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Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> Why do we babble on about no thing?

>

> Lewis

>

> P: Cause we have to!

> And you'll have to,

> until you don't.

 

L: I prefer, cause I am able to!

And I will do so

until I am unable.

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Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> Why do we babble on about no thing?

>

> Lewis

>

> P: Cause we have to!

> And you'll have to,

> until you don't.

>

>

 

 

Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the universe

together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in front of me

is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this no thing

glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite number of

fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we can point

to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no relation

to anything else).

 

Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist for it

to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

 

al.

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-

anders_lindman

Nisargadatta

Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

 

 

Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> Why do we babble on about no thing?

>

> Lewis

>

> P: Cause we have to!

> And you'll have to,

> until you don't.

>

>

 

 

Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the universe

together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in front of me

is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this no thing

glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite number of

fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we can point

to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no relation

to anything else).

 

Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist for it

to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

 

al.

 

 

ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

again. How are/am you?

 

Love my friend, is a glue that holds

the cosmos together, strings and pings

quarks and memes and themes and

molecules of inspiration and human

love perspiration, shooting

stars in all directions, comet

tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

Is that was that will be possibility probability

all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

This Is What It Is.

Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

 

Love,

a.

 

 

 

 

 

**

 

If you do not wish to receive individual emails, to change your subscription,

sign in with your ID and go to Edit My Groups:

 

/mygroups?edit=1

 

Under the Message Delivery option, choose " No Email " for the Nisargadatta

group and click on Save Changes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

>

> -

> anders_lindman

> Nisargadatta

> Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> >

> > Lewis

> >

> > P: Cause we have to!

> > And you'll have to,

> > until you don't.

> >

> >

>

>

> Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the universe

> together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in front of

me

> is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this no

thing

> glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite number

of

> fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we can

point

> to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no

relation

> to anything else).

>

> Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist for

it

> to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

>

> al.

>

>

> ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> again. How are/am you?

>

> Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> the cosmos together, strings and pings

> quarks and memes and themes and

> molecules of inspiration and human

> love perspiration, shooting

> stars in all directions, comet

> tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> Is that was that will be possibility probability

> all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> This Is What It Is.

> Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

>

> Love,

> a.

>

 

 

Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did accurately

described the soup after all. Well done.

 

But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out of no

thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

 

Blesswisely yours,

 

al.

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-

anders_lindman

Nisargadatta

Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

 

 

Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

>

> -

> anders_lindman

> Nisargadatta

> Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> >

> > Lewis

> >

> > P: Cause we have to!

> > And you'll have to,

> > until you don't.

> >

> >

>

>

> Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the universe

> together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in front of

me

> is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this no

thing

> glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite number

of

> fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we can

point

> to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no

relation

> to anything else).

>

> Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist for

it

> to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

>

> al.

>

>

> ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> again. How are/am you?

>

> Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> the cosmos together, strings and pings

> quarks and memes and themes and

> molecules of inspiration and human

> love perspiration, shooting

> stars in all directions, comet

> tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> Is that was that will be possibility probability

> all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> This Is What It Is.

> Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

>

> Love,

> a.

>

 

 

Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did accurately

described the soup after all. Well done.

 

But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out of no

thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

 

Blesswisely yours,

 

al.

 

 

 

sorry, a lapse in clarity:

 

love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing into

something......else......This.

 

love,

a.

 

 

 

 

 

**

 

If you do not wish to receive individual emails, to change your subscription,

sign in with your ID and go to Edit My Groups:

 

/mygroups?edit=1

 

Under the Message Delivery option, choose " No Email " for the Nisargadatta

group and click on Save Changes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

>

> -

> anders_lindman

> Nisargadatta

> Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

wrote:

> >

> > -

> > anders_lindman

> > Nisargadatta

> > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> >

> >

> > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > >

> > > Lewis

> > >

> > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > And you'll have to,

> > > until you don't.

> > >

> > >

> >

> >

> > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

universe

> > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

front of

> me

> > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this

no

> thing

> > glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite

number

> of

> > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we

can

> point

> > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no

> relation

> > to anything else).

> >

> > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist

for

> it

> > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

> >

> > al.

> >

> >

> > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > again. How are/am you?

> >

> > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > quarks and memes and themes and

> > molecules of inspiration and human

> > love perspiration, shooting

> > stars in all directions, comet

> > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > This Is What It Is.

> > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> >

> > Love,

> > a.

> >

>

>

> Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

accurately

> described the soup after all. Well done.

>

> But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out of no

> thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

>

> Blesswisely yours,

>

> al.

>

>

>

> sorry, a lapse in clarity:

>

> love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing into

something......else......This.

>

> love,

> a.

>

 

 

I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp the

concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking mind

becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to Noumenon

in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

similar to 'nothing'.

 

al.

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Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

<anders_lindman> wrote:

> Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

> >

> > -

> > anders_lindman

> > Nisargadatta

> > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> >

> >

> > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

> wrote:

> > >

> > > -

> > > anders_lindman

> > > Nisargadatta

> > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > >

> > >

> > > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > > >

> > > > Lewis

> > > >

> > > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > > And you'll have to,

> > > > until you don't.

> > > >

> > > >

> > >

> > >

> > > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

> universe

> > > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

> front of

> > me

> > > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this

> no

> > thing

> > > glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite

> number

> > of

> > > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we

> can

> > point

> > > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no

> > relation

> > > to anything else).

> > >

> > > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist

> for

> > it

> > > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

> > >

> > > al.

> > >

> > >

> > > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > > again. How are/am you?

> > >

> > > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > > quarks and memes and themes and

> > > molecules of inspiration and human

> > > love perspiration, shooting

> > > stars in all directions, comet

> > > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > > This Is What It Is.

> > > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> > >

> > > Love,

> > > a.

> > >

> >

> >

> > Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

> accurately

> > described the soup after all. Well done.

