and test that. But, ultimately, we now know a solid car is mainly composed of empty space; this is true on a higher level. It is more true than the first. But trying to pass through the car, which is really more empty space than matter, will not end well. How could both truths be true? They are, and though we use the same words, they mean different things in ordinary usage than they do in physics. In exactly the same way, it is possible to both say that a solid car is not solid at all, that dense material is composed overwhelmingly (99%+) of empty space, and not be confused in the slightest. If this example is not clear, it is better to go read about modern physics than continuing to read about ancient ultimate truths in Buddhism. We may not be able to prove that physics is true, but we can prove that Buddhism is true. Here even "prove" means two different things. Presumably, scientists can objectively demonstrate to other similarly trained scientists that these claims of empty space in the centers of atoms is true; we can't see that, but they can or they claim they can. Successful Buddhist meditators can see kalapas ("particles" of perception) and can then begin to turn their temporarily purified minds/hearts towards seeing the more subtle constructs known as cittas ("mind moments"). In this way, ultimate materiality and ultimate mentality are reveals, and one sees without a doubt that this is the way things are. With this knowledge and vision, one becomes dispassionate, and lets go, and in this way awakens to the ultimate truth here and now. Nirvana is not for the afterlife. It is experienced and resorted to in this very life. It is the ultimate bliss, the ultimate peace, a true refuge from all suffering. We can prove it for ourselves. Sadly, we cannot then prove it for another. A scientist can throw data at us and interpret it as meaning this or that, empty space or solid matter. A Buddhist is not able to force someone to see things as they really are. There are protections in place in samsara to keep us ignorant of the ultimate truth, to keep is craving and searching for sensual pleasures wherever we can find them, and to constantly not see that all things are impermanent. If we cannot see the three most obvious things about all phenomena, about all planes of existence, about all things, how are we to ever know-and-see what the Buddha realized, what the Buddha taught, and what countless others practiced and enjoyed when they came to see what he saw that made him the "Awakened One"? Buddhism has a point, and it is not to debate or argue with science. Its point is to lead to awakening, enlightenment, and the end of all suffering. Every other teaching may lead to great things, indeed to great places and planes of rebirth, but no other Teaching (dharma), has a means of ending all suffering for once and for all time.
DETAILS CONTINUED FROM ABOVE
Vesak (Visakha) Day is big every year in California in particular.
.
One should not fall under the wrong view that nirvana is death, emptiness, nothingness, or nonexistence.

Our minds with their characteristic defilements (greed, hatred, delusion) are quick to conceive of things in accordance with each mind's predominant defilement.

Those with a predominance of greed (passion, preference, lust, clinging) type will tend to view nirvana (amata = "the deathless") will tend to imagine nirvana as eternal life.

Those with a predominance of hate (aversion, revulsion, anger, fear) will tend to imagine it as annihilation.

Those with a predominance of delusion (ignorance, wrong views, doubt, uncertainty) will be confused, doubtful, vacillating.

These views are all wrong, and the Buddha spent years pointing this out to those who asked. The nature of nirvana and the one who enters it after this life was a frequent cause of useless speculation and views. The Buddha found such questions unprofitable because of all the assumptions the questioner came with. No answer would suffice without driving the questioner into holding wrong view. What the Buddha taught instead of answering such speculative things was the path to know-and-see directly.

For instance, if one wanted to know what San Francisco is like, one might ask and hear all about it harbor, bridge, and boats then come under the false impression that is a water world. Or hearing about its winding roads, traffic, and trolleys, one might think it is all dry asphalt. Then, if one were able, one might not answer questions about San Francisco but provide a map, directions, and guidance toward it. Anyone arriving would cease to have any question or uncertainty about it that that person could not answer for oneself without relying on a teacher. That is Buddhism, not a set of theories, dogmas, or beliefs but a path-of-practice to awakening, inviting one to come and see for oneself.

Our categories do not apply, and they are incorrect because of our unquestioned assumptions. We ask, as was asked in ancient times, What becomes of the arhat (an accomplished one or, speaking to the Buddha, one might phrase it, What happens to the Tathagata) after death? Does he (the arhat or the Buddha) exist, not exist, both exist and not exist, or neither exist nor not exist?

This exhausts the logical possibilities to imagine the surprise when the correct answer is "none of the above." All are wrong views holding an unquestioned assumption.

