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Topic: Repentance
tribo's photo
Sun 10/19/08 02:17 PM

How do we, all of humanity, wake up to the world of ALL agendas and begin to let go of judgment?
How can there not be judgement if one agenda is in direct opposition to another?

You can’t separate judgment from agenda. The agenda is what makes judgment necessary. Without the agenda, there would be no judgment. Without judgment, there is no way to determine if the agenda is progressing.

What we’re really talking about is the definitions of “good” and “bad”. Those terms are only meaningful when evaluated relative to some goal. “good” = “assisting in the attainment of a goal”, “bad” = “opposing the attainment of a goal”.

“Judgment” is the determination of goodness or badness. “Agenda” is the goal.

Letting go of judgment would be essentially abandoning any means of determining whether or not you were making progress toward the goal.
So... As humans we're meant to be judgmental.
Well, "judgemental” has a pretty negative connotation. What I had in mind when I used “judgment” was something more like “discernment” or “reasoning”, whereas “judgmental” implies something more like “intolerance”.

Where do we go from here?
Toward our goals.

Yeah, that sounds pretty glib, but what other answer could there be? Give up all goals? Everyone have exactly the same goals? Both of those options only lead to ... well ... some kind of an “everything is the same as everything else” state that is a fairly concise description of what I, personally, would consider to be a totally meaningless existence.
Sky what if the goal is like that of the natives to revere nature and family and spirit, with utmost respect to all and to what is best for the family[tribes] in all unselfishness? they really were brought up to share and not to consider anything really there own but only for there use as needed, for them this has worked for centuries, again i know they warred against each other and there definitely were agendas but even the n you see them coming together to form the six nations and others doing the same and it did get better for all and harmony reigned much more than dis-harmony, it may not be the perfect way but it so surpasses today's me me me generation agreed?
Yes, I definitely would agree with that. "Harmony in all things" is a personal goal of mine. (Although I am egregiously lacking in the achievement thereof. laugh)

(analogy incoming)

I think of the problem of "opposing goals" and SplendidLife's "all agendas" as being like team sports. Each team has opposing goals. Anythying that helps you win is "good". Anything that hinders you from winning is "bad". But those good and bad things only exist within the game. Outside of the game they are meaningless.

There can be four friends who go out to play basketball. They split up into a two-on-two game. They play rough and with full intention to win. But once the game is over, they are still friends. And in fact, they remained friends throughout the game, even though they were all trying their best to defeat the other team.

But here's where the real problem comes in.

If we take this to the level of professional sports, we can see huge amounts of animosity and prejudice based solely on where someone lives.

So the problem is not in playing the game, the problem is in identifying with the game.

In other words, if one thinks that there isnothing but the game, then one cannot but consider anything and everything that hinders his "winning of the game" to be bad. It is this inability to separate from the game that is the real cause of "insistence on being right".

Examples:

A person who believes that they will cease to exist if their team loses will be pretty fearful of their team losing and pretty adamant about doing whatever they can to get their team to win.

A person who believes they will cease to exist if their car stops running will be pretty fearful of their car stopping running and pretty adamant about keeping their car well maintained.

A person who believes they will cease to exist if their body stops running, will be pretty fearful of dying and adamant about staying alive. :wink:

Dang! Went off on a rant there.

Yes, having common goals (as the indians did) is crucial to harmony. And I personally favor harmony over disharmony - usually. :wink: happy



usually?


book of truths:

34) Outside of keeping the body sound, competitive sports are an unnecessary and destructive force upon society. They build class divisions, false pride, false accomplishments, give false hope, and breed at the same time both success and failure of something that should not even play apart in a society that is already in decline and has no need to worship or idolize fleeting and meaningless achievements that in the long run will only matter to the present audience - that has raised the participants up to a level of worship that no one or thing deserves. A perfect example of why and what we are and why the people of this country as well as others are in the state and condition they are in.


tribo's photo
Sun 10/19/08 02:23 PM
SKY, did you mean by "usually" except for those times when outside forces try to disrupt the way of life, like invaders bent on taking away that life you have?