> >

> > But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out of no

> > thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

> >

> > Blesswisely yours,

> >

> > al.

> >

> >

> >

> > sorry, a lapse in clarity:

> >

> > love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing into

> something......else......This.

> >

> > love,

> > a.

> >

>

>

> I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

> and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp the

> concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking mind

> becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to Noumenon

> in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

> similar to 'nothing'.

>

> al.

 

Hi Al,

 

Yes. Emptiness, sunyata, is also close in meaning to nonthingness (no

inherent self-existence) and becoming (potential arising and falling).

Yet these are conceptions as well admit of a reality beyond

conventional reality, a reality beyond words, sometimes said to be the

ultimate reality. In that, these concepts, all of those in Buddhism

and its teachings are within the bounds of conventional reality as

well. They are not exempt from its self-immolating logic. Proper

application of sunyata to sunyata, Buddhism, Buddha and the Buddha's

teachings eliminates them all leaving no thing beyond words and this

is not equivalent, in any way, to " nothing. "

 

Lewis

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the unpardonable sin: cross posting, top posting (hi Sarlo) and naming names.

 

so crucify me, I'll still love you. We can no longer belong to separate lists.

-

anders_lindman

Nisargadatta

Thursday, June 16, 2005 7:20 AM

Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

 

 

Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

>

> -

> anders_lindman

> Nisargadatta

> Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

wrote:

> >

> > -

> > anders_lindman

> > Nisargadatta

> > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> >

> >

> > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > >

> > > Lewis

> > >

> > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > And you'll have to,

> > > until you don't.

> > >

> > >

> >

> >

> > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

universe

> > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

front of

> me

> > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe this

no

> thing

> > glue, because words are fragments and not even an infinite

number

> of

> > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but we

can

> point

> > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having no

> relation

> > to anything else).

> >

> > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must exist

for

> it

> > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the real 'stuff'.

> >

> > al.

> >

> >

> > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > again. How are/am you?

> >

> > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > quarks and memes and themes and

> > molecules of inspiration and human

> > love perspiration, shooting

> > stars in all directions, comet

> > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > This Is What It Is.

> > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> >

> > Love,

> > a.

> >

>

>

> Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

accurately

> described the soup after all. Well done.

>

> But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out of no

> thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

>

> Blesswisely yours,

>

> al.

>

>

>

> sorry, a lapse in clarity:

>

> love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing into

something......else......This.

>

> love,

> a.

>

 

 

I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp the

concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking mind

becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to Noumenon

in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

similar to 'nothing'.

 

al.

 

 

 

 

**

 

If you do not wish to receive individual emails, to change your subscription,

sign in with your ID and go to Edit My Groups:

 

/mygroups?edit=1

 

Under the Message Delivery option, choose " No Email " for the Nisargadatta

group and click on Save Changes.

 

 

 

 

 

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Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

wrote:

> Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

> <anders_lindman> wrote:

> > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

wrote:

> > >

> > > -

> > > anders_lindman

> > > Nisargadatta

> > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > >

> > >

> > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz "

<nli10u@c...>

> > wrote:

> > > >

> > > > -

> > > > anders_lindman

> > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > > > >

> > > > > Lewis

> > > > >

> > > > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > > > And you'll have to,

> > > > > until you don't.

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

> > universe

> > > > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

> > front of

> > > me

> > > > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe

this

> > no

> > > thing

> > > > glue, because words are fragments and not even an

infinite

> > number

> > > of

> > > > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but

we

> > can

> > > point

> > > > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having

no

> > > relation

> > > > to anything else).

> > > >

> > > > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must

exist

> > for

> > > it

> > > > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the

real 'stuff'.

> > > >

> > > > al.

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > > > again. How are/am you?

> > > >

> > > > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > > > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > > > quarks and memes and themes and

> > > > molecules of inspiration and human

> > > > love perspiration, shooting

> > > > stars in all directions, comet

> > > > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > > > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > > > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > > > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > > > This Is What It Is.

> > > > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> > > >

> > > > Love,

> > > > a.

> > > >

> > >

> > >

> > > Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

> > accurately

> > > described the soup after all. Well done.

> > >

> > > But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out

of no

> > > thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

> > >

> > > Blesswisely yours,

> > >

> > > al.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > > sorry, a lapse in clarity:

> > >

> > > love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing

into

> > something......else......This.

> > >

> > > love,

> > > a.

> > >

> >

> >

> > I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

> > and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp

the

> > concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking

mind

> > becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to

Noumenon

> > in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

> > similar to 'nothing'.

> >

> > al.

>

> Hi Al,

>

> Yes. Emptiness, sunyata, is also close in meaning to nonthingness

(no

> inherent self-existence) and becoming (potential arising and

falling).

> Yet these are conceptions as well admit of a reality beyond

> conventional reality, a reality beyond words, sometimes said to be

the

> ultimate reality. In that, these concepts, all of those in Buddhism

> and its teachings are within the bounds of conventional reality as

> well. They are not exempt from its self-immolating logic. Proper

> application of sunyata to sunyata, Buddhism, Buddha and the Buddha's

> teachings eliminates them all leaving no thing beyond words and this

> is not equivalent, in any way, to " nothing. "

>

> Lewis

 

Hi Lewis,

 

I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be called 'no

thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

 

al.

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Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

> the unpardonable sin: cross posting, top posting (hi Sarlo) and

naming names.

 

 

Maybe 'nothing' _is_ a better concept. I guess it depends on the

angle we are coming from. :-)

 

>

> so crucify me, I'll still love you. We can no longer belong to

separate lists.

> -

> anders_lindman

> Nisargadatta

> Thursday, June 16, 2005 7:20 AM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

wrote:

> >

> > -

> > anders_lindman

> > Nisargadatta

> > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> >

> >

> > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz "

<nli10u@c...>

> wrote:

> > >

> > > -

> > > anders_lindman

> > > Nisargadatta

> > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > >

> > >

> > > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > > >

> > > > Lewis

> > > >

> > > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > > And you'll have to,

> > > > until you don't.

