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Does the following convey any meaning for you?
Does it seem true?
Nonsense?
Paradoxical?
Context dependent?
You can not know the unknowable
but the unknowable is known
Now where you going to swim to?
For the present we have no time to waste. In the future, time itself teaches us . . .
1
Comments
"Thought can organize the world so well that you are no longer able to see it."
Anthony de Mello
To carry yourself forward and experience myriad things is delusion. That myriad things come forth and experience themselves is awakening.
Also similar thing is said in Hsin Hsin Ming:
All is void, clear, and self-illuminating, with no need to exert the mind.
Here thinking, feeling, knowledge, and imagination are of no value.
It was in response to this point:
- Seeking to know the unknowable is a waste of time. For example, for someone to seek to know/understand Ultimate Truth.
Does that give it a context?
Knowledge that is considered unknowable points out the limits of our referentiality to an illusory self.
Moving beyond such limits only requires the transcendence of that which would seek such knowledge.
This is just
acquisition verses renunciation.
You know, I can touch-type (honestly); my fingers just fly around the keyboard; they know exactly where to go at quite a rapid rate.
But if I had to tell you what the letters are on a keyboard from left to right I would struggle to do so; I'm not even sure I could without some hand-wringing and mistakes.
So I can both not know something, but also know something, and the something I know I just 'know'; my fingers just 'know' where the keys are, but I wouldn't be to tell you what the keys were in order.
Does this sound like the right path to understanding this? Is this epistemology? We covered this on my Buddhist foundation course, but I was a naff student.