One simple method of Zen training that allowed me to overcome my post-traumatic stress disorder and unleash creativity. And reading the blog from the beginning, you can practise it without a teacher

Thursday, November 15, 2018

I haven't forgotten my promise yet and continue to entertain you...
A look at the organism (
multicellular organism) as a potential allows you to explain not only the emergence of death (due to the limited potential) but also the emergence of sleep: antientropy is a limited resource and in the end the balance must be restored allowing chaos to take revenge.

Friday, October 12, 2018

You are much more than your past. You can always figure out things that you've never been taught and thus surprise the opponents.

Saturday, September 29, 2018

I once caught myself thinking that the images of Christian saints on icons often cause cognitive dissonance (and I think this is the reason why these images impress some): on the one hand, these guys are often depicted full of love, compassion and altruism, and by default it's assumed that this is their constant state and source of strength; on the other, we know from our own experience, or simply feel, that such behavior is the path to self-destruction in the long run: you can't only spend energy as an altruist, you must also get it as an egoist.

In this connection, Jung wonders who is the third in the Trinity. Indeed, the fullness of life (or god, in fact), according to Jung, is expressed not by the Trinity but by Quaternity. The third is the Devil (the cross just includes this fourth substance.) But this truth is only for initiates who lead the flock.


Thursday, September 20, 2018

When I was about five, I was interested in the question of what the blind see. If I close my eyes, I see the darkness, but the darkness is something, but how can one not see anything at all? I was disappointed when my father told me that the blind see the darkness. Now I understand that I was rightly disappointed by such an answer because nothing actually means everything: everything that can potentially exist.

Thursday, July 5, 2018

Zen Intuition: The Ability to Anticipate the Future

 See also Zen Intuition and Zen Intuition: The Ability to Perceive a Situation as a Whole

Zen intuition in particular manifests itself as the ability to anticipate the future (usually it's limited to what concerns you), and in this cese it enables you to understand a situation without thinking: you begin to understand what is happening around when you see what will happen next. But very often stupidity is the inability to see what will happen in the long run, which is not the case for Zen mind: in fact, Zen intuition, that is, mu, is also the understanding of what you should do in the long term although often you cannot predict what exactly in the long term will happen; it also entails an exciting and rather extravagant way of living - if you have nothing against this, Zen practice will make you a wise fool: you'll know exactly what to do though without knowing why* - you're not a prophet - but on the other hand, you'll also know what determines the expediency of your actions.**

The ability to anticipate the future is also directly related to creativity. You cannot create anything

Thursday, June 21, 2018

There's one idea that I've been meaning to share

There's one idea that I've been meaning to share: there's one similarity of patterns that can indicate that consciousness is not only a product of natural selection but a manifestation of the very structure of life.
In a nutshell, once reading Richard Dawkins' The Extended Phenotype, it occurred to me that the three levels of life that Dawkins views there: genes, the organism, and group are suspiciously like Freudian the id, ego, and super-ego.
I hope there will be a post where you can see my explanations (in particular, why I think it's correct to identify the orgasm with the ego) and speculations on this matter.

Saturday, June 9, 2018

What Can the Possible Turn into?

I found it's curious that the state of mind of a practicing Zen Buddhist is akin to the state of a particle in a quantum superposition. Furthermore, there's also an interesting similarities between quantum effects and how some hierarchies are formed. I'd also recall that for quantum physicists, the idea that sometimes the future can affect the present (that is, that there's the oppositely directed time's arrow) is not at all new.

There were these two posts - Hypothesis: Res Potentia and Res Extensa Linked By Measurement and Is The Possible Ontologically Real?  - by Stuart Kauffman on 13.7 Cosmos & Culture blog in 2012 where he argues that 'perhaps the "possible" is ontologically real and the world consists of two realms, "Possibles" and "Actuals."'
Ontologically real in this case means that the future can affect the present.

'...in the famous double slit experiment yielding the famous interference bands, that any single photon simultaneously possibly did and possibly did not go through the left slit'
Let me remind you that the riddle here is that a single proton seems to 'know' that there's a second slit there; even if we assume that the proton passes through only one slit, it behaves as if it 'knows' that there's the second. Thus, if we accept the Kauffman's point of view that the photon in this case exists in the Possible, then its present state is determined not by its past but its future state.

'Possibles evade the Law of the Excluded Middle. So too does Feynman's claim about the photon possibly going through the left slit and simultaneously possibly not going through the left slit.'
Any impact on the particle, for example, by measurement, leads to the collapse of its wave function, as a result of which the state of uncertainty disappears.