> > > >

> > > >

> > >

> > >

> > > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

> universe

> > > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

> front of

> > me

> > > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe

this

> no

> > thing

> > > glue, because words are fragments and not even an

infinite

> number

> > of

> > > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but

we

> can

> > point

> > > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having

no

> > relation

> > > to anything else).

> > >

> > > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must

exist

> for

> > it

> > > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the

real 'stuff'.

> > >

> > > al.

> > >

> > >

> > > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > > again. How are/am you?

> > >

> > > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > > quarks and memes and themes and

> > > molecules of inspiration and human

> > > love perspiration, shooting

> > > stars in all directions, comet

> > > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > > This Is What It Is.

> > > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> > >

> > > Love,

> > > a.

> > >

> >

> >

> > Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

> accurately

> > described the soup after all. Well done.

> >

> > But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out

of no

> > thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

> >

> > Blesswisely yours,

> >

> > al.

> >

> >

> >

> > sorry, a lapse in clarity:

> >

> > love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing

into

> something......else......This.

> >

> > love,

> > a.

> >

>

>

> I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

> and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp

the

> concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking

mind

> becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to

Noumenon

> in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

> similar to 'nothing'.

>

> al.

>

>

>

>

> **

>

> If you do not wish to receive individual emails, to change your

subscription, sign in with your ID and go to Edit My Groups:

>

> /mygroups?edit=1

>

> Under the Message Delivery option, choose " No Email " for the

Nisargadatta group and click on Save Changes.

>

>

>

>

> --

----------

>

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Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

<anders_lindman> wrote:

> Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

> wrote:

> > Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

> > <anders_lindman> wrote:

> > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

> wrote:

> > > >

> > > > -

> > > > anders_lindman

> > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz "

> <nli10u@c...>

> > > wrote:

> > > > >

> > > > > -

> > > > > anders_lindman

> > > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > > > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Lewis

> > > > > >

> > > > > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > > > > And you'll have to,

> > > > > > until you don't.

> > > > > >

> > > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

> > > universe

> > > > > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

> > > front of

> > > > me

> > > > > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe

> this

> > > no

> > > > thing

> > > > > glue, because words are fragments and not even an

> infinite

> > > number

> > > > of

> > > > > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but

> we

> > > can

> > > > point

> > > > > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having

> no

> > > > relation

> > > > > to anything else).

> > > > >

> > > > > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must

> exist

> > > for

> > > > it

> > > > > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the

> real 'stuff'.

> > > > >

> > > > > al.

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > > > > again. How are/am you?

> > > > >

> > > > > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > > > > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > > > > quarks and memes and themes and

> > > > > molecules of inspiration and human

> > > > > love perspiration, shooting

> > > > > stars in all directions, comet

> > > > > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > > > > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > > > > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > > > > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > > > > This Is What It Is.

> > > > > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> > > > >

> > > > > Love,

> > > > > a.

> > > > >

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

> > > accurately

> > > > described the soup after all. Well done.

> > > >

> > > > But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out

> of no

> > > > thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

> > > >

> > > > Blesswisely yours,

> > > >

> > > > al.

> > > >

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > sorry, a lapse in clarity:

> > > >

> > > > love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing

> into

> > > something......else......This.

> > > >

> > > > love,

> > > > a.

> > > >

> > >

> > >

> > > I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

> > > and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp

> the

> > > concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking

> mind

> > > becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to

> Noumenon

> > > in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

> > > similar to 'nothing'.

> > >

> > > al.

> >

> > Hi Al,

> >

> > Yes. Emptiness, sunyata, is also close in meaning to nonthingness

> (no

> > inherent self-existence) and becoming (potential arising and

> falling).

> > Yet these are conceptions as well admit of a reality beyond

> > conventional reality, a reality beyond words, sometimes said to be

> the

> > ultimate reality. In that, these concepts, all of those in Buddhism

> > and its teachings are within the bounds of conventional reality as

> > well. They are not exempt from its self-immolating logic. Proper

> > application of sunyata to sunyata, Buddhism, Buddha and the Buddha's

> > teachings eliminates them all leaving no thing beyond words and this

> > is not equivalent, in any way, to " nothing. "

> >

> > Lewis

>

> Hi Lewis,

>

> I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be called 'no

> thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

>

> al.

 

Hi Al,

 

Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult to

grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual thing,

a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it dissolves

thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not remove

no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a residue. That

residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined, unlabeled,

as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then there is the

end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena, including

no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning itself up as well

being self-immolating in the hands of the user leaving " no thing

beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of conventional

reality, using them always creates and recreates and forms and reforms

conventional reality.

 

So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of an

assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this and

though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

" nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of koan,

some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about ad

infinitum, etc. And to what end?

 

Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

 

There is not no thing

There is no thing and not no thing

There is neither no thing nor not no thing

 

All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

production but so can this:

 

Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

 

Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

turning around in the head.

 

There is simply no thing beyond words.

 

No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly explain

how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

understanding. It is so simple.

 

What in all that is is beyond words?

 

Lewis

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-

Lewis Burgess

Nisargadatta

Friday, June 17, 2005 12:38 PM

Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

 

 

Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

<anders_lindman> wrote:

> Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

> wrote:

> > Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

> > <anders_lindman> wrote:

> > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

> wrote:

> > > >

> > > > -

> > > > anders_lindman

> > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz "

> <nli10u@c...>

> > > wrote:

> > > > >

> > > > > -

> > > > > anders_lindman

> > > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > > > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Lewis

> > > > > >

> > > > > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > > > > And you'll have to,

> > > > > > until you don't.