We assume, for example, that there is a being here right now, and that later, after death (or disappearing from the human world), in an afterlife, that being no longer exists. This is incorrect.

Or we assume a being is here now, and later, after death, in an afterlife, that being continues to exist for eternity. This is incorrect.

Well, it can't be both, and it certainly can't be neither, so which is it? It has to be one or the other, right? No.

The Truth is, the being we assume to be here right now is actually not, so how much less does it become eternalized or annihilated when it passes away from here?

Well, okay, that's counterintuitive, but then what happens?

What is arising now, which we take to be a "mortal and changing personality" or an "immortal and unchanging soul," arises dependent on conditions. (This is called Dependent Origination). This is how things arise.

It is wrong to say nothing is here. (It is better to say no thing is here, which is a little different but not different enough for that to make sense to most people). Something is here, but all things (dhammas, phenomena) are passing away.
  • What things are here? Constituents. What is not here? What those constituents seem to create or originate. If there are three separate colors, what is there? Three colors. If those colors are combined to make a new color (say by adding red, blue, and another color to make purple), what is there? Conventionally speaking, there are no longer the three colors, and what now exists is a new color. This is obvious. What is not obvious is what really, ultimately speaking, exists. There are three separate colors, what is there? Three colors. If those colors are combined to make a new color, what is there? Ultimately speaking, three colors. Though they seem to have changed, there really are only those things after they've combined. So what to make of the new fourth color? It is not really new but implicit in the others: this is what the combination of those colors looks like. We imagine something new came into being, so logically we are forced to conclude that if we separate them, the new color is "annihilated." Things (everything excluding nirvana, which is not a "thing" and does not have the characteristics of things) come together, turn, and pass away. A living being, or the illusion of one, comes together, turns (changes, transforms), and passes away. What is it that is changing? The Five Aggregates? What is it that passes away? Ignorance (the illusion of it being a being when the constituents are no longer functionally integrated). The being, who did not really come into existence, does not pass away, but the illusion that arose does. Conventionally, we see what's going on, and wrong assessments are made, wrong assumptions, wrong conclusions. And we enter a world of suffering. What if we could let go of it and end the problem? That would be nice but we can't let go, and this is not the extent of it so that even death is not the end. Death means rebirth; rebirth means death. A clever person may ask, "Who" enters into existence? This question is wrongly put. Ignorance arises; a being does not come into existence. "Who" physically forms, feels, perceives, mentally forms, and is conscious? This question is wrongly put. It should not be "who" but "what." If we ask, "What forms?" the answer is very easy and apparent. If we ask, "What feels?" the answer is very easy and apparent. If we ask, "Who is conscious?" the question is wrongly asked. But ask what is conscious and the answer is very easy (if unsatisfying) and apparent: Form forms. Feelings feel. Perception perceives. Mental formations form. And consciousness is conscious. Clinging to these as a "being," "ego," "self," "soul" is the mistake. Undoing that mistake is enlightenment and awakening. The Buddha taught the path to achieve that. In ignorance we cling to the illusion of self; clinging clings. The aggregates cling to themselves as something else, as the whole being more than the sum of its parts. It is, conventionally. But ultimately, it is not. This becomes clear with the purification of the mind. Otherwise, with a defiled mind, this information becomes dangerous. This teaching is like wrongly grasping a venomous snake. Seize it by the tail and get bitten and die in agony. Seize it by the head and all is well.
It is also wrong to say that a "being" is here because that is not quite right. A "being" appears to be here, but that "being" resolves into constituent parts, none of which are real for more than a moment.

In fact, they endure for less than a moment. This is because there are three submoments or phases (arising, turning, and passing) of whatever arises.

It is not that we are born, begin to exist, and then pass out of existence years later; this is, of course, how it seems. But what is really happening, and one may observe this directly as one awakens, is that an impersonal process in a past life reappears in this life and passing from here and wanders on into a future life.

At any moment in any life, one may ask, What is it that is actually arising? The correct answer will not be a "being" but an illusion because Five Aggregates clung to as self are arising, not an actual being who is destined to die and be reborn.

Each of the aggregates -- form (kalapas), feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and consciousness (cittas) -- which we assume to be the "being" is, in fact, a momentary process or flux.

Even now a thought or feeling or perception is arising and passing away. What replaces it, what is next, is nearly identical but not identical. Therefore, what was is gone and what came after is about to go, and we nevertheless cling to this process as an unchanging essence or being, when at its core there is no such being. How can it really die? It cannot except in the fact that it is always dying, at every moment and submoment.

