Sense & Soul Ken Wilber

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Sense & Soul Ken Wilber"

Transcription

1 Sense & Soul Ken Wilber The Four Hands of God: Toward a more complete understanding of the elements of spirituality. So far, in our ongoing exploration of an integral approach to spirituality, we have introduced the ideas of perspectives (first-, second-, and third-person perspectives, such as I, you/we, and it ) and levels of development (such as archaic, magic, mythic, mental, integral, and higher). Let us begin to pull these together into something of a coherent statement, so that the contours of the integral approach will start to become clear. Later, we will introduce the remaining elements of the integral approach, including developmental lines, states of consciousness, and types. When we are finished, all five elements perspectives, levels, lines, states, and types will hopefully be integrated into a seamless whole, which gives us a truly integral framework with which to better understand human spirituality and perhaps Spirit itself. But one thing that we have found time and again is that if you leave out any of those elements in your account of spirituality, you end up with a decidedly less-than-integral approach which is to say, a partial, fragmented, broken approach to God. And, generally speaking, a broken God is not high on anybody s gift list. Let us begin by integrating perspectives and levels. How do they fit together? Please see Figure 1. Notice that it is divided into four squares or quadrants. These quadrants are just another name for perspectives. You can see four of these important perspectives listed in their respective quadrants I (the Upper-Left quadrant), we (the Lower-Left quadrant), it (the Upper-Right quadrant) and its (the Lower-Right quadrant). Figure 1. The Four Quadrants

2 Notice the contents of each of those quadrants. (Don t worry if all of the terms don t make sense; the diagram shows more details than we need, but the essential points should be obvious.) The Upper Right contains things like atoms, molecules, cells, organisms, triune brains, and so on. These are all things that can be seen out there in an objective fashion. Each of them is an it or third-person object. Science specializes in studying these types of objects. The Upper Right is what an organism e.g., your organism looks like from an objective, detached, exterior, scientific approach. But notice that, unlike the Upper Right, the Upper Left cannot be seen out there in a scientific fashion, because the Upper Left contains things like feelings, ideas, wishes, interior states, even things like mathematics and logic, none of which can be seen running around out there in the sensory world, but can only be accessed by looking within by introspection, awareness, contemplation, meditation, phenomenology, and so on. In figure 1, you can see a few representative items that you can be aware of if you introspect your own mind or awareness or experience things like sensations, feelings, images, symbols, concepts, and so on, none of which can be see in the exterior world. So the Upper Right is what your organism looks like from the outside in an objective stance, and the Upper Left is what your organism looks like from the inside, from within, in a subjective or introspective stance. The Upper Right is a third-person it, but the Upper Left is a first-person I hence, the outside and the inside views of your being. (Needless to say, an integral approach maintains that both of these are equally important for an overall picture. More about that later.) So the two upper quadrants represent the inside and outside of an individual. But individuals always exist in collectives. There is no inside without an outside, and no singular without a plural. So the lower two quadrants represent the plural the collectives or communities of individuals. And like individuals, these collectives, or societies, can be looked at from within and from without. The Lower-Right quadrant is a collective looked at from the outside in a scientific, third-person perspective. Systems theory is the classic approach to this quadrant. Systems theory looks at all things as systems of dynamically interwoven its or third-person processes and systems. You can see many of these collective systems listed in the Lower-Right quadrant. Systems theory usually claims that it is covering ALL of reality, but its third-person-systems approach actually does not include or explain interior realities at all. Poetry, beauty, divinity, the sublime, aesthetics, morals all of those get left out of systems theory, because all of those actually exist in the other quadrants and cannot be captured at all by systems theory. But systems theory does cover this one quadrant very well, and thus it can help to give us, not the whole story, but onefourth of the story, so to speak. The fact is, societies, couples, groups, families, nations and all of the plural or collective forms of beings possess not just an outside but an inside. In addition to exterior forms that can be investigated by systems theory, they have interiors that can be investigated by other means. They have shared values, shared feelings, shared identities, shared cultures, shared worldviews all of the items that can be found in the Lower-Left quadrant (or the interior of the collective). Figure 2 is a four-quadrant diagram drawn with an emphasis on some specifically human aspects of the quadrants. Some of these shared values and worldviews are listed in the lower left of Figure 2, such as magic, mythic, rational, postmodern, and integral. Figure 2. Some Examples of the Four Quadrants in Humans

3 Another way to get a sense of what the quadrants mean is to notice that many great philosophers and sages have specialized in one quadrant. This makes their discoveries very important but also partial. Take a look at Figure 3 and you will recognize many of these pioneers. Figure 3. Some Pioneers in the Various Quadrants

4 You might have noticed by now that the four quadrants are simply a variation on the three major perspectives of first-person (I), second-person (you/we), and third-person (it/its). And those are variations on the Good (morals, you/we), the True (objective truth, it/its), and the Beautiful (the beauty in the I of the beholder). Further, each quadrant has development that proceeds through levels. I have previously given a summary of the levels of understanding of Spirit, and asked Which Level of God Do You Believe In? That was a good example of levels in one of the quadrants. But the point is that quadrants and levels always go together. A simplified version of this can be seen in Figure 4 (taken from my book A Theory of Everything). This diagram, which we call AQAL ( All quadrants, all levels ) is therefore an easy way to see how quadrants and levels always coexist. And the integral suggestion is that, if you leave out any of them, a broken God awaits you. Figure 4. All Quadrants, All Levels The AQAL approach makes another strong claim, namely, that none of those quadrants can be reduced to the others. Each of them is an irreducible reality in its own right. Each quadrant contains realities that are crucial for a more comprehensive, balanced, and integral approach to reality, to the universe, to God and Goddess and Spirit. The integral approach maintains that if we take all of these important factors into account, then some of the truly difficult and intractable problems of religion and spirituality start to make sense the relation of science and religion, the nature of humanity s relation to Spirit, the developmental levels of understanding God, the role of spirituality in the modern and postmodern world among many others.

