Wholeness

and then there’s this…

The great boon of repression is that it makes it possible to live decisively in an overwhelmingly miraculous and incomprehensible world, a world so full of beauty, majesty, and terror that if animals perceived it all they would be paralyzed to act. … What would the average man (sic) do with a full consciousness of absurdity? He has fashioned his character for the precise purpose of putting it between himself and the facts of life; it is his special tour-de-force that allows him to ignore incongruities, to nourish himself on impossibilities, to thrive on blindness. He accomplishes thereby a peculiarly human victory: the ability to be smug about terror.

-Ernest Becker, The Denial of Death

Thats some good stuff bro, first time I am seeing something sensible on this forum. Post more. I dont agree with the psychoanalysts and psychologists but this is at least interesting and coherent.

Has Huxley ever written anything on Christianity?

The perennial philosophy.

Terror management theory

I don’t have a problem with psychology but with their dishonesty as to what is possible to be established and what isn’t. Most of them talk about things like fear or hatred as if these were some rigorous and observable phenomena when we simply and plainly lack the technological and scientific ability to penetrate the mechanisms of brains and cognition and emotion in general to any meaningful degree. And psychoanalysis is complete quackery that is completely discredited and scientifically hopeless, psychology has to wait and accept it is only relevant as a branch of biology and sociology is not a science, like philosophy or economics, and that’s completely fine.

I know what fear and hatred are. I don’t need to wait around for science to tell me.

:sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses:

:sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses:

Which one I can think of three.
Julien, Thomas Henry, and Aldous

Not really about Christianity, though is it.
It is a failed attempt atfinding a “highest” common denominator to a series of incompatible religions, only to conclude with a sort of half baked atheism.

Grand father Thomas Henry mentions God only to dismiss him, coining the term agnostic.

2 Other notable Huxley’s were eugenicists, so probably not much use to the discusion.

Science can tell you more about them, beyond your own personal experience of them.

If you scroll up you will see that he was responding to a quotation by Aldous Huxley.

How did Aldous Huxley fail? What do you mean by “half baked atheism”?

That’s true. And you could know everything that science can tell you about them but without your own personal experience of them you wouldn’t know what they were essentially.

“Any entity whose essence is made up of existence, is essentially opposed to the possibility of our getting it in our grasp as an entity which is a whole.”

Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, H233, page 276

10 Simple Ways to Relieve Depersonalization

[size=85]By Shaun O’ Connor
Last updated: 14 Jan 2020
~ 4 MIN READ[/size]

1. Read Aloud. … I do sometimes, but not always.
2. Cut out Caffeine. … Not my morning coffee, No!!!
3. Listen to Podcasts and Music. … Music is the food of love, so I do listen on - podcasts… sometimes.
4. Avoid Drugs. … (I) Don’t do drugs, kids.
5. Get Up Early. … But not if I can’t…
6. Go to Bed Early. … But not if I can’t…
7. Practice Your Hobbies. … But not if I can’t…
8. Don’t Overreact. … I never do…
9. Don’t Avoid Any Activities. … But not if I couldn’t help, but to…
10 Be Social! But not if I couldn’t help, not to…

Detoxing, resting up well, exercising, hydrating, are also all good aids to becoming less derealised/more Whole again.

I’m glad you’re feeling more whole. The personal is the highest rung on the ladder of intelligibility below spirituality. Thus it is the fulfillment of all our mundane goals. But as such it is the level of ego anxiety. Depersonalization is a means of defending against that anxiety. When the psyche springs it on us involuntarily, it can seem strange. When it is consciously and voluntarily employed as method of coping it can temporarily be an effective strategy for dealing with stress. Used in this way it is a form of compartmentalization. The Buddha’s teaching about the five skandas employs this method as a means of relief from existential suffering.

Quote from “Phenomenology of the Human Person” by Robert Sokolowski -

“The conversational game… can be played on the things we speak about because things do present themselves as wholes and in part, as subjects with features. The ontology of things lets our speech and our language come into play.”

Oh, I don’t mind a bit of derealisation now and again… it can be quite fun and break up the monotony of existence every-so-often… a neural pause button, if you will. It takes One inward, to experience unique thoughts and feelings that One otherwise wouldn’t care to entertain. Being too grounded ain’t no fun, no fun… a balance was struck, between a private inner world and an outward facing sociality.

Sounds like detachment ^^^ ? from a reality that is difficult to cope with… especially if there are a few things that One is simultaneously having to cope with/adjust to. Makes sense… ensuring that stress, and cortisol, are minimised.

I suddenly came to a realisation just now, that I have to reacquaint myself with myself, in that my daily personal growth and me experiencing that growth in real-time had ceased, and so I now have to catch up with myself i.e. synchronisation… first, my thoughts needed de-buffering, now this.

Am I a mobile phone? :-k