> > > > > >

> > > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

> > > universe

> > > > > together as a unit. For example, the computer monitor in

> > > front of

> > > > me

> > > > > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe

> this

> > > no

> > > > thing

> > > > > glue, because words are fragments and not even an

> infinite

> > > number

> > > > of

> > > > > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist, but

> we

> > > can

> > > > point

> > > > > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate (having

> no

> > > > relation

> > > > > to anything else).

> > > > >

> > > > > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must

> exist

> > > for

> > > > it

> > > > > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the

> real 'stuff'.

> > > > >

> > > > > al.

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > > > > again. How are/am you?

> > > > >

> > > > > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > > > > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > > > > quarks and memes and themes and

> > > > > molecules of inspiration and human

> > > > > love perspiration, shooting

> > > > > stars in all directions, comet

> > > > > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > > > > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > > > > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > > > > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > > > > This Is What It Is.

> > > > > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> > > > >

> > > > > Love,

> > > > > a.

> > > > >

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

> > > accurately

> > > > described the soup after all. Well done.

> > > >

> > > > But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out

> of no

> > > > thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

> > > >

> > > > Blesswisely yours,

> > > >

> > > > al.

> > > >

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > sorry, a lapse in clarity:

> > > >

> > > > love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing

> into

> > > something......else......This.

> > > >

> > > > love,

> > > > a.

> > > >

> > >

> > >

> > > I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

> > > and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp

> the

> > > concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the thinking

> mind

> > > becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to

> Noumenon

> > > in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

> > > similar to 'nothing'.

> > >

> > > al.

> >

> > Hi Al,

> >

> > Yes. Emptiness, sunyata, is also close in meaning to nonthingness

> (no

> > inherent self-existence) and becoming (potential arising and

> falling).

> > Yet these are conceptions as well admit of a reality beyond

> > conventional reality, a reality beyond words, sometimes said to be

> the

> > ultimate reality. In that, these concepts, all of those in Buddhism

> > and its teachings are within the bounds of conventional reality as

> > well. They are not exempt from its self-immolating logic. Proper

> > application of sunyata to sunyata, Buddhism, Buddha and the Buddha's

> > teachings eliminates them all leaving no thing beyond words and this

> > is not equivalent, in any way, to " nothing. "

> >

> > Lewis

>

> Hi Lewis,

>

> I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be called 'no

> thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

>

> al.

 

Hi Al,

 

Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult to

grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual thing,

a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it dissolves

thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not remove

no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a residue. That

residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined, unlabeled,

as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then there is the

end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena, including

no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning itself up as well

being self-immolating in the hands of the user leaving " no thing

beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of conventional

reality, using them always creates and recreates and forms and reforms

conventional reality.

 

So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of an

assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this and

though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

" nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of koan,

some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about ad

infinitum, etc. And to what end?

 

Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

 

There is not no thing

There is no thing and not no thing

There is neither no thing nor not no thing

 

All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

production but so can this:

 

Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

 

Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

turning around in the head.

 

There is simply no thing beyond words.

 

No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly explain

how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

understanding. It is so simple.

 

What in all that is is beyond words?

 

Lewis

 

 

it's just a knee-jerk thought thinking I am with out any substance, at all.

 

a.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

**

 

If you do not wish to receive individual emails, to change your subscription,

sign in with your ID and go to Edit My Groups:

 

/mygroups?edit=1

 

Under the Message Delivery option, choose " No Email " for the Nisargadatta

group and click on Save Changes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

>

> -

> Lewis Burgess

> Nisargadatta

> Friday, June 17, 2005 12:38 PM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

> <anders_lindman> wrote:

> > Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

> > wrote:

> > > Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

> > > <anders_lindman> wrote:

> > > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...>

> > wrote:

> > > > >

> > > > > -

> > > > > anders_lindman

> > > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:15 AM

> > > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz "

> > <nli10u@c...>

> > > > wrote:

> > > > > >

> > > > > > -

> > > > > > anders_lindman

> > > > > > Nisargadatta

> > > > > > Wednesday, June 15, 2005 5:54 AM

> > > > > > Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

> > > > > >

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Nisargadatta , Pedsie2@a... wrote:

> > > > > > > Why do we babble on about no thing?

> > > > > > >

> > > > > > > Lewis

> > > > > > >

> > > > > > > P: Cause we have to!

> > > > > > > And you'll have to,

> > > > > > > until you don't.

> > > > > > >

> > > > > > >

> > > > > >

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Not only that; I think the no thing is what binds the

> > > > universe

> > > > > > together as a unit. For example, the computer

monitor in

> > > > front of

> > > > > me

> > > > > > is somehow holding together! No words can ever describe

> > this

> > > > no

> > > > > thing

> > > > > > glue, because words are fragments and not even an

> > infinite

> > > > number

> > > > > of

> > > > > > fragments can describe the soup in which they exist,

but

> > we

> > > > can

> > > > > point

> > > > > > to the fact that things cannot be truly separate

(having

> > no

> > > > > relation

> > > > > > to anything else).

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Separation is indeed an illusion, an illusion that must

> > exist

> > > > for

> > > > > it

> > > > > > to emerge 'this' and 'that'. The no thing is the

> > real 'stuff'.

> > > > > >

> > > > > > al.

> > > > > >

> > > > > >

> > > > > > ah, my dearest al. nice to see you

> > > > > > again. How are/am you?

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Love my friend, is a glue that holds

> > > > > > the cosmos together, strings and pings

> > > > > > quarks and memes and themes and

> > > > > > molecules of inspiration and human

> > > > > > love perspiration, shooting

> > > > > > stars in all directions, comet

> > > > > > tail cooked in a soup. Everything that

> > > > > > Is that was that will be possibility probability

> > > > > > all in One I Am, appearing as I Am This, This

> > > > > > that I Am. Alpha and Omega just another flavor.

> > > > > > This Is What It Is.

> > > > > > Love = Truth, something out of Nothing.

> > > > > >

> > > > > > Love,

> > > > > > a.

> > > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > Exactly, dearest Anna. I am fine. I think you maybe did

> > > > accurately

> > > > > described the soup after all. Well done.

> > > > >

> > > > > But I want to correct you on one point: It is something out

> > of no

> > > > > thing, not something out of nothing. Big difference!

> > > > >

> > > > > Blesswisely yours,

> > > > >

> > > > > al.

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > >

> > > > > sorry, a lapse in clarity:

> > > > >

> > > > > love and truth is something out of nothing, turning nothing

> > into

> > > > something......else......This.

> > > > >

> > > > > love,

> > > > > a.

> > > > >

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > I feel that there is a difference between the concept 'nothing'

> > > > and 'no thing'. The rational mind is very much trained to grasp

> > the

> > > > concept 'nothing', but when we say 'no thing', then the

thinking

> > mind

> > > > becomes confused, and that makes it a much better pointer to

> > Noumenon

> > > > in my view. Buddhists use the concept 'emptiness', but that is

> > > > similar to 'nothing'.

> > > >

> > > > al.

> > >

> > > Hi Al,

> > >

> > > Yes. Emptiness, sunyata, is also close in meaning to nonthingness

> > (no

> > > inherent self-existence) and becoming (potential arising and

> > falling).

> > > Yet these are conceptions as well admit of a reality beyond

> > > conventional reality, a reality beyond words, sometimes said

to be

> > the

> > > ultimate reality. In that, these concepts, all of those in

Buddhism

> > > and its teachings are within the bounds of conventional reality as

> > > well. They are not exempt from its self-immolating logic. Proper

> > > application of sunyata to sunyata, Buddhism, Buddha and the

Buddha's

> > > teachings eliminates them all leaving no thing beyond words

and this

> > > is not equivalent, in any way, to " nothing. "

> > >

> > > Lewis

> >

> > Hi Lewis,

> >

> > I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> > imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be called 'no

> > thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

> >

> > al.

>

> Hi Al,

>

> Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult to

> grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual thing,

> a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it dissolves

> thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not remove

> no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a residue. That

> residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined, unlabeled,

> as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then there is the

> end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena, including

> no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning itself up as well

> being self-immolating in the hands of the user leaving " no thing

> beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of conventional

> reality, using them always creates and recreates and forms and reforms

> conventional reality.

>

> So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

> and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of an

> assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this and

> though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

> " nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of koan,

> some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about ad

> infinitum, etc. And to what end?

>

> Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

>

> There is not no thing

> There is no thing and not no thing

> There is neither no thing nor not no thing

>

> All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

> production but so can this:

>

> Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

>

> Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

> turning around in the head.

>

> There is simply no thing beyond words.

>

> No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly explain

> how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

> understanding. It is so simple.

>

> What in all that is is beyond words?

>

> Lewis

>

>

> it's just a knee-jerk thought thinking I am with out any

substance, at all.

>

> a.

 

 

Unremitting silent glossilalia

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Guest guest

Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

wrote:

> Nisargadatta , " anders_lindman "

> <anders_lindman> wrote:

> > Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

> > wrote:

....

> >

> > Hi Lewis,

> >

> > I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> > imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be called 'no

> > thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

> >

> > al.

>

> Hi Al,

>

> Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult to

> grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual

thing,

> a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it dissolves

> thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not remove

> no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a residue. That

> residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined,

unlabeled,

> as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then there is

the

> end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena, including

> no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning itself up as

well

> being self-immolating in the hands of the user leaving " no thing

> beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of

conventional

> reality, using them always creates and recreates and forms and

reforms

> conventional reality.

>

> So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

> and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of

an

> assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this

and

> though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

> " nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of

koan,

> some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about ad

> infinitum, etc. And to what end?

>

> Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

>

> There is not no thing

> There is no thing and not no thing

> There is neither no thing nor not no thing

>

> All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

> production but so can this:

>

> Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

>

> Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

> turning around in the head.

>

> There is simply no thing beyond words.

>

> No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly

explain

> how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

> understanding. It is so simple.

>

> What in all that is is beyond words?

>

> Lewis

 

 

Maybe to say " there is no thing " is misleading, but to say " there

is 'no thing' " is different IMO. I use the phrase 'no thing' as a

pointer to 'that' which every thing is sprung from. Some may call it

Noumenon. Maybe even Tao. And these kind of concepts are different

from concept like 'nothing' and 'emptiness'. Therefore I suspected

that sunyata had been mistranslated, because emptiness is not a good

pointer to the unmanifested since that word has a firm meaning in

english.

 

al.

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Share on other sites

Guest guest

---

> > Hi Lewis,

> >

> > I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> > imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be called 'no

> > thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

> >

> > al.

>

Hi Al,

 

Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult to

grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual

thing, a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it

dissolves thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not

remove no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a residue.

That residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined,

unlabeled, as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then

there is the end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena,

including no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning itself

up as well being self-immolating in the hands of the user leaving " no

thing beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of

conventional reality, using them always creates and recreates and

forms and reforms conventional reality.

 

So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of

an assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this

and though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

" nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of

koan, some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about

ad infinitum, etc. And to what end?

 

Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

 

There is not no thing

There is no thing and not no thing

There is neither no thing nor not no thing

 

All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

production but so can this:

 

Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

 

Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

turning around in the head.

 

There is simply no thing beyond words.

 

No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly

explain how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

understanding. It is so simple.

 

What in all that is is beyond words?

 

Lewis

 

 

Maybe to say " there is no thing " is misleading, but to say " there

is 'no thing' " is different IMO. I use the phrase 'no thing' as a

pointer to 'that' which every thing is sprung from. Some may call it

Noumenon. Maybe even Tao. And these kind of concepts are different

from concept like 'nothing' and 'emptiness'. Therefore I suspected

that sunyata had been mistranslated, because emptiness is not a good

pointer to the unmanifested since that word has a firm meaning in

english.

 

al.