5 Accordingly, we will next begin exploring the many ways that an integral or AQAL framework can shed much-needed light on some of the most difficult problems facing religion in the modern and postmodern world. Because if this approach is generally correct, it offers, for the first time, a way to integrate premodern religion with modern science and postmodern developments, honoring each and every one of them in an integral embrace. As a small preview, how about this: if you look at Figure 2, notice that many of the great spiritual teachers appear in the Upper-Left quadrant but not in the other three quadrants. (Figure 2 mentions Buddha, Plotinus, and Aurobindo, but it could also list Jesus, Lao Tzu, Luria, Eckhart, St. Teresa, etc.) What if that is true, and it is the nature of religion or spirituality to offer us profound insights about that quadrant, but not the others? Would that hurt religion? Or could it possibly help religion by allowing it to specialize in what it does best, while conceding the other quadrants to other disciplines that historically have outshone religion in results? An integral approach that emphasized all quadrants and all levels would be able to integrate science and religion, premodern and modern and postmodern, but without diluting any of them. If that is the case, something rather revolutionary would be looming on the integral horizon. /// Which Level of God Do You Believe In? Your vision of God depends on where you are in your spiritual development. I have said that, "Throughout history, religion has been the single greatest source of human-caused wars, suffering, and misery. In the name of God, more suffering has been inflicted than by any other manmade cause." I was, of course, using the word "religion" in its sociological meaning, as any belief invested with "ultimate concern," in which case not only Islam, Christianity, and Shintoism are religions, but Marxism, Nazism, and Eco-terrorism are all versions of religions or religiously held beliefs. Seen as such, the opening sentence is obviously true. This points up a crucial aspect of an integral approach to spirituality, namely, there are several different meanings of the words "religion" and "spirituality," all of which are important. The whole point about an integral or comprehensive approach is that it must find a way to believably include all of those important meanings in a coherent whole. I have introduced the idea of perspectives, such as first-person, second-person, and third-person perspectives, and pointed out that those perspectives give rise to such items as the Good, the True, and the Beautiful (or art, science, and morals). As we continue to introduce the ingredients of an integral approach to religion and spirituality, those perspectives are an important part, as we will continue to see. Another important ingredient is levels, which in this case means "levels of religious belief, faith, or spirituality." Levels of religion? Levels of spirituality? Levels of belief? Yes, indeed, and this topic, which is highly controversial, nonetheless has perhaps the most explanatory power of all of the ingredients in an integral view. It refers specifically to the fact that human beings undergo psychological development. At each level or stage of development, they will see the world in a different way. Hence, each level of development has, as it were, a different religious belief or worldview. This does not make God or Spirit the result of human development; it does, however, make the ways in which humans conceive of God or Spirit the result of development. And this is where it gets really interesting. Start with levels of psychological development. Scholars in the field of development are agreed that human beings universally undergo various types of development. Language, for example, emerges in a series of stages, a sequence that we might stylistically summarize as letters, then words, then sentences, then paragraphs. There are no known cases of sentences emerging before words, or words emerging before

6 letters (or phonemes). In fact, it is impossible, since the whole point about sequential stages is that they emerge in an order that incorporates previous stages. Exactly like atoms to molecules to cells to organisms, each true stage in a developmental sequence transcends and includes its predecessors. You cannot skip stages, just like you cannot go from atoms to cells and skip molecules. Nor can you reverse stages (no cells before molecules). Their general features are universal. Although scholars are agreed that human development occurs and that many of its general features are universal such as words before sentences, neural net before brainstem, symbols before concepts, images before rules (there are literally hundreds of these types of uncontested universals, which we called content-free universals ) there is nonetheless a great deal of argument about the exact details. That development occurs is uncontested, but the various models of development are still hotly debated. What is so amazing, however, is that, despite the differences in the models at the level of fine detail, in broad terms they show a remarkable similarity. In fact, in Integral Psychology, I summarized over 100 different psychospiritual models of development, and what is so striking is their general similarity. Thus, when it comes to levels of development which is the aspect of an integral approach that we are introducing now then if we stay with the general outlines and contours of development, we do just fine. But if we leave out developmental levels, we leave out an important and uncontested component of the human psyche, and thus our approach would not, and could not, be integral. What, then, are some of the more important levels of development? Of the 100 models that I mentioned, I will here use one of the most influential, and one that is still quite valid as a simple summary or overview, that of the pioneering genius, Jean Gebser. Gebser found that human beings tend to go through at least five major levels of development, which he called archaic, magic, mythic, mental, and integral. Those words mean pretty much what you think they mean. Let's accept for the moment that, in a very general sense, those stages might be true. If so, then there is an archaic spirituality, a magic spirituality, a mythic spirituality, a mental spirituality, and an integral spirituality (with possibly higher stages still to come). Put bluntly, there is an archaic God, a magic God, a mythic God, a mental God, and an integral God. Which God do you believe in? An archaic God sees divinity in any strong instinctual force. A magic God locates divine power in the human ego and its magical capacity to change the animistic world with rituals and spells. A mythic God is located not on this earth but in a heavenly paradise not of this world, entrance to which is gained by living according to the covenants and rules given by this God to his peoples. A mental God is a rational God, a demythologized Ground of Being that underlies all forms of existence. And an integral God is one that embraces all of the above. Which of those Gods is the most important? According to an integral view, all of them, because each higher stage actually builds upon and includes the lower, so the lower stages are more fundamental and the higher stages are more significant, but leave out any one of them and you re in trouble. You are, that is, less than integral, less than comprehensive, less than inclusive in your understanding of God. So which level of God do you believe in? Whatever it is, the central point is that, if human beings do indeed undergo psychological development, then their understanding of God or Goddess or Spirit will likewise undergo development. Tracing that development while honoring each and every stage as an equally crucial component of that development is an important part of any integral approach to religion and spirituality.

7 Along with perspectives, levels are therefore an important ingredient in the integral approach. Now we can start putting some of these items together into a bigger picture. /// Why Do Religions Teach Love and Yet Cause So Much War? Transcending the trauma to get to the truth of the world's faiths. Throughout history, religion has been the single greatest source of human-caused wars, suffering, and misery. In the name of God, more suffering has been inflicted than by any other manmade cause. Does that strike you as odd? And if that statement is true, does it not follow that peace on earth, good will toward men demands the death of God? An integral approach to spirituality takes that assertion very seriously. Yet it also accepts the idea that religion in some sense contains deep and abiding truths about reality, possibly about Ultimate Reality itself. It is one of the distinctive aspects of the integral approach that it claims to be able to reconcile those two astonishingly contradictory items. Item #1: Religion causes more human war and misery than any other manmade cause. Item #2: Religion is about Ultimate Reality. The only way to reconcile those two items is to recognize that, at the very least, religion contains two very different aspects. One clearly divides humans; the other might be able to unite them. Peace on earth, good will toward men obviously rests upon differentiating those two aspects and placing each of them in a larger context. Exactly how to do so is one of the goals of the integral approach. But one thing is certain and historically undeniable: if we cannot do so, religion will continue to be the death of humans until humans have the death of God. It is common, of course, to say that all religions or certainly most of them teach some sort of brotherly/sisterly love, that all major religions have some version of the Golden Rule, and that religions therefore have acted to introduce love and compassion into the world. Once again, however, that flies in the face of historical fact: for every year of peace in humankind s history there have been fourteen years of war, 90% of which have been fought either because of, or under the banner of, God by whatever name. (More on this at Ken Wilber Online.) Again, it seems as if there are almost two different kinds of religion, one of which brutally divides, and one of which unites (or can unite). How do we tell them apart, and how might we begin to switch allegiance from the former to the latter? If you believe in God and yet don t have an answer to that question, you are inadvertently contributing to the wars of tomorrow, yes? And it won t quite do to say that the world would be peaceful if everybody accepted my personal savior or my path to Spirit. Surely that is the cause, not the cure, of the problem, yes? I have introduced the idea of an integral approach to spirituality. Most of my writings are self-contained pieces; few of them require any familiarity with earlier or later writing. The integral approach has about a half-dozen major components, however, each of which needs to be understood in order for the approach itself to make sense. Thus, this constitutes a series of installments, each of which builds upon its predecessors.