SkyHook5652's photo
Sun 10/19/08 02:26 PM


How do we, all of humanity, wake up to the world of ALL agendas and begin to let go of judgment?
How can there not be judgement if one agenda is in direct opposition to another?

You can’t separate judgment from agenda. The agenda is what makes judgment necessary. Without the agenda, there would be no judgment. Without judgment, there is no way to determine if the agenda is progressing.

What we’re really talking about is the definitions of “good” and “bad”. Those terms are only meaningful when evaluated relative to some goal. “good” = “assisting in the attainment of a goal”, “bad” = “opposing the attainment of a goal”.

“Judgment” is the determination of goodness or badness. “Agenda” is the goal.

Letting go of judgment would be essentially abandoning any means of determining whether or not you were making progress toward the goal.
So... As humans we're meant to be judgmental.
Well, "judgemental” has a pretty negative connotation. What I had in mind when I used “judgment” was something more like “discernment” or “reasoning”, whereas “judgmental” implies something more like “intolerance”.

Where do we go from here?
Toward our goals.

Yeah, that sounds pretty glib, but what other answer could there be? Give up all goals? Everyone have exactly the same goals? Both of those options only lead to ... well ... some kind of an “everything is the same as everything else” state that is a fairly concise description of what I, personally, would consider to be a totally meaningless existence.



Sky what if the goal is like that of the natives to revere nature and family and spirit, with utmost respect to all and to what is best for the family [tribes] in all unselfishness? they really were brought up to share and not to consider anything really there own but only for there use as needed, for them this has worked for centuries.

Again i know they warred against each other and there definitely were agendas but even then you see them coming together to form the six nations and others doing the same, and it did get better for all and harmony reigned much more than dis-harmony, it may not be the perfect way but it so surpasses today's me me me generation agreed?
Actually, this deserves a little more than I gave it in my previous post.

As I understand it, the beauty of the Indians’ culture was that there was an almost universal agreement as to goals. It’s kind of like there was a single common super-goal – “harmony with nature” – and everything else was a sort of corollary of that super-goal. In that type of situation, just about everything aligns pretty well with just about everything else. People, plants, animals, and even inanimate objects, were all part of “nature” and so there was no room for conflicting goals. As a philosophy, I consider it to be just about ideal. It is very unfortunate that their way of life got buried by the demands of increasing population.

splendidlife's photo
Sun 10/19/08 02:32 PM


TLW:
personal agendas are set aside in order to try to reach the common good...
See... I believe this is completely within the realm of possibility.
I just want to point out that "the common good" must, by definition, encompass "the personal good" for all the people involved. So you can't really "set aside personal agenda" because "common good" is the collective "personal agendas".
Perhaps I should have pointed out what TLW said here:
The problem is that the human race is cursed with egoism
When one's ego is at the helm, all one can see through is their personal agenda.

True... we cannot erase personal agenda...

All for one and one for all leaves no one out.

Its when no one can see past personal agenda to the rest of the human race that the common good gets lost.
Exactly. It's when the personal agenda ignores and denies all other agendas that the problem arises. :smile:

See...

This is one of the extraordinary things about you, SkyHook.

You're more interested in finding the common ground than just the sport of expressing conflicting opinion.

It goes somewhere...

:smile:
Y'see now that's where you're wrong. :wink: laugh


Ha Ha! Real Funny! :tongue:

splendidlife's photo
Sun 10/19/08 02:38 PM

How do we, all of humanity, wake up to the world of ALL agendas and begin to let go of judgment?
How can there not be judgement if one agenda is in direct opposition to another?

You can’t separate judgment from agenda. The agenda is what makes judgment necessary. Without the agenda, there would be no judgment. Without judgment, there is no way to determine if the agenda is progressing.

What we’re really talking about is the definitions of “good” and “bad”. Those terms are only meaningful when evaluated relative to some goal. “good” = “assisting in the attainment of a goal”, “bad” = “opposing the attainment of a goal”.