Some believe that there's a problem here: if quantum superposition collapses to a fixed state, what happens to all the other possible states? In other words, at first glance, there's a loss of information then. But it looks like there's a satisfactory answer: the information in this case turns to the structure (to the ties, in Buddhist terminology) so when the wave function collapses, the particle becomes part of a larger system - see here - 'Because superposition becomes a shared property of the system and its environment, we can’t any longer see the superposition just by looking at the little part of that shared state corresponding to the original system.'*

It's interesting that the mind of a practicing Zen Buddhist seems to have the same pattern: there's a state of mind when you're free from your past (which means that you have the freedom to choose), and you can have this state as long as you remain independent.** Here it's appropriate to recall that another name for the Possible is the Potential (and in this case it is also equivalent to independence.) The analogy can be continued: as for a particle in a quantum superposition, for Zen mind the Law of the Excluded Middle doesn't matter; and this state can collapse for the same reason: if you somehow lost independence. Therefore, I believe, quantum effects can explain the work of any mind: it's just because very few can afford to be in quantum superposition, most can never realize how their minds work.

In the same way, it seems, can be explained the principles of the formation of hierarchies: the transition of independence (ie, the Potential) of the members to the structure of the hierarchy*** (the Actual.) Note that the formation of hierarchies in this case means an increase in entropy since the collapse of a wave function = an increase in entropy. I've never heard of any pandits thinking about independence as the Potential; in particular, I've never heard that economists somehow took into account independence while describing human behavior, although mergers and associated with it the loss of independence by the players is a universal pattern of development for almost any economic situation - is it so phantom what they lose? Meanwhile, when it coms to political decisions, it's not uncommon that a choice is made in favor of independence and sovereignty and to the detriment of economic expediency. So at least among elites, the understanding that independence is as real as economic benefit clearly exists. Think also about the fact that any large company at one time definitely overcame the temptation to give up its own project for the sake of short-term benefits.

Think also about this: when it comes to complex systems that exhibit some kind of order, everyone is inclined to look for a hierarchy at their base. But, at least, the mind is not the case: it's based on parity - Freud was a genius when he guessed that at the core the psyche lies conflict, that is, parity - this can be the reason why the self remains so elusive to physiologists: it's as if nowhere and everywhere. 
  
PS There is another idea that I've been wanting to share, and which I probably do in one of the following posts: it's about another similarity between two patterns that, on the one hand, is clearly evident, on the other, not noticed for some reasons.

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*As I understand it, the assumption that unrealized scenarios of the future turn into the structure makes it possible to avoid the need for the multiple universe theory.
 **The choice in this case doesn't take place between all possible states, but between the possibility to maintain one's independence and the possibility to lose it.
***In other words, we can think of human hierarchies as vampires feeding on the potential of their members.







Saturday, April 21, 2018

Zen Intuition: The Ability to Anticipate the Future

 See also Zen Intuition and Zen Intuition: The Ability to Perceive a Situation as a Whole

Zen intuition in particular manifests itself as the ability to anticipate the future (usually it's limited to what concerns you), and in this cese it enables you to understand a situation without thinking: you begin to understand what is happening around when you see what will happen next. But very often stupidity is the inability to see what will happen in the long run, which is not the case for Zen mind: in fact, Zen intuition, that is, mu, is also the understanding of what you should do in the long term although often you cannot predict what exactly in the long term will happen; it also entails an exciting and rather extravagant way of living - if you have nothing against this, Zen practice will make you a wise fool: you'll know exactly what to do though without knowing why* - you're not a prophet - but on the other hand, you'll also know what determines the expediency of your actions.**

The ability to anticipate the future is also directly related to creativity. You cannot create anything

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

This post is about the legacy of Stephen Hawking, which is ambiguous. On the one hand, of course, his pursuit of the truth gives him the right to be called a Buddhist to a much greater extent than the author of The Science Delusion, for example.
But on the other hand, now by default it is assumed that his choice - he preferred to continue to live after losing his independence and self-reliance - was absolutely right; and in this sense his glorification sends a wrong message. The truth is that independence and self-reliance are not only the ultimate goal, but also the ultimate truth: all the rest is their derivatives. No one can lecture others when it comes to life and death, but everyone should always have the choice, and in this way we will overcome the sad legacy of the Abrahamic religions.