8 Does this sound interesting to you? If so, then let s begin. I haven't spelled out, or really indicated what an integral approach to spirituality would include. Many readers naturally assumed that this was simply another version of universalism the belief that there are certain truths contained in all the world s religions. But the integral approach emphatically does not make that suggestion. Other readers maintained that I was offering a version of the perennial philosophy espoused by Aldous Huxley or Huston Smith. Does the integral approach believe that all religions are saying essentially the same thing from a different perspective? No, almost the opposite. Yet the integral approach does claim to be able to unite, in some sense, the world s great spiritual traditions, which is what has caused much of the interest in this approach. If humanity is ever to cease its swarming hostilities and be united in one family, without squashing the significant and important differences among us, then something like an integral approach seems the only way. Until that time, religions will continue to brutally divide humanity, as they have throughout history, and not unite, as they must if they are to be a help, not a hindrance, to tomorrow s existence. So how can we describe the integral approach in simple terms? It s clearly going to be a bit of a new idea, so bear with me. We might start by calling it a content-free cross-culturalism. Gulp. That s simple? Content-free refers to the fact that virtually all previous approaches at unification have attempted to find some sort of unity on the level of actual content (whereas the integral approach does not). For example, most of the world s great religions have some version of the Golden Rule, and most universalists use those types of common elements to find their unity in the world s religions. The integral approach does none of that. Or rather, all such similarities in content are looked upon as quite secondary, even trivial. This is why we call the core of the integral approach content-free. It finds its similarities in certain patterns of content, not in the content itself. Here s a simple example. Notice that all the world s mature languages contain first-, second-, and thirdperson pronouns. First person means the person who is speaking (I, me, we); second person means the person spoken to (you, thou); and third person means the person or thing being spoken about (him, her, it). So if you are talking to me about your new car, you are the first person, I am the second person, and the car is the third person. These pronouns actually represent three perspectives that human beings can take when they talk about the world or attempt to know the world. For example, I have my first-person impressions of my new car ( I like it! ). I can ask you, a second person, what you think about it ( I like it, too! ). You and I are now a we (a first-person plural) and we both agree, the car ( it ) is great! Although there are obviously countless combinations here, it s sometimes useful to summarize these three major perspectives as I/me, you/we, and he/her/it or simply I, we, and it. So what? Well, the fact that every major language contains these three types of pronouns means that we have a set of metauniversals here, or something that we find in all major cultures. Notice that these universals I, we, and it do not themselves have any content. To say that all languages have a first-person pronoun ( I or me ) is not to say anything about that person at all. It is not to say that this person is named Martha, or this person is spiritual, or this person is made of carbon and water molecules, or this person contains Jungian archetypes, or anything like that at all.

9 It s much, much deeper than that. To say that all human beings recognize a first-, second-, and third-person perspective is to say that those perspectives but not necessarily any of their contents are universally available to all normal humans. It s sort of like saying that all human beings contain two kidneys, two lungs, and one liver. But it says nothing about what you actually do with your kidneys or lungs or liver. In other words, to say that you have a first-person perspective on what you are reading right now you are a firstperson I who is reading this is to say nothing about what you actually think about what you are reading. Maybe you like it, maybe you don t. All I am saying is that you definitely have available to you a first-person perspective, and you know that you do. Now this begins to get interesting, because we have started to find a series of things that are universal, but that themselves have no particular content. They are meta-universals. Or, as we were saying, contentfree cross-cultural patterns. Notice that we never find a perspective running around all by itself, dangling in midair, completely divorced from some sort of content, only that the perspectives themselves are not merely culture-bound or merely relative, appearing in some cultures but not in others. So I am not saying that content-free means culture-free; rather, perspectives such as I, we, and it are wedded to particular cultures but not reducible to them. The fascinating part is that these three perspectives might actually give rise to art, morals, and science. Or the Beautiful, the Good, and the True: the Beauty that is in the eye (or the I ) of the beholder; the Good or moral actions that can exist between you and me as a we ; and the objective Truth about third-person objects (or its ) that you and I might discover: hence, art ( I ), morals ( we ), and science ( it ). The Good, the True, and the Beautiful. Which leads us to a spirituality gone integral, a God found whole in the midst of the fractured postmodern world. /// What's my philosophy? In a word, integral. And what on earth or in heaven do I mean by integral? The dictionary meaning is fairly simple: comprehensive, balanced, inclusive, essential for completeness. Short definition, tall order. What would something like an inclusive or comprehensive spirituality mean? What could it mean? And would it even be remotely possible? Integral, in a sense, would be the ultimate ecumenical movement, if such a thing is even desirable. It would be a spirituality that claimed to leave nothing essential out. It would be a spirituality that in principle could be recognized and even practiced by believers in all the world s religions without abandoning their own essentials. It would be based on what seem to be universal human capacities to interface with the Divine. It would be inclusive and comprehensive, touching on all the bases of this elusive thing called spirituality. It would be. Impossible, is what it would be. But consider where we are in today s modern and postmodern world. We have, for the first time in history, easy access to all of the world s great religions. Examine the many great traditions from Christianity to Buddhism, Islam to Taoism, Paganism to Neoplatonism and you are struck by two items: there are an enormous number of differences between them, and a handful of striking similarities. When you find a few essential items that all, or virtually all, of the world s great religions agree on, you have probably found something incredibly important about the human condition, at least as important as, say, a few things that physicists can manage to agree on (which nowadays, by the way, ain t all that impressive).

10 What are these spiritual similarities? I ll come back to those shortly, honest. For now, simply notice what it would mean if there were a handful of general items that regularly recur in humanity s attempts to know God (and presumably God s correlative attempts to reach a slumbering humanity, if God indeed exists). These similarities would seem to suggest, among other things, that there are spiritual patterns at work in the universe, at least as far as we can tell, and these spiritual patterns announce themselves with impressive regularity wherever human hearts and minds attempt to attune themselves to the cosmos in all its radiant dimensions. And that would mean, would have to mean, that the standard-issue human being is hardwired for spiritual realities. That is, the human organism itself seems to be hardwired for these deep spiritual patterns, although not necessarily for the specific ways that they show up in a particular religion important as those are. Rather, the human being seems imbued by the realities suggested by these cross-cultural spiritual currents and patterns, with which individual religions and spiritual movements resonate, according to their own capacities and to their own degrees of fidelity. The simple recognition of these deep spiritual patterns would be the glimmering of an integral spirituality. That recognition would also imply that, any practices that would help individual human beings attune themselves to these patterns would increase humanity s understanding of, and attunement with, the spiritual patterns of the universe. This attunement could occur through any of the great religions, but would be tied exclusively to none of them. A person could be attuned to an integral spirituality while still be a practicing Christian, Buddhist, New-Age advocate, or Neopagan. This would be something added to one s religion, not subtracted from it. The only thing it would subtract (and there s no way around this) is the belief that one s own path is the only true path to salvation. If humanity s attunement to the spiritual patterns of the universe are helped by various practices which might include prayer, meditation, yoga, contemplation then modern psychological and psychotherapeutic measures would surely be part of any integral spirituality, since those measures can help increase a person s capacity for various sorts of practice. What do I mean by psychotherapeutic measures? This in itself is a large topic, so let me say, for introductory purposes, they are any measures that might be taken if you have an emotional problem and visit the office of a psychologist, psychotherapist, or psychiatrist all of the measures for treating human psychological issues that have been developed in the last century or so, and that have demonstrated the capacity to help alleviate or remove emotional problems or obstructions. Finally, integral spirituality as the very name integral implies transcends and includes science, it does not exclude, repress, or deny science. To say that the spiritual currents of the cosmos cannot be captured by empirical science is not to say that they deny science, only that they show their face to other methods of seeking knowledge, of which the world has an abundance. Well, then, what are some of these spiritual currents, or some of the similarities that recur in virtually all of the great wisdom traditions? Let me start with a short and simple list. This is not the last word on the topic, but the first word, a simple list of suggestions to get the conversation going. Most of the great wisdom traditions agree that: 1. Spirit, by whatever name, exists. 2. Spirit, although existing out there, is found in here, or revealed within to the open heart and mind. 3. Most of us don t realize this Spirit within, however, because we are living in a world of sin, separation, or duality that is, we are living in a fallen, illusory, or fragmented state.