“Judgment” is the determination of goodness or badness. “Agenda” is the goal.

Letting go of judgment would be essentially abandoning any means of determining whether or not you were making progress toward the goal.
So... As humans we're meant to be judgmental.
Well, "judgemental” has a pretty negative connotation. What I had in mind when I used “judgment” was something more like “discernment” or “reasoning”, whereas “judgmental” implies something more like “intolerance”.

Where do we go from here?
Toward our goals.

Yeah, that sounds pretty glib, but what other answer could there be? Give up all goals? Everyone have exactly the same goals? Both of those options only lead to ... well ... some kind of an “everything is the same as everything else” state that is a fairly concise description of what I, personally, would consider to be a totally meaningless existence.



We could call it evaluative instead of judgmental, if you'd like.

SkyHook5652's photo
Sun 10/19/08 02:51 PM
usually?

book of truths:

34) Outside of keeping the body sound, competitive sports are an unnecessary and destructive force upon society. They build class divisions, false pride, false accomplishments, give false hope, and breed at the same time both success and failure of something that should not even play apart in a society that is already in decline and has no need to worship or idolize fleeting and meaningless achievements that in the long run will only matter to the present audience - that has raised the participants up to a level of worship that no one or thing deserves. A perfect example of why and what we are and why the people of this country as well as others are in the state and condition they are in.
I'd have to reply to that by saying that It's not the sports that are the problem. It's identifying with the sport that is the problem.

If a fan identifies with a team to the point where he thinks that his well being is somehow diminished by "his team" losing, it's not the sport that is to blame. It's his own inability to separate himself from the game that is to blame.

Don't mistake the symptom for the cause.

SKY, did you mean by "usually" except for those times when outside forces try to disrupt the way of life, like invaders bent on taking away that life you have?
Actually, it was more about playing a good game of B-Ball with my buds. laugh What I had in mind was regarding personal choice. If given the choice, I will usually try to maintain harmony with my environment. But I also like to play basketball, so I play with friends and during that time, there may be some dishormoy. But in that case I choose to experience the disharmony. In the case of an attacker, I don't choose the disharmony. (Well...at least I'm not aware of choosing it. :tongue:)

tribo's photo
Sun 10/19/08 03:28 PM

usually?

book of truths:

34) Outside of keeping the body sound, competitive sports are an unnecessary and destructive force upon society. They build class divisions, false pride, false accomplishments, give false hope, and breed at the same time both success and failure of something that should not even play apart in a society that is already in decline and has no need to worship or idolize fleeting and meaningless achievements that in the long run will only matter to the present audience - that has raised the participants up to a level of worship that no one or thing deserves. A perfect example of why and what we are and why the people of this country as well as others are in the state and condition they are in.
I'd have to reply to that by saying that It's not the sports that are the problem. It's identifying with the sport that is the problem.

If a fan identifies with a team to the point where he thinks that his well being is somehow diminished by "his team" losing, it's not the sport that is to blame. It's his own inability to separate himself from the game that is to blame.

Don't mistake the symptom for the cause.

SKY, did you mean by "usually" except for those times when outside forces try to disrupt the way of life, like invaders bent on taking away that life you have?
Actually, it was more about playing a good game of B-Ball with my buds. laugh What I had in mind was regarding personal choice. If given the choice, I will usually try to maintain harmony with my environment. But I also like to play basketball, so I play with friends and during that time, there may be some dishormoy. But in that case I choose to experience the disharmony. In the case of an attacker, I don't choose the disharmony. (Well...at least I'm not aware of choosing it. :tongue:)





the inability to seperate oneself from the sport was a given, you and others maybe albe to do this to a degree, seeing it as i said as just good fun or fitness, but i was talking of organized sports if you read closely. and i gave credit for those who do it for fun or exercise also. out side of that i agree and its why it something in my bok of truths.