 

I understand your pointing and have no thing to say about your

pointing and to what you point to as that is your preference at the

moment.

 

Your understanding of emptiness (sunyata), however, is mistaken.

Emptiness or sunyata in Madhyamika Buddhist usage does not point

something beyond it or point at all. It is not a pointer to " that. " It

has nothing to do with pointing to such and is not equivalent in any

way to 'nothing' " that, " 'no thing' as you use it, Noumenon, or Tao or

any other self-created 'ineffable thing' that attempts to capture all

of reality as source in language and imagination. It is a conceptual

device, a thing used to dissolve those concepts and all concepts

including itself as it was said to you above, previously. Below is a

URL that presents the concept of sunyata in a clear, succint way so

you can understand that is a soteriological device that is designed to

dissolve pointers like 'That' " Noumenon, " " Tao " " no thing " and other

hyperessentialities conceptually created to to obscure and deflect the

existential experience and sense of irremediable ignorance; the

unchanging inability of being able consciously knowing in any way, in

word, concept, language, imagination,... the how and why of the

appearances and happenings of daily life; the refusal to admit and

surrender to the inescapable sense that one cannot know in any way

origins, source with 'conscious understanding' So, a bandaid, a

hyperessential pointer, is repeatedly created and placed on what

appears to be a never healing wound; a futile palliative. For the

Madhyamikan Buddhist this behavior is the cause of suffering.

 

There is the conceptualization of the unknowing knowing found in all

the nondual and Christian mystic traditions, that is, knowing sans

words, concepts, language, imagination, conscious thought,

conceptualization, pointing. This is said to appear when there is the

ability to no longer need or use " bandaids " or the arising of

incapability of assigning hyperessentialities. In this idea, we accept

our creations as creations and do not assign reality or essentialness

to them. And we play and explore them in the now without being chained

to this or that. It is freedom or emancipation from the slavery of

needing to play omniscient; that is, claiming I know it all by

capturing all in an ultimate word ore words or theory that contains

all things and thus explains all things. All explanations work to the

end they were made be it religion, science, a novel, scribbling in a

diary. Is there a final or ultimate or absolute story of it all?

 

The Meaning of Sunyata in Nagarjuna's Philosophy

http://www.integralscience.org/sacredscience/SS_sunyata.html

 

Lewis

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Guest guest

Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

wrote:

> ---

> > > Hi Lewis,

> > >

> > > I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> > > imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be

called 'no

> > > thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

> > >

> > > al.

> >

> Hi Al,

>

> Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult

to

> grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual

> thing, a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it

> dissolves thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not

> remove no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a

residue.

> That residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined,

> unlabeled, as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then

> there is the end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena,

> including no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning

itself

> up as well being self-immolating in the hands of the user

leaving " no

> thing beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of

> conventional reality, using them always creates and recreates and

> forms and reforms conventional reality.

>

> So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

> and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of

> an assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this

> and though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

> " nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of

> koan, some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about

> ad infinitum, etc. And to what end?

>

> Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

>

> There is not no thing

> There is no thing and not no thing

> There is neither no thing nor not no thing

>

> All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

> production but so can this:

>

> Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

>

> Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

> turning around in the head.

>

> There is simply no thing beyond words.

>

> No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly

> explain how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

> understanding. It is so simple.

>

> What in all that is is beyond words?

>

> Lewis

>

>

> Maybe to say " there is no thing " is misleading, but to say " there

> is 'no thing' " is different IMO. I use the phrase 'no thing' as a

> pointer to 'that' which every thing is sprung from. Some may call it

> Noumenon. Maybe even Tao. And these kind of concepts are different

> from concept like 'nothing' and 'emptiness'. Therefore I suspected

> that sunyata had been mistranslated, because emptiness is not a good

> pointer to the unmanifested since that word has a firm meaning in

> english.

>

> al.

>

> I understand your pointing and have no thing to say about your

> pointing and to what you point to as that is your preference at the

> moment.

>

> Your understanding of emptiness (sunyata), however, is mistaken.

> Emptiness or sunyata in Madhyamika Buddhist usage does not point

> something beyond it or point at all. It is not a pointer to " that. "

It

> has nothing to do with pointing to such and is not equivalent in any

> way to 'nothing' " that, " 'no thing' as you use it, Noumenon, or Tao

or

> any other self-created 'ineffable thing' that attempts to capture

all

> of reality as source in language and imagination. It is a conceptual

> device, a thing used to dissolve those concepts and all concepts

> including itself as it was said to you above, previously. Below is a

> URL that presents the concept of sunyata in a clear, succint way so

> you can understand that is a soteriological device that is designed

to

> dissolve pointers like 'That' " Noumenon, " " Tao " " no thing " and other

> hyperessentialities conceptually created to to obscure and deflect

the

> existential experience and sense of irremediable ignorance; the

> unchanging inability of being able consciously knowing in any way,

in

> word, concept, language, imagination,... the how and why of the

> appearances and happenings of daily life; the refusal to admit and

> surrender to the inescapable sense that one cannot know in any way

> origins, source with 'conscious understanding' So, a bandaid, a

> hyperessential pointer, is repeatedly created and placed on what

> appears to be a never healing wound; a futile palliative. For the

> Madhyamikan Buddhist this behavior is the cause of suffering.

>

> There is the conceptualization of the unknowing knowing found in all

> the nondual and Christian mystic traditions, that is, knowing sans

> words, concepts, language, imagination, conscious thought,

> conceptualization, pointing. This is said to appear when there is

the

> ability to no longer need or use " bandaids " or the arising of

> incapability of assigning hyperessentialities. In this idea, we

accept

> our creations as creations and do not assign reality or

essentialness

> to them. And we play and explore them in the now without being

chained

> to this or that. It is freedom or emancipation from the slavery of

> needing to play omniscient; that is, claiming I know it all by

> capturing all in an ultimate word ore words or theory that contains

> all things and thus explains all things. All explanations work to

the

> end they were made be it religion, science, a novel, scribbling in a

> diary. Is there a final or ultimate or absolute story of it all?