11 4. There is a way out of this fallen state (of sin or illusion or disharmony), there is a Path to our liberation. 5. If we follow this Path to its conclusion, the result is a Rebirth or Enlightenment, a direct experience of Spirit within and without, a Supreme Liberation, which 6. marks the end of sin and suffering, and 7. manifests in social action of mercy and compassion on behalf of all sentient beings. Does a list something like that make sense to you? Because if there are these general spiritual patterns in the cosmos, at least wherever human beings appear, then this changes everything. You can be a practicing Christian and still agree with that list; you can be a practicing Neopagan and still agree with that list. We can argue the fine details, but the simple existence of those types of currents profoundly changes the nature of belief itself. If we add to those spiritual currents the other two ingredients that I mentioned authentic spirituality must transcend and include modern science (not deny it), and psychological measures can help accelerate spiritual capacities then we are getting very close to what might in fact be an integral spirituality, a spirituality for the modern and postmodern world that includes the best of the premodern traditions as well. ///

Wilber s AQAL Map and Beyond. Introduction. Wilber s AQAL Map

Wilber s AQAL Map and Beyond. Introduction. Wilber s AQAL Map Introduction Wilber s AQAL Map Ken Wilber is the world s most widely published philosopher, whose books have been translated into 30 languages (Meyerhoff 2005). Since he offers a synthesis of science,

More information

Examining the nature of mind. Michael Daniels. A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000).

Examining the nature of mind. Michael Daniels. A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000). Examining the nature of mind Michael Daniels A review of Understanding Consciousness by Max Velmans (Routledge, 2000). Max Velmans is Reader in Psychology at Goldsmiths College, University of London. Over

More information

Introduction to Integral Theory and Practice

Introduction to Integral Theory and Practice Introduction to Integral Theory and Practice IOS BASIC AND THE AQAL MAP Ken Wilber Here I introduce the fundamental elements of the Integral Operating System, or Integral model: quadrants, levels, lines,

More information

Chapter 1. Introduction

Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 1 Introduction How perfectible is human nature as understood in Eastern* and Western philosophy, psychology, and religion? For me this question goes back to early childhood experiences. I remember

More information

meets Integral Yoga Integral Discussion

meets Integral Yoga Integral Discussion Integral Yoga meets Integral Discussion Content of this Presentation Integral Discussion Platforms e.g: What is Enlightenment magazine Topics e.g.: Evolutionary Spirituality Some Key Players Ken Wilber:

More information

What s God got to do with it?

What s God got to do with it? What s God got to do with it? In this address I have drawn on a thesis submitted at Duke University in 2009 by Robert Brown. Based on this thesis I ask a question that you may not normally hear asked in

More information

B O O K L E T T H R E E V E R S I O N A Guide to Integral Theory and Practice. By Ken Wilber

B O O K L E T T H R E E V E R S I O N A Guide to Integral Theory and Practice. By Ken Wilber V E R S I O N 1. 0 B O O K L E T T H R E E A Guide to Integral Theory and Practice By Ken Wilber 13 vision-logic 12 formal 11 rules 10 concepts symbols 9 8 emotion 7 impulse 6 perception sensation Upper

More information

Foreword to Ken Wilber: Thought as Passion by Frank Visser. It is a pleasure to introduce my friend Frank Visser s book, Ken Wilber: Thought

Foreword to Ken Wilber: Thought as Passion by Frank Visser. It is a pleasure to introduce my friend Frank Visser s book, Ken Wilber: Thought Foreword to Ken Wilber: Thought as Passion by Frank Visser It is a pleasure to introduce my friend Frank Visser s book, Ken Wilber: Thought as Passion. Since I seem to be related to the subject of the

More information

Honouring Egypt. The Great Pyramids of Giza over 4,500 years ago Akhenaten and Nefertiti 3,350 years ago

Honouring Egypt. The Great Pyramids of Giza over 4,500 years ago Akhenaten and Nefertiti 3,350 years ago Honouring Egypt The Great Pyramids of Giza over 4,500 years ago Akhenaten and Nefertiti 3,350 years ago The Evolving Scientific Mind through a Transdisciplinary Lens: Perspectives from Postformal Psychology,

More information

Heavens and Hells of the Mind: An Introduction to the Series. By Simone Keiran. In recent decades, certain realizations about human spirituality have

Heavens and Hells of the Mind: An Introduction to the Series. By Simone Keiran. In recent decades, certain realizations about human spirituality have Heavens and Hells of the Mind: An Introduction to the Series By Simone Keiran In recent decades, certain realizations about human spirituality have taken root. Spiritual seekers are coming to understand

More information

Introduction to the Integral Approach (and the AQAL Map) During the last 30 years, we have witnessed a historical first: all of the world s cultures

Introduction to the Integral Approach (and the AQAL Map) During the last 30 years, we have witnessed a historical first: all of the world s cultures Introduction to the Integral Approach (and the AQAL Map) During the last 30 years, we have witnessed a historical first: all of the world s cultures are now available to us. In the past, if you were born,

More information

Sentence Starters from They Say, I Say

Sentence Starters from They Say, I Say Sentence Starters from They Say, I Say Introducing What They Say A number of have recently suggested that. It has become common today to dismiss. In their recent work, Y and Z have offered harsh critiques

More information

Taoist and Confucian Contributions to Harmony in East Asia: Christians in dialogue with Confucian Thought and Taoist Spirituality.

Taoist and Confucian Contributions to Harmony in East Asia: Christians in dialogue with Confucian Thought and Taoist Spirituality. Taoist and Confucian Contributions to Harmony in East Asia: Christians in dialogue with Confucian Thought and Taoist Spirituality. Final Statement 1. INTRODUCTION Between 15-19 April 1996, 52 participants

More information

Ken Wilber: Well, thank you Bill. Good to be here, buddy.