How can it really be reborn? It cannot, except that a continuation of the impersonal/empty process gets called a rebirth. In fact, one is at every moment being reborn. This is what it means to say that "all things are impermanent."

This refers to radical impermanence, not casual and apparent decay. Of course, a building is erected and one day falls. This is impermanence, but this is not radical impermanence. Radical impermanence says that at a subatomic level, all of the ions and atoms, quarks and muons, everything (spoken of in ancient Buddhist physics as kalapas or "particles" that constitute materiality), is arising, turning, and passing away, moving, vibrating, decaying, hurtling toward destruction.

This is happening extremely quickly, so quickly that we see no motion, as when a propeller spins so fast it seems to not be moving at all or when hurtling through space something seems to be motionless because there is no apparent contrast or when a smooth river looks like a solid body of water when in fact every molecule of H20 is in constant change and upheaval.

So Siddhartha, passing from a world called Tusita, reappeared on the human plane in this world (because this is far from the only world within the human plane), meditated, awakened, and taught others the path-of-practice to awaken. And in doing so, he made an end of ignorance, an end of wrong view, an end of delusion, and saw things as they really are.

Therefore, the impersonal process of rebirth was brought to cessation and with it all further suffering. Even in seeing things as they really are, before passing away, he (like all arhats) was intimate with nirvana, saw it, experienced it, knew it to be real and a refuge (sarana) so that nothing could really bother him because everything else was understood to be unreal -- passing, incapable of satisfying or fulfilling one, and impersonal -- so, without identifying with this process (the aggregates formerly clung to as self), what suffering could there be?

There could only be apparent suffering, illusory suffering, the burdens of this corporeal phenomena (aging, sickness, death, and hunger), which when no longer identified with, are harmless.

Everything is just as it is, and it is fine the way it is. This is not true for us yet, but it is true for arhats. The Buddha, as all buddhas, in seeing this, was free. So that is why it is incorrect and very misleading to think that Vesak celebrates his "death."

It celebrates the opposite, his freedom from death (the deathless state = nirvana). It is thrice blessed because the birth (rebirth), the great awakening, and the passing into final nirvana all took place on the same full moon day of the month of Vesakha in Year 1, Year 35, and Year 80 of his conventional life.

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

The LIGHT science can't explain (sutra)

Astrum, 6/15/23; Ven. Sujato (trans.); Dhr. Seven, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly

The attribute of light science still can't explain: Double-slit experiment
(Astrum) Light knows (or in any case behaves as if it knows) when it's being measured, changing in response to the subjective expectations and intentions of observers, which suggests this "reality" is a simulation rather than a reliable (objective) base. The Double-slit experiment and quantum light paradox changed everything. Things are not what they seem because observing, intention, and assumptions change them.
Light (aloka) in Buddhism
āloka-saññā: "perception of light." The recurring Pali canon passage reads: "Here the meditator contemplates the perception of light, fixes mind on the perception of the day, as at daytime so by night, and as at nighttime so by day. In this way, with a mind clear and unclouded, one develops a stage of mind that is full of brightness."

This perception is one of the methods for overcoming drowsiness recommended by the Buddha to his chief male disciple foremost in psychic powers, Mahā Moggallāna (A.VII. 58).

According to DN 33, this method is conducive to the development of "knowledge and vision." (See "purification," visuddhi). And it is said to be helpful for the attainment of the psychic "divine eye." (See abhiññā). Light can also be a subject of meditation as a kasina.

The Light Sutra
Ven. Sujato, Aloka Sutta (AN 4.143), suttacentral.net; Dhr. Seven (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly

[The Buddha said:] “Meditators, there are these four [sources or kinds of] lights. What are the four? The lights of the:
  • moon,
  • sun,
  • fire,
  • wisdom.
“These are the four lights. The best of these four lights is the light of wisdom.”

COMMENTARY
31 Planes of Existence (Ven. Suvanno)
This would explain why this publication is called Wisdom Quarterly, rather than Faith Weekly or Belief Daily or Hope Momentarily. The worst thing of all things is ignorance; therefore, the best thing of all things is enlightenment (bodhi).*

Just some thoughts on light. Loka means "world," and the prefix a- means "not," so is it possible that the word "light" (aloka) means "not-world," not all of this around us -- but the immaterial, unworldly, ethereal, sublime, supersensual?

