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I read so many threads taking it for granted. Maybe it's time we understood what we are talking about. What does it mean to you? Don't just cut and paste, post your understanding of the word.
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I personally don't know what it is so more recently I just don't give much importance to it.
Thus, different from Awareness which is always aware. I picture meeting (being/becoming) awareness as a kind of big deal;) Just my .02:) I have no idea!
Buy Garma C.C. Chang's book A Treasury of Mahayana Sutras then read the Sutra, The Elucidation of Consciousness (Sutra 39, Taisho 347, pp. 178–186 translated into Chinese by Divâkara.)
Beyond this, there are different types or ways of talking about consciousness that are mentioned throughout the Suttas, commentarial literature, and in various traditions. For example, there's what's called the stream of consciousness (vinnana-sota), re-linking consciousness (patisandhi-citta), subconsciousness and/or storehouse consciousness (bhavanga-citta in Theravada and alaya-vijnana in Mahayana), consciousness without feature (vinnanam anidassanam), etc.
Interpretations and acceptance of these terms vary. Some even disregard them altogether and simply focus on understanding and observing the six types of sense consciousness since these are the most discussed in the Suttas and arguably the most important in terms of meditation practice.
A bit of esoteric Buddhism thrown in, at the end of the Khajjaniya Sutta it speaks about the monk whose mind (citta) is thus released (vimutta-cittaṃ). So astonishing is this release that the devas together with Indra, Brahma and Pajapati say: "We ourselves do not directly know on what your meditation (jhāyasī) rests (nissāya)."
It is just replacing words with other words.
The crucial aspect of consciousness is – the way I see it - what is sometimes referred to as qualia. This most intimate thing is very difficult to fit into our understanding of the world. “Qualia are unobservable in others and unquantifiable in us. We cannot possibly be sure, when discussing individual qualia, that we are even discussing the same phenomena.”
Buddhism doesn’t have good answers I think, and modern science is in the dark about it too.
If you mean the other thing... the question is a category mistake, as is the first part of this sentence.
If we could build a brain, we have no idea whether this brain would experience qualia and if so, how that came about.
Consciousness and these objects are codependent. Without the objects there cannot be consciousness and vice versa.
We know a lot more about the brain than the Buddha did; but we’re stuck with the “hard problem” of consciousness.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_problem_of_consciousness
I don’t see the Buddhist position clearly. I suppose Jason is right in saying the Buddha didn’t address this “hard problem” and concentrated on the “easy problems” of finding a practical way of dealing with the suffering-aspect of conscious experience.
Just a shot in the dark.
And how will we ever know if we don't try?
I don't think it's something we attained but something we are.
Buddha taught dependent origination because seeing how DO works becomes part of the whirlpool of ennui running out of energy, or karma. That's why whenever he was asked ontological questions, he brought our attention back to dependent origination instead of answering the question.
I don't think he wanted us to take it on faith and some of us would have.
Dependent origination is not an answer, it's a solution: http://www.leighb.com/mn38.htm
When DO is grasped as an ontological answer, Buddhism becomes a death cult.
Can you sort out the difference between a solution and an answer for me? Sorry, just being a wisenheimer...
Dependant origination does fit the bill for me in answer to the supposedly unponderable questions because it narrows them down to something that has no first cause.
It is hard to define a process that is in constant change... It has to be felt and realised. I think this is where the finger and the moon Zen teaching arose from.
Dependant origination is not just something we are to realise, it is what we are in the absolute sense... A verb, not seperate nouns.
Just my honest opinion. How in the world could seeing compassion as common sense be nhilistic?
But I think it was clear from my post that I meant answer as in ontological answer, solution as in soteriological solution.
'What is this?' Is an ontological question. 'How do we end suffering?' Is a soteriological question.
"there was no life for many billions of years" is just a thought(mental object).
Without thought could you even know "objects can exist without consciousness".
Perhaps it does. But there are other views.
I'm probably just being picky and you understand that these are provisional designations.
Now the thing is not to find out what it is, but to accept the above.
I think I have addressed Sâti's heresy before. Most Buddhists don't take the time to look at the Pali and impulsively shoot from the hip on this particular matter.
The Buddha admonished Sâti who put forth the erroneous view that consciousness transmigrates as self-same (anañña). The upshot is that the consciousness is not self-same (anañña) — not that consciousness does not transmigrate.
When I was eel wriggling to try and cling on to my soul, yours is the view I held. But it was never my soul to do as I saw fit with. http://www.leighb.com/mn38.htm
There are some things you don't really have until you let them go.
Reading D. ii. 62-63, we learn that "consciousness conditions (viññana-paccayā) mind-and-body (i.e., namarupa, the embryonic being)"; moreover "if consciousness were not to descend (okkamisatha) into the mother's womb" the mind-and-body would not develop.
It seems clear from the above that this consciousness, which is between karmic dispositions (sankhâra) and namarupa, plays a pivotal role by being the go between thus conditioning the namarupa/embryo which means, of course, that consciousness is not self-same (obviously Sâti was wrong about consciousness).
But I think it was clear from my post that I meant answer as in ontological answer, solution as in soteriological solution.
'What is this?' Is an ontological question. 'How do we end suffering?' Is a soteriological question.
Both questions lead to the same answer.
No. It's what suffering is. What beings call self is just suffering. That includes identifying with DO.
The illusion is that of being separate, not being, lol.
I am nothing more and nothing less than that which I am doing right now.
"I am not this" however "I am awake"
"This" is a noun... "Awake" is a verb. "I" am not a thing. "I" am an action... A process.
I am not a being, I simply am being.
Just another wave on the water... But I am also the water itself in the absolute sense.
Buddha still recognised the waves or he wouldn't have bothered acknowledging us let alone save us from suffering.
Alas, I have no real desire for any of those things now. I'd never own an SUV or a big house... If I become a father, I will be a loving father and if I don't then I will be a loving whatever else happens.