Ken Wilber: Well, thank you Bill. Good to be here, buddy. A Conversation with Ken Wilber Bill Harris: Hello everyone. Once again this is Bill Harris Director of Centerpointe Research Institute and I am here today with Ken Wilber, the founder of Integral Institute

More information

K.V. LAURIKAINEN EXTENDING THE LIMITS OF SCIENCE

K.V. LAURIKAINEN EXTENDING THE LIMITS OF SCIENCE K.V. LAURIKAINEN EXTENDING THE LIMITS OF SCIENCE Tarja Kallio-Tamminen Contents Abstract My acquintance with K.V. Laurikainen Various flavours of Copenhagen What proved to be wrong Revelations of quantum

More information

Foreword to The Translucent Revolution by Arjuna Ardagh

Foreword to The Translucent Revolution by Arjuna Ardagh Foreword to The Translucent Revolution by Arjuna Ardagh It s a rather extraordinary, even historical, time we live in, and not just for the perils but the promise. The perils I m sure you ve heard plenty

More information

Integral Spirituality

Integral Spirituality Integral Spirituality A Startling New Role for Religion in the Modern and Postmodern World Ken Wilber 2 Integral Spirituality A Startling New Role for Religion in the Modern and Postmodern World A Note

More information

Roger on Buddhist Geeks

Roger on Buddhist Geeks Roger on Buddhist Geeks BG 172: The Core of Wisdom http://www.buddhistgeeks.com/2010/05/bg-172-the-core-of-wisdom/ May 2010 Episode Description: We re joined again this week by professor and meditation

More information

Unity Transformation Experience and Integral Spirituality

Unity Transformation Experience and Integral Spirituality Unity Transformation Experience and Integral Spirituality April 2013 To my dear Unity family I am again sending an open letter to you about what I believe to be the greatest threat to Unity's ministry

More information

Foreword to Where s Wilber At? Ken Wilber s Integral Vision in the New Millennium. by Brad Reynolds

Foreword to Where s Wilber At? Ken Wilber s Integral Vision in the New Millennium. by Brad Reynolds Foreword to Where s Wilber At? Ken Wilber s Integral Vision in the New Millennium by Brad Reynolds Brad Reynolds has written an eloquent, passionate, beautiful book about my ideas. I can only be grateful

More information

Russo-Netzer, P. (in press). Spiritual Development. In: In: M. H. Bornstein,

Russo-Netzer, P. (in press). Spiritual Development. In: In: M. H. Bornstein, Russo-Netzer, P. (in press). Spiritual Development. In: In: M. H. Bornstein, M. E. Arterberry, K. L. Fingerman & J. E. Lansford (Eds.), SAGE Encyclopedia of Lifespan Human Development. Spiritual Development

More information

Ursuline College Accelerated Program

Ursuline College Accelerated Program Ursuline College Accelerated Program CRITICAL INFORMATION! DO NOT SKIP THIS LINK BELOW... BEFORE PROCEEDING TO READ THE UCAP MODULE, YOU ARE EXPECTED TO READ AND ADHERE TO ALL UCAP POLICY INFORMATION CONTAINED

More information

Radical Centrism & the Redemption of Secular Philosophy

Radical Centrism & the Redemption of Secular Philosophy Radical Centrism & the Redemption of Secular Philosophy Ernest N. Prabhakar, Ph.D. DrErnie@RadicalCentrism.org Radical Centrism is an new approach to secular philosophy 1 What we will cover The Challenge

More information

1 COSMOLOGY & FAITH 1010L

1 COSMOLOGY & FAITH 1010L 1 COSMOLOGY & FAITH 1010L COSMOLOGY & FAITH By John F. Haught, adapted by Newsela Since the beginning of human existence on our planet, people have asked questions of a religious nature. For example, what

More information

Mathematics as we know it has been created and used by

Mathematics as we know it has been created and used by 0465037704-01.qxd 8/23/00 9:52 AM Page 1 Introduction: Why Cognitive Science Matters to Mathematics Mathematics as we know it has been created and used by human beings: mathematicians, physicists, computer

More information

BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS

BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS BIG IDEAS OVERVIEW FOR AGE GROUPS Barbara Wintersgill and University of Exeter 2017. Permission is granted to use this copyright work for any purpose, provided that users give appropriate credit to the

More information

THE BELIEF IN GOD AND IMMORTALITY A Psychological, Anthropological and Statistical Study

THE BELIEF IN GOD AND IMMORTALITY A Psychological, Anthropological and Statistical Study 1 THE BELIEF IN GOD AND IMMORTALITY A Psychological, Anthropological and Statistical Study BY JAMES H. LEUBA Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy in Bryn Mawr College Author of "A Psychological Study of

More information

The New Age Movement Q & A

The New Age Movement Q & A The New Age Movement Q & A The New Age Worldview I. Historical Influences * Eastern Religions: Hinduism & Buddhism * Spiritualism & the Occult * American Transcendentalism (Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman) *

More information

ARE YOU READY? Lecture 2 Loss of Truth

ARE YOU READY? Lecture 2 Loss of Truth ARE YOU READY? Lecture 2 Loss of Truth One word of truth outweighs the world. (Russian Proverb) The Declaration of Independence declared in 1776 that We hold these Truths to be self-evident In John 14:6

More information

Chiara Mascarello, Università degli Studi di Padova

Chiara Mascarello, Università degli Studi di Padova Evan Thompson, Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy, Columbia University Press, 2015, pp. 453, $ 32.95, ISBN 9780231137096 Chiara Mascarello, Università

More information

Dalai Lama (Tibet - contemporary)

Dalai Lama (Tibet - contemporary) Dalai Lama (Tibet - contemporary) 1) Buddhism Meditation Traditionally in India, there is samadhi meditation, "stilling the mind," which is common to all the Indian religions, including Hinduism, Buddhism,

More information

The Ontological Argument

The Ontological Argument The Ontological Argument Arguments for God s Existence One of the classic questions of philosophy and philosophical argument is: s there a God? Of course there are and have been many different definitions

More information

Class 2: The Holistic Model of Reality and the Mechanics of Consciousness

Class 2: The Holistic Model of Reality and the Mechanics of Consciousness Course One: Introduction to Modern Spirituality Class 2: The Holistic Model of Reality and the Mechanics of Consciousness Master Charles I take this opportunity to welcome you in the awareness of our oneness...

More information

As always, it is very important to cultivate the right and proper motivation on the side of the teacher and the listener.

As always, it is very important to cultivate the right and proper motivation on the side of the teacher and the listener. HEART SUTRA 2 Commentary by HE Dagri Rinpoche There are many different practices of the Bodhisattva one of the main practices is cultivating the wisdom that realises reality and the reason why this text

More information

A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person

A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person A Philosophical Critique of Cognitive Psychology s Definition of the Person Rosa Turrisi Fuller The Pluralist, Volume 4, Number 1, Spring 2009, pp. 93-99 (Article) Published by University of Illinois Press

More information

Contents Part I Fundamentals 1 Introduction to Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality 2 Science, Religion, and Psychology

Contents Part I Fundamentals 1 Introduction to Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality 2 Science, Religion, and Psychology Contents Part I Fundamentals...1 1 Introduction to Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality...3 1.1 Introduction...3 1.2 Basic Concepts...3 1.2.1 What is Religion...3 1.2.2 What Is Spirituality?...8 1.3

More information

Andrew B. Newberg, Principles of Neurotheology (Ashgate science and religions series), Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate Publishing, 2010 (276 p.

Andrew B. Newberg, Principles of Neurotheology (Ashgate science and religions series), Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate Publishing, 2010 (276 p. Dr. Ludwig Neidhart (Augsburg, 01.06.12) Andrew B. Newberg, Principles of Neurotheology (Ashgate science and religions series), Farnham, Surrey, England: Ashgate Publishing, 2010 (276 p.) Review for the

More information

Here s a very dumbed down way to understand why Gödel is no threat at all to A.I..