There are Three Spheres (and 31 Planes) of Existence, and the light in each would seem to be qualitatively different. There is the lowest, where our human plane exists as well as some sensual heavens and miserable subhuman worlds, called the Sensual Sphere (kama loka).
Above us is the Fine Material Sphere (rupa loka), which is brighter, more subtle, with glorious streaming light of many kinds and apparently more or brighter colors than we perceive in this sphere.

Above that is the Immaterial Sphere (arupa loka), composed of heavens that are so refined as to not be based on matter at all, just mind. Or light may permeate all of these spheres or "worlds" just the same.

Angkor Wat is a yantra, a model of cakkavala.
For example, on the occasion of the birth of a supremely awakened one (a samma-sam-buddha), it is said a magnificent light spreads throughout the universe (or every part of the multiverse) and lights it up.

At that time unfortunate beings reborn in what are called the "interstitial hells" (a sort of 32nd plane of existence as it is not listed among the narakas, nirayas, or avici, the most tormented hell/purgatory of all) see that they are not alone, but others are also there normally steeped in complete darkness.

These places are very interesting for what they say about Buddhist cosmology: The world-systems (cakkavalas), solar systems, galaxies, or individual universes are like bubbles next to one another. As they are not cubes, which would occupy all of space between themselves, there is that portion of unoccupied space outside the bubbles. Light does not reach these places, except on the extraordinarily rare occasion of a supremely awakened one's birth.

That the ancient Gandharans, proto-Indians, Indus Valley Civilization scientists and seers (rishis) -- who were in contact with otherworldly extraterrestrials (called devas and brahmas) who constantly visit and live on this planet -- would know the shape of our world-system, solar system, galaxy, cosmos, universe, or multiverse is startling.

But the ancient Vedas ("Knowledge Books") of the Brahmins and the teachings (dharmas) of the wandering ascetics like the Buddha ("Sage of the Scythians") and buddhas before him were far ahead of their time.
  • *The greatest of all non-things is NIRVANA (nibbana), which is the highest, the ultimate, the deathless (amata), "unconditioned element," a compact rather than a composite, since it stands alone, not relying on causes or conditions for its existence. This makes it utterly unlike anything else we meet with or can conceive of -- though we can directly experience it in this very life, because it is complete error to conceive of it as nothingness. It is NOT nothingness and not a "thing," given that the definition of a "thing" (dhamma, ordinary "phenomena") is that which relies on constituent parts for its composite -- and its unsatisfactory, impermanent, and impersonal -- existence. Nirvana alone exists without supports or components.
Get 60% off your Babbel subscription: go.babbel.com... Join the official Astrum Discord server: discord.gg/TKw8Hpvtv8 Astrum merch now available, like apparel (astrum-shop.fourthwall.com) and metal posters. Subscribe for more videos about other planets.  Facebook, Twitter. Astrum Spanish: @astrumespanol Astrum Portuguese: @astrumbrasil, Donate. Patreon. Ethereum wallet: 0x5F8cf793962ae8Df4Cba017E7A6159a104744038. Become a Patron today and support channel. Astrum can't do it alone. Thanks to those who have supported so far. #light #quantum #astrum photon energy, polarized lenses, double slit experiment, quantum #astrum #quantum #light

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Is consciousness primary to reality? (doc)


Is consciousness primary to reality?
(metaRising) June 25, 2021. Is consciousness a fundamental aspect of reality? This documentary follows the recent return of “pan-psychism” as a respectable theory in philosophy and science, part of the Waking Cosmos series.

Support: patreon.com/wakingcosmos Thanks. This documentary is a non-profit, educational film. All footage used with permission or in compliance with fair use/fair dealing. Non copyright/reuse-allowed music composed by Scott Buckley, Aleks Michalski, and Dreamstate Logic. SEO TAGS: Panpsychist Philip Goff documentary about consciousness documentary about Reality Consciousness documentary BBC Paradigm shift documentary Panpsychism Documentary Hard Problem of Consciousness Mind Body Problem Philosophy of Mind Idealism Documentary Full documentary Waking Cosmos Philosophy Documentary BBC Cosmos Documentary Horizon Documentary 2021 Cosmic Consciousness Universal Consciousness Collective Consciousness Cosmic Mind