>

> The Meaning of Sunyata in Nagarjuna's Philosophy

> http://www.integralscience.org/sacredscience/SS_sunyata.html

>

> Lewis

 

 

I have change my mind about the 'no thing' concept. It adds nothing

to all pointers that already exist. It is interesting to hear that

sunyata is not a pointer. I will check out the link you gave.

 

al.

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Guest guest

-

anders_lindman

Nisargadatta

Sunday, June 19, 2005 6:28 AM

Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

 

 

Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

wrote:

> ---

> > > Hi Lewis,

> > >

> > > I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> > > imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be

called 'no

> > > thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

> > >

> > > al.

> >

> Hi Al,

>

> Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and difficult

to

> grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual

> thing, a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather, it

> dissolves thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does not

> remove no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a

residue.

> That residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined,

> unlabeled, as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up, then

> there is the end of sunyata and its residual undefined phenomena,

> including no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning

itself

> up as well being self-immolating in the hands of the user

leaving " no

> thing beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of

> conventional reality, using them always creates and recreates and

> forms and reforms conventional reality.

>

> So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and pointing

> and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the fomr of

> an assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does this

> and though much much less a graspable some thing than a " nothing " or

> " nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of

> koan, some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking about

> ad infinitum, etc. And to what end?

>

> Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted by:

>

> There is not no thing

> There is no thing and not no thing

> There is neither no thing nor not no thing

>

> All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit thought

> production but so can this:

>

> Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

>

> Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with this

> turning around in the head.

>

> There is simply no thing beyond words.

>

> No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly

> explain how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes all

> understanding. It is so simple.

>

> What in all that is is beyond words?

>

> Lewis

>

>

> Maybe to say " there is no thing " is misleading, but to say " there

> is 'no thing' " is different IMO. I use the phrase 'no thing' as a

> pointer to 'that' which every thing is sprung from. Some may call it

> Noumenon. Maybe even Tao. And these kind of concepts are different

> from concept like 'nothing' and 'emptiness'. Therefore I suspected

> that sunyata had been mistranslated, because emptiness is not a good

> pointer to the unmanifested since that word has a firm meaning in

> english.

>

> al.

>

> I understand your pointing and have no thing to say about your

> pointing and to what you point to as that is your preference at the

> moment.

>

> Your understanding of emptiness (sunyata), however, is mistaken.

> Emptiness or sunyata in Madhyamika Buddhist usage does not point

> something beyond it or point at all. It is not a pointer to " that. "

It

> has nothing to do with pointing to such and is not equivalent in any

> way to 'nothing' " that, " 'no thing' as you use it, Noumenon, or Tao

or

> any other self-created 'ineffable thing' that attempts to capture

all

> of reality as source in language and imagination. It is a conceptual

> device, a thing used to dissolve those concepts and all concepts

> including itself as it was said to you above, previously. Below is a

> URL that presents the concept of sunyata in a clear, succint way so

> you can understand that is a soteriological device that is designed

to

> dissolve pointers like 'That' " Noumenon, " " Tao " " no thing " and other

> hyperessentialities conceptually created to to obscure and deflect

the

> existential experience and sense of irremediable ignorance; the

> unchanging inability of being able consciously knowing in any way,

in

> word, concept, language, imagination,... the how and why of the

> appearances and happenings of daily life; the refusal to admit and

> surrender to the inescapable sense that one cannot know in any way

> origins, source with 'conscious understanding' So, a bandaid, a

> hyperessential pointer, is repeatedly created and placed on what

> appears to be a never healing wound; a futile palliative. For the

> Madhyamikan Buddhist this behavior is the cause of suffering.

>

> There is the conceptualization of the unknowing knowing found in all

> the nondual and Christian mystic traditions, that is, knowing sans

> words, concepts, language, imagination, conscious thought,

> conceptualization, pointing. This is said to appear when there is

the

> ability to no longer need or use " bandaids " or the arising of

> incapability of assigning hyperessentialities. In this idea, we

accept

> our creations as creations and do not assign reality or

essentialness

> to them. And we play and explore them in the now without being

chained

> to this or that. It is freedom or emancipation from the slavery of

> needing to play omniscient; that is, claiming I know it all by

> capturing all in an ultimate word ore words or theory that contains

> all things and thus explains all things. All explanations work to

the

> end they were made be it religion, science, a novel, scribbling in a

> diary. Is there a final or ultimate or absolute story of it all?

>

> The Meaning of Sunyata in Nagarjuna's Philosophy

> http://www.integralscience.org/sacredscience/SS_sunyata.html

>

> Lewis

 

 

I have change my mind about the 'no thing' concept. It adds nothing

to all pointers that already exist. It is interesting to hear that

sunyata is not a pointer. I will check out the link you gave.

 

al.

 

 

 

Morning Al,

 

Just a quick question? While all this discourse about_______________,

Is BEING Being? And If not,

where did it go? Is Being Enlightened, Enlightening? If not, where did the

light go?

 

a.

 

 

 

 

 

**

 

If you do not wish to receive individual emails, to change your subscription,

sign in with your ID and go to Edit My Groups:

 

/mygroups?edit=1

 

Under the Message Delivery option, choose " No Email " for the Nisargadatta

group and click on Save Changes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

Nisargadatta , " Anna Ruiz " <nli10u@c...> wrote:

>

> -

> anders_lindman

> Nisargadatta

> Sunday, June 19, 2005 6:28 AM

> Re: Mumbo Jumbo....

>

>

> Nisargadatta , " Lewis Burgess " <lbb10@c...>

> wrote:

> > ---

> > > > Hi Lewis,

> > > >

> > > > I think that concepts like 'nothing' and 'emptiness' are too

> > > > imprinted in our minds. Maybe synyata should better be

> called 'no

> > > > thing', or no-thing-ness (not nothingness)?