Here s a very dumbed down way to understand why Gödel is no threat at all to A.I.. Comments on Godel by Faustus from the Philosophy Forum Here s a very dumbed down way to understand why Gödel is no threat at all to A.I.. All Gödel shows is that try as you might, you can t create any

More information

THE CREATED CONSTITUTION OF MAN

THE CREATED CONSTITUTION OF MAN The Whole Counsel of God Study 9 THE CREATED CONSTITUTION OF MAN Then the LORD God formed man of the dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being.

More information

Why I Am Not a Property Dualist By John R. Searle

Why I Am Not a Property Dualist By John R. Searle 1 Why I Am Not a Property Dualist By John R. Searle I have argued in a number of writings 1 that the philosophical part (though not the neurobiological part) of the traditional mind-body problem has a

More information

Overview of Eurasian Cultural Traditions. Strayer: Ways of the World Chapter 5

Overview of Eurasian Cultural Traditions. Strayer: Ways of the World Chapter 5 Overview of Eurasian Cultural Traditions Strayer: Ways of the World Chapter 5 China and the Search for Order Three traditions emerged during the Zhou Dynasty: Legalism Confucianism Daoism Legalism Han

More information

Structure and essence: The keys to integrating spirituality and science

Structure and essence: The keys to integrating spirituality and science Structure and essence: The keys to integrating spirituality and science Copyright c 2001 Paul P. Budnik Jr., All rights reserved Our technical capabilities are increasing at an enormous and unprecedented

More information

What s a Liberal Religious Community For? Peninsula Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Burley, Washington June 10, 2012

What s a Liberal Religious Community For? Peninsula Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Burley, Washington June 10, 2012 Introduction to Responsive Reading What s a Liberal Religious Community For? Peninsula Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Burley, Washington June 10, 2012 Our responsive reading today is the same one I

More information

The Development of Consciousness. Shapeshifting: The Evolution of a Post-Modern Integral Medicine

The Development of Consciousness. Shapeshifting: The Evolution of a Post-Modern Integral Medicine Our unceasing and innate longing for health, happiness and wholeness is embodied in our continuing efforts to better our lives. Blessed with the therapies and remedies of modern science, informed by cross-cultural

More information

Rationalist-Irrationalist Dialectic in Buddhism:

Rationalist-Irrationalist Dialectic in Buddhism: Rationalist-Irrationalist Dialectic in Buddhism: The Failure of Buddhist Epistemology By W. J. Whitman The problem of the one and the many is the core issue at the heart of all real philosophical and theological

More information

VIEWING PERSPECTIVES

VIEWING PERSPECTIVES VIEWING PERSPECTIVES j. walter Viewing Perspectives - Page 1 of 6 In acting on the basis of values, people demonstrate points-of-view, or basic attitudes, about their own actions as well as the actions

More information

Without the Divine, there is no Stoicism : by Nigel Glassborow

Without the Divine, there is no Stoicism : by Nigel Glassborow Without the Divine, there is no Stoicism : by Nigel Glassborow First posted 15 Feb 2015 on the Stoicism Today blog at Exeter University. Also published in Stoicism Today: Selected Writings II, edited by

More information

SOCI : SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION TR 9:30 10:50 ENV 125 Fall, 2013

SOCI : SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION TR 9:30 10:50 ENV 125 Fall, 2013 COURSE SYLLABUS SOCI 3700.001: SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION TR 9:30 10:50 ENV 125 Fall, 2013 Instructor: David A. Williamson, Ph.D. 940/565-2215 (direct voice) Chilton 390C 940/565-2296 (departmental voice) David.Williamson@unt.edu

More information

Ronald Dworkin, Religion without God, Harvard University Press, 2013, pp. 192, 16.50, ISBN

Ronald Dworkin, Religion without God, Harvard University Press, 2013, pp. 192, 16.50, ISBN Ronald Dworkin, Religion without God, Harvard University Press, 2013, pp. 192, 16.50, ISBN 9780674726826 Simone Grigoletto, Università degli Studi di Padova In 2009, Thomas Nagel, to whom Dworkin s book

More information

THEOLOGY IN THE FLESH

THEOLOGY IN THE FLESH 1 Introduction One might wonder what difference it makes whether we think of divine transcendence as God above us or as God ahead of us. It matters because we use these simple words to construct deep theological

More information

Okay, so let s pause explanations for now and begin our direct experiential

Okay, so let s pause explanations for now and begin our direct experiential Okay, so let s pause explanations for now and begin our direct experiential explorations. What I d like you to do until we meet again is the following: and for this, a small simple notepad and pen or iphone

More information

Ethical non-naturalism

Ethical non-naturalism Michael Lacewing Ethical non-naturalism Ethical non-naturalism is usually understood as a form of cognitivist moral realism. So we first need to understand what cognitivism and moral realism is before

More information

1990 Conference: Buddhism and Modern World

1990 Conference: Buddhism and Modern World 1990 Conference: Buddhism and Modern World Buddhism and Science: Some Limits of the Comparison by Harry Wells, Ph. D. This is the continuation of a series of articles which begins in Vajra Bodhi Sea, issue

More information

In our global milieu, we live in a world of religions, and increasingly, Christians are confronted

In our global milieu, we live in a world of religions, and increasingly, Christians are confronted Book Review/Response: The Bible and Other Faiths In our global milieu, we live in a world of religions, and increasingly, Christians are confronted with how to relate to these religions. Ida Glaser approaches

More information

TEILHARD DE CHARDIN: TOWARD A DEVELOPMENTAL AND ORGANIC THEOLOGY

TEILHARD DE CHARDIN: TOWARD A DEVELOPMENTAL AND ORGANIC THEOLOGY TEILHARD DE CHARDIN: TOWARD A DEVELOPMENTAL AND ORGANIC THEOLOGY There is a new consciousness developing in our society and there are different efforts to describe it. I will mention three factors in this

More information

Differences between Psychosynthesis and Jungian Psychology 2017 by Catherine Ann Lombard. Conceptual differences

Differences between Psychosynthesis and Jungian Psychology 2017 by Catherine Ann Lombard. Conceptual differences Conceptual differences Archetypes The Self I Psychosynthesis (Assagioli, 1978, 1993, 2000, 2002) Archetypes are spiritual energies of higher ideas emerging from a transpersonal unconsciousness or transpersonal

More information

III Knowledge is true belief based on argument. Plato, Theaetetus, 201 c-d Is Justified True Belief Knowledge? Edmund Gettier

III Knowledge is true belief based on argument. Plato, Theaetetus, 201 c-d Is Justified True Belief Knowledge? Edmund Gettier III Knowledge is true belief based on argument. Plato, Theaetetus, 201 c-d Is Justified True Belief Knowledge? Edmund Gettier In Theaetetus Plato introduced the definition of knowledge which is often translated

More information

Christian scholars would all agree that their Christian faith ought to shape how

Christian scholars would all agree that their Christian faith ought to shape how Roy A. Clouser, The Myth of Religious Neutrality: An Essay on the Hidden Role of Religious Beliefs in Theories (Notre Dame: The University of Notre Dame Press, 2005, rev. ed.) Kenneth W. Hermann Kent State