SkyHook5652's photo
Sun 10/19/08 03:32 PM
How do we, all of humanity, wake up to the world of ALL agendas and begin to let go of judgment?
How can there not be judgement if one agenda is in direct opposition to another?

You can’t separate judgment from agenda. The agenda is what makes judgment necessary. Without the agenda, there would be no judgment. Without judgment, there is no way to determine if the agenda is progressing.

What we’re really talking about is the definitions of “good” and “bad”. Those terms are only meaningful when evaluated relative to some goal. “good” = “assisting in the attainment of a goal”, “bad” = “opposing the attainment of a goal”.

“Judgment” is the determination of goodness or badness. “Agenda” is the goal.

Letting go of judgment would be essentially abandoning any means of determining whether or not you were making progress toward the goal.
So... As humans we're meant to be judgmental.
Well, "judgemental” has a pretty negative connotation. What I had in mind when I used “judgment” was something more like “discernment” or “reasoning”, whereas “judgmental” implies something more like “intolerance”.

Where do we go from here?
Toward our goals.

Yeah, that sounds pretty glib, but what other answer could there be? Give up all goals? Everyone have exactly the same goals? Both of those options only lead to ... well ... some kind of an “everything is the same as everything else” state that is a fairly concise description of what I, personally, would consider to be a totally meaningless existence.
We could call it evaluative instead of judgmental, if you'd like.
That works for me. (Judgmental works as well just as long as any negative connotations are left out of the definition - which is really all I wanted to do.) happy

So I would say yes. As Humans we are meant to be evaluative (or discerning or reasoning or even discriminating or judgemental in a non-prejudiced sense). It is that capability for evaluation and judgement that has enabled all the great achievements of man. (And it is our blindness in the area of ethics that has made us simultaneously the most potentially dangerous and destructive factor in the survival of the entire planet.)

splendidlife's photo
Sun 10/19/08 03:51 PM
Edited by splendidlife on Sun 10/19/08 03:56 PM

How do we, all of humanity, wake up to the world of ALL agendas and begin to let go of judgment?
How can there not be judgement if one agenda is in direct opposition to another?

You can’t separate judgment from agenda. The agenda is what makes judgment necessary. Without the agenda, there would be no judgment. Without judgment, there is no way to determine if the agenda is progressing.

What we’re really talking about is the definitions of “good” and “bad”. Those terms are only meaningful when evaluated relative to some goal. “good” = “assisting in the attainment of a goal”, “bad” = “opposing the attainment of a goal”.

“Judgment” is the determination of goodness or badness. “Agenda” is the goal.

Letting go of judgment would be essentially abandoning any means of determining whether or not you were making progress toward the goal.
So... As humans we're meant to be judgmental.
Well, "judgemental” has a pretty negative connotation. What I had in mind when I used “judgment” was something more like “discernment” or “reasoning”, whereas “judgmental” implies something more like “intolerance”.

Where do we go from here?
Toward our goals.

Yeah, that sounds pretty glib, but what other answer could there be? Give up all goals? Everyone have exactly the same goals? Both of those options only lead to ... well ... some kind of an “everything is the same as everything else” state that is a fairly concise description of what I, personally, would consider to be a totally meaningless existence.
We could call it evaluative instead of judgmental, if you'd like.
That works for me. (Judgmental works as well just as long as any negative connotations are left out of the definition - which is really all I wanted to do.) happy

So I would say yes. As Humans we are meant to be evaluative (or discerning or reasoning or even discriminating or judgemental in a non-prejudiced sense). It is that capability for evaluation and judgement that has enabled all the great achievements of man. (And it is our blindness in the area of ethics that has made us simultaneously the most potentially dangerous and destructive factor in the survival of the entire planet.)