> > > >

> > > > al.

> > >

> > Hi Al,

> >

> > Doing that would then make it a thing, however airy and

difficult

> to

> > grasp, it is still usable for a chase. Sunyata is a processual

> > thing, a dynamic concept and it does not point at all, rather,

it

> > dissolves thingness and nothingness and all in between. It does

not

> > remove no-thing-ness, nonthingness and becoming. It leaves a

> residue.

> > That residue is phenomena arising and falling as is, undefined,

> > unlabeled, as is. Now when the sunyata of sunyata is taken up,

then

> > there is the end of sunyata and its residual undefined

phenomena,

> > including no-thing-ness, becoming and nonthingness and burning

> itself

> > up as well being self-immolating in the hands of the user

> leaving " no

> > thing beyond words " to seek, find, etc. Since words are part of

> > conventional reality, using them always creates and recreates

and

> > forms and reforms conventional reality.

> >

> > So, one cannot say " there is no thing " and escape words and

pointing

> > and cycling and chasing phantoms because it is words in the

fomr of

> > an assertion and it becomes a thing, a concept. " There is " does

this

> > and though much much less a graspable some thing than

a " nothing " or

> > " nonthing " is, it is still an object of contemplation, a kind of

> > koan, some thing to begin waxing on, chasing about, thinking

about

> > ad infinitum, etc. And to what end?

> >

> > Also, it is immediately contradicted, synthesized, and doubted

by:

> >

> > There is not no thing

> > There is no thing and not no thing

> > There is neither no thing nor not no thing

> >

> > All airy enough to partially and temporarily short circuit

thought

> > production but so can this:

> >

> > Beeboo baba nono keekee meefoso rooni.

> >

> > Like a non-sense mantra or a koan one cannot live well with

this

> > turning around in the head.

> >

> > There is simply no thing beyond words.

> >

> > No one can demonstrate that there is, because no one directly

> > explain how language, speech, writing is produced. It passes

all

> > understanding. It is so simple.

> >

> > What in all that is is beyond words?

> >

> > Lewis

> >

> >

> > Maybe to say " there is no thing " is misleading, but to

say " there

> > is 'no thing' " is different IMO. I use the phrase 'no thing' as

a

> > pointer to 'that' which every thing is sprung from. Some may

call it

> > Noumenon. Maybe even Tao. And these kind of concepts are

different

> > from concept like 'nothing' and 'emptiness'. Therefore I

suspected

> > that sunyata had been mistranslated, because emptiness is not a

good

> > pointer to the unmanifested since that word has a firm meaning

in

> > english.

> >

> > al.

> >

> > I understand your pointing and have no thing to say about your

> > pointing and to what you point to as that is your preference at

the

> > moment.

> >

> > Your understanding of emptiness (sunyata), however, is mistaken.

> > Emptiness or sunyata in Madhyamika Buddhist usage does not point

> > something beyond it or point at all. It is not a pointer

to " that. "

> It

> > has nothing to do with pointing to such and is not equivalent

in any

> > way to 'nothing' " that, " 'no thing' as you use it, Noumenon, or

Tao

> or

> > any other self-created 'ineffable thing' that attempts to

capture

> all

> > of reality as source in language and imagination. It is a

conceptual

> > device, a thing used to dissolve those concepts and all concepts

> > including itself as it was said to you above, previously. Below

is a

> > URL that presents the concept of sunyata in a clear, succint

way so

> > you can understand that is a soteriological device that is

designed

> to

> > dissolve pointers like 'That' " Noumenon, " " Tao " " no thing " and

other

> > hyperessentialities conceptually created to to obscure and

deflect

> the

> > existential experience and sense of irremediable ignorance; the

> > unchanging inability of being able consciously knowing in any

way,

> in

> > word, concept, language, imagination,... the how and why of the

> > appearances and happenings of daily life; the refusal to admit

and

> > surrender to the inescapable sense that one cannot know in any

way

> > origins, source with 'conscious understanding' So, a bandaid, a

> > hyperessential pointer, is repeatedly created and placed on what

> > appears to be a never healing wound; a futile palliative. For

the

> > Madhyamikan Buddhist this behavior is the cause of suffering.

> >

> > There is the conceptualization of the unknowing knowing found

in all

> > the nondual and Christian mystic traditions, that is, knowing

sans

> > words, concepts, language, imagination, conscious thought,

> > conceptualization, pointing. This is said to appear when there

is

> the

> > ability to no longer need or use " bandaids " or the arising of

> > incapability of assigning hyperessentialities. In this idea, we

> accept

> > our creations as creations and do not assign reality or

> essentialness

> > to them. And we play and explore them in the now without being

> chained

> > to this or that. It is freedom or emancipation from the slavery

of

> > needing to play omniscient; that is, claiming I know it all by

> > capturing all in an ultimate word ore words or theory that

contains

> > all things and thus explains all things. All explanations work

to

> the

> > end they were made be it religion, science, a novel, scribbling

in a

> > diary. Is there a final or ultimate or absolute story of it

all?

> >

> > The Meaning of Sunyata in Nagarjuna's Philosophy

> > http://www.integralscience.org/sacredscience/SS_sunyata.html

> >

> > Lewis

>

>

> I have change my mind about the 'no thing' concept. It adds

nothing

> to all pointers that already exist. It is interesting to hear

that

> sunyata is not a pointer. I will check out the link you gave.

>

> al.

>

>

>

> Morning Al,

>

> Just a quick question? While all this discourse

about_______________,

> Is BEING Being? And If not,

> where did it go? Is Being Enlightened, Enlightening? If not,

where did the light go?

>

> a.

>

 

 

Godmorning Anna,

 

Light is now.

 

Light is brought to us by the Trinity/Being: (1) Lightbringer, (2)

Darkness, (3) Now.

 

al.

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