More information

VEDANTIC MEDITATION. North Asian International Research Journal of Social Science & Humanities. ISSN: Vol. 3, Issue-7 July-2017 TAPAS GHOSH

VEDANTIC MEDITATION. North Asian International Research Journal of Social Science & Humanities. ISSN: Vol. 3, Issue-7 July-2017 TAPAS GHOSH IRJIF I.F. : 3.015 North Asian International Research Journal of Social Science & Humanities ISSN: 2454-9827 Vol. 3, Issue-7 July-2017 VEDANTIC MEDITATION TAPAS GHOSH Dhyana, the Sanskrit term for meditation

More information

Lecture 3: Vivekananda and the theory of Maya

Lecture 3: Vivekananda and the theory of Maya Lecture 3: Vivekananda and the theory of Maya Spectrum of light The prism is space, time and causation. In Vedanta, Maya is space, time and causation (desa, kala, nimitta) Atman is the Light of Pure Consciousness;

More information

RAHNER AND DEMYTHOLOGIZATION 555

RAHNER AND DEMYTHOLOGIZATION 555 RAHNER AND DEMYTHOLOGIZATION 555 God is active and transforming of the human spirit. This in turn shapes the world in which the human spirit is actualized. The Spirit of God can be said to direct a part

More information

So we are in the process of going through an introduction to Integral Life

So we are in the process of going through an introduction to Integral Life Turiya: The Supreme Witness So we are in the process of going through an introduction to Integral Life Practice, one of the most complete and all-embracing practices of self-realization and self-fulfillment.

More information

Understanding the Maya s Triple Rebirth Metaphor of 2012

Understanding the Maya s Triple Rebirth Metaphor of 2012 Understanding the Maya s Triple Rebirth Metaphor of 2012 An essay by Thomas Razzeto Copyright 2012 Thomas Razzeto Introduction It is a scientific fact that the astronomy that will unfold in the sky on

More information

SEMINAR IN WORLD RELIGIONS UIMN/APOL 570

SEMINAR IN WORLD RELIGIONS UIMN/APOL 570 SEMINAR IN WORLD RELIGIONS UIMN/APOL 570 17-21 August 2015 Taught by Donald S. Tingle Cincinnati Christian University Contact information: donald.tingle@ccuniversity.edu CCU Catalog Course Description

More information

Interviews with Participants of Nuns in the West I Courtney Bender, Wendy Cadge

Interviews with Participants of Nuns in the West I Courtney Bender, Wendy Cadge 1 of 7 6/15/2015 6:09 PM Home About MID Bulletins News Events Glossary Links Contact Us Support MID Benedict's Dharma Gethsemani I Gethsemani II Gethsemani III Abhishiktananda Society Bulletins Help Interviews

More information

Part I: The Structure of Philosophy

Part I: The Structure of Philosophy Revised, 8/30/08 Part I: The Structure of Philosophy Philosophy as the love of wisdom The basic questions and branches of philosophy The branches of the branches and the many philosophical questions that

More information

Interview. with Ravi Ravindra. Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation?

Interview. with Ravi Ravindra. Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation? Interview Buddhist monk meditating: Traditional Chinese painting with Ravi Ravindra Can science help us know the nature of God through his creation? So much depends on what one thinks or imagines God is.

More information

Quantum Consciousness: Our Evolution, Our Salvation. Written by Ervin Laszlo Thursday, 01 March :00 - Last Updated Monday, 19 August :38

Quantum Consciousness: Our Evolution, Our Salvation. Written by Ervin Laszlo Thursday, 01 March :00 - Last Updated Monday, 19 August :38 I call it quantum consciousness : the consciousness we access when we use the potential of our quantumcomputer brains. The brain is a macroscopic quantum system, yet we use it as if it were exclusively

More information

In Concerning the Difference between the Spirit and the Letter in Philosophy, Johann

In Concerning the Difference between the Spirit and the Letter in Philosophy, Johann 13 March 2016 Recurring Concepts of the Self: Fichte, Eastern Philosophy, and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy In Concerning the Difference between the Spirit and the Letter in Philosophy, Johann Gottlieb

More information

DEGREE OPTIONS. 1. Master of Religious Education. 2. Master of Theological Studies

DEGREE OPTIONS. 1. Master of Religious Education. 2. Master of Theological Studies DEGREE OPTIONS 1. Master of Religious Education 2. Master of Theological Studies 1. Master of Religious Education Purpose: The Master of Religious Education degree program (M.R.E.) is designed to equip

More information

STUDIES IN THE ENGLISH BIBLE

STUDIES IN THE ENGLISH BIBLE A Course In STUDIES IN THE ENGLISH BIBLE Prepared by the Committee on Religious Education of the American Bible College A COURSE IN STUDIES IN THE ENGLISH BIBLE Prepared by the Committee on Religious Education

More information

Lessons of Jung's Encounter with Native Americans

Lessons of Jung's Encounter with Native Americans Northern Arizona University From the SelectedWorks of Timothy Thomason 2008 Lessons of Jung's Encounter with Native Americans Timothy Thomason, Northern Arizona University Available at: https://works.bepress.com/timothy_thomason/19/

More information

RELIGION DISCUSSION: Information for this discussion comes from a book called The Philosopher s Way by John Chaffee

RELIGION DISCUSSION: Information for this discussion comes from a book called The Philosopher s Way by John Chaffee RELIGION DISCUSSION: Information for this discussion comes from a book called The Philosopher s Way by John Chaffee What is your definition of religion? What is the purpose of religion? Personal questions

More information

Department of Philosophy

Department of Philosophy Department of Philosophy Phone: (512) 245-2285 Office: Psychology Building 110 Fax: (512) 245-8335 Web: http://www.txstate.edu/philosophy/ Degree Program Offered BA, major in Philosophy Minors Offered

More information

Keith Roby Memorial Lecture

Keith Roby Memorial Lecture Keith Roby Memorial Lecture The Science of Oneness A worldview for the twenty-first century A worldview is a set of beliefs about life, the universe and everything It enables us to understand the world

More information

Workshops and lectures being offered by Ven. Ani Pema in. Bangalore / Mumbai / Pune / Nashik (March April 2018)

Workshops and lectures being offered by Ven. Ani Pema in. Bangalore / Mumbai / Pune / Nashik (March April 2018) Workshops and lectures being offered by Ven. Ani Pema in Bangalore / Mumbai / Pune / Nashik (March 2018 - April 2018) Ven. Ani Pema is visiting different cities in India from early March until end of April,

More information

Templates for Research Paper

Templates for Research Paper Templates for Research Paper Templates for introducing what they say A number of have recently suggested that. It has become common today to dismiss. In their recent work, have offered harsh critiques

More information

Defend Your Faith Lesson 5

Defend Your Faith Lesson 5 Lesson 5 IS CHRISTIANITY THE ONLY WAY? And in none other is there salvation; for neither is there any other name under heaven, that is given among men, wherein we must be saved (Acts 4:12) I. INTRODUCTION.

