At the conclusion of the post Three Principles, I wrote that there was nothing mystical about a mystic. I'm serious. If we're all living on a vertical scale of conscious experience, it's a perfectly rational position to state that those who arrive at the higher levels experience aspects of reality of which those on lower levels are currently unaware. Those on higher levels experience deeper feelings, and realize more insights. Those individuals that reach the very highest levels universally report exceptional insights, which are also extremely consistent across cultures. Those at lower levels can't grasp the higher perspectives until they reach those levels themselves. The Buddhist analogy of
Rational Mysticism?
Rational Mysticism?
Rational Mysticism?
At the conclusion of the post Three Principles, I wrote that there was nothing mystical about a mystic. I'm serious. If we're all living on a vertical scale of conscious experience, it's a perfectly rational position to state that those who arrive at the higher levels experience aspects of reality of which those on lower levels are currently unaware. Those on higher levels experience deeper feelings, and realize more insights. Those individuals that reach the very highest levels universally report exceptional insights, which are also extremely consistent across cultures. Those at lower levels can't grasp the higher perspectives until they reach those levels themselves. The Buddhist analogy of