More information

Journal of Religion & Film

Journal of Religion & Film Volume 2 Issue 3 Special Issue (December 1998): Spotlight on Teaching 12-17-2016 Religion and Popular Movies Conrad E. Ostwalt Appalachian State University, ostwaltce@appstate.edu Journal of Religion &

More information

The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition

The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition The Confessional Statement of the Biblical Counseling Coalition Preamble: Changing Lives with Christ s Changeless Truth We are a fellowship of Christians convinced that personal ministry centered on Jesus

More information

Introduction. I. Proof of the Minor Premise ( All reality is completely intelligible )

Introduction. I. Proof of the Minor Premise ( All reality is completely intelligible ) Philosophical Proof of God: Derived from Principles in Bernard Lonergan s Insight May 2014 Robert J. Spitzer, S.J., Ph.D. Magis Center of Reason and Faith Lonergan s proof may be stated as follows: Introduction

More information

Causation and Free Will

Causation and Free Will Causation and Free Will T L Hurst Revised: 17th August 2011 Abstract This paper looks at the main philosophic positions on free will. It suggests that the arguments for causal determinism being compatible

More information

Hi everyone, this is Vishen Lakhiani, and with me, I have the legendary Ken Wilber. Ken, how are you today?

Hi everyone, this is Vishen Lakhiani, and with me, I have the legendary Ken Wilber. Ken, how are you today? Vishen: Hi, I m Vishen Lakhiani, Founder of Mindvalley, the school for human transformation. You re listening to the Mindvalley Podcast, where we ll be bringing you the greatest teachers and thought leaders

More information

Charlie Hebdo, God and Earth Spirituality

Charlie Hebdo, God and Earth Spirituality Charlie Hebdo, God and "Human beings experience hurt and pain. They seek refuges from hurt and pain. They seek refuge in wealth, they seek refuge in other men, they seek refuge in knowledge and they seek

More information

Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays

Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays Bernays Project: Text No. 26 Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays (Bemerkungen zur Philosophie der Mathematik) Translation by: Dirk Schlimm Comments: With corrections by Charles

More information

Approaches to Bible Study

Approaches to Bible Study 34 Understanding the Bible LESSON 2 Approaches to Bible Study In the first lesson you were given an overview of many of the topics that will be discussed in this course. You learned that the Bible is a

More information

Tao Te Ching. Tao Te Ching. Lao Tzu's Timeless Classic for Today. David Tuffley. To my beloved Nation of Four Concordia Domi Foris Pax

Tao Te Ching. Tao Te Ching. Lao Tzu's Timeless Classic for Today. David Tuffley. To my beloved Nation of Four Concordia Domi Foris Pax Tao Te Ching Lao Tzu's Timeless Classic for Today David Tuffley To my beloved Nation of Four Concordia Domi Foris Pax A leader is best when people barely know he exists, when his work is done, his aim

More information

Saul Kripke, Naming and Necessity

Saul Kripke, Naming and Necessity 24.09x Minds and Machines Saul Kripke, Naming and Necessity Excerpt from Saul Kripke, Naming and Necessity (Harvard, 1980). Identity theorists have been concerned with several distinct types of identifications:

More information

CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY

CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY CHRISTIAN SPIRITUALITY Opening Prayer Heavenly Father, through the hands of Mary we offer you Jesus, the Incarnate Word, the Victim in whom you are well pleased. Moved by the love of the Holy Spirit in

More information

Ikeda Wisdom Academy The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra. Review

Ikeda Wisdom Academy The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra. Review Ikeda Wisdom Academy The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra Review August 2013 Study Review The Wisdom of the Lotus Sutra, vol. 1, Part III - Section 8 9 The Expedient Means chapter of the Lotus Sutra elucidates

More information

Master of Arts in Health Care Mission

Master of Arts in Health Care Mission Master of Arts in Health Care Mission The Master of Arts in Health Care Mission is designed to cultivate and nurture in Catholic health care leaders the theological depth and spiritual maturity necessary

More information

YOU ARE THE UNIVERSE Deepak Chopra & Menas Kafatos Harmony Books, New York 2017 Reviewed by Simon Senzon It is rare that a book comes along with a

YOU ARE THE UNIVERSE Deepak Chopra & Menas Kafatos Harmony Books, New York 2017 Reviewed by Simon Senzon It is rare that a book comes along with a YOU ARE THE UNIVERSE Deepak Chopra & Menas Kafatos Harmony Books, New York 2017 Reviewed by Simon Senzon It is rare that a book comes along with a balance of spiritual wisdom and scientific credibility

More information

The Themes of Discovering the Heart of Buddhism

The Themes of Discovering the Heart of Buddhism The Core Themes DHB The Themes of Discovering the Heart of Buddhism Here there is nothing to remove and nothing to add. The one who sees the Truth of Being as it is, By seeing the Truth, is liberated.

More information

The Path of the Unification Church

The Path of the Unification Church The Path of the Unification Church Father gave this sermon on Sunday October 14, 1988, to commemorate thirty eight years having passed since his release from the Hungnam Special Labor Camp. Note: This

More information

Annotated Bibliography. seeking to keep the possibility of dualism alive in academic study. In this book,

Annotated Bibliography. seeking to keep the possibility of dualism alive in academic study. In this book, Warren 1 Koby Warren PHIL 400 Dr. Alfino 10/30/2010 Annotated Bibliography Chalmers, David John. The conscious mind: in search of a fundamental theory.! New York: Oxford University Press, 1996. Print.!

More information

Mark Anthony D. Abenir, MCD Department of Social Sciences & Philosophy University of Santo Tomas

Mark Anthony D. Abenir, MCD Department of Social Sciences & Philosophy University of Santo Tomas Mark Anthony D. Abenir, MCD Department of Social Sciences & Philosophy University of Santo Tomas Shifting Period 1 st Topic Introduction to Philosophy Logic & Critical Thinking Fallacies of Reasoning Ideas

More information

Outline Lesson 2 - Philosophy & Ethics: Says Who?

Outline Lesson 2 - Philosophy & Ethics: Says Who? Outline Lesson 2 - Philosophy & Ethics: Says Who? I. Introduction Have you been taken captive? - 2 Timothy 2:24-26 A. Scriptural warning against hollow and deceptive philosophy Colossians 2:8 B. Carl Sagan

More information

Secularization in Western territory has another background, namely modernity. Modernity is evaluated from the following philosophical point of view.

Secularization in Western territory has another background, namely modernity. Modernity is evaluated from the following philosophical point of view. 1. Would you like to provide us with your opinion on the importance and relevance of the issue of social and human sciences for Islamic communities in the contemporary world? Those whose minds have been

More information

In Search of the Ontological Argument. Richard Oxenberg

In Search of the Ontological Argument. Richard Oxenberg 1 In Search of the Ontological Argument Richard Oxenberg Abstract We can attend to the logic of Anselm's ontological argument, and amuse ourselves for a few hours unraveling its convoluted word-play, or

More information

Bob Atchley, Sage-ing Guild Conference, October, 2010

Bob Atchley, Sage-ing Guild Conference, October, 2010 1 Roots of Wisdom and Wings of Enlightenment Bob Atchley, Sage-ing Guild Conference, October, 2010 Sage-ing International emphasizes, celebrates, and practices spiritual development and wisdom, long recognized

More information