And describing it as pertaining to ethics rather than righteousness, takes the weight off of judgment and points to a more evaluative approach. Wow... this might actually make it do-able to include even the non-religious. Imagine that!
:wink:

SkyHook5652's photo
Sun 10/19/08 06:51 PM
Edited by SkyHook5652 on Sun 10/19/08 06:53 PM
usually?
book of truths:
34) Outside of keeping the body sound, competitive sports are an unnecessary and destructive force upon society. They build class divisions, false pride, false accomplishments, give false hope, and breed at the same time both success and failure of something that should not even play a part in a society that is already in decline and has no need to worship or idolize fleeting and meaningless achievements that in the long run will only matter to the present audience - that has raised the participants up to a level of worship that no one or thing deserves. A perfect example of why and what we are and why the people of this country as well as others are in the state and condition they are in.
I'd have to reply to that by saying that It's not the sports that are the problem. It's identifying with the sport that is the problem.

If a fan identifies with a team to the point where he thinks that his well being is somehow diminished by "his team" losing, it's not the sport that is to blame. It's his own inability to separate himself from the game that is to blame.

Don't mistake the symptom for the cause.

SKY, did you mean by "usually" except for those times when outside forces try to disrupt the way of life, like invaders bent on taking away that life you have?
Actually, it was more about playing a good game of B-Ball with my buds. laugh What I had in mind was regarding personal choice. If given the choice, I will usually try to maintain harmony with my environment. But I also like to play basketball, so I play with friends and during that time, there may be some dishormoy. But in that case I choose to experience the disharmony. In the case of an attacker, I don't choose the disharmony. (Well...at least I'm not aware of choosing it. :tongue:)
the inability to seperate oneself from the sport was a given, you and others maybe albe to do this to a degree, seeing it as i said as just good fun or fitness, but i was talking of organized sports if you read closely. and i gave credit for those who do it for fun or exercise also. out side of that i agree and its why it something in my bok of truths.
Yes, I understand that you were referring to organized sports and that that label would apply to anything from world-wide things like the Olympics, down to the intra-class games at a grade school. But I didn't realize that "the inability to separate oneself from the sport was a given". My only aim was to clarify that fact and how it related to the given scenario. happy

I realize we're going far afield of the OP, but I'm wondering if you feel that it is even possible to "cure" the root cause of the problem. That is, to actually rehabilitate one's ability to make that separation/differentiation at will?

tribo's photo
Sun 10/19/08 09:39 PM

usually?
book of truths:
34) Outside of keeping the body sound, competitive sports are an unnecessary and destructive force upon society. They build class divisions, false pride, false accomplishments, give false hope, and breed at the same time both success and failure of something that should not even play a part in a society that is already in decline and has no need to worship or idolize fleeting and meaningless achievements that in the long run will only matter to the present audience - that has raised the participants up to a level of worship that no one or thing deserves. A perfect example of why and what we are and why the people of this country as well as others are in the state and condition they are in.
I'd have to reply to that by saying that It's not the sports that are the problem. It's identifying with the sport that is the problem.

If a fan identifies with a team to the point where he thinks that his well being is somehow diminished by "his team" losing, it's not the sport that is to blame. It's his own inability to separate himself from the game that is to blame.

Don't mistake the symptom for the cause.

SKY, did you mean by "usually" except for those times when outside forces try to disrupt the way of life, like invaders bent on taking away that life you have?
Actually, it was more about playing a good game of B-Ball with my buds. laugh What I had in mind was regarding personal choice. If given the choice, I will usually try to maintain harmony with my environment. But I also like to play basketball, so I play with friends and during that time, there may be some dishormoy. But in that case I choose to experience the disharmony. In the case of an attacker, I don't choose the disharmony. (Well...at least I'm not aware of choosing it. :tongue:)
the inability to seperate oneself from the sport was a given, you and others maybe albe to do this to a degree, seeing it as i said as just good fun or fitness, but i was talking of organized sports if you read closely. and i gave credit for those who do it for fun or exercise also. out side of that i agree and its why it something in my bok of truths.
Yes, I understand that you were referring to organized sports and that that label would apply to anything from world-wide things like the Olympics, down to the intra-class games at a grade school. But I didn't realize that "the inability to separate oneself from the sport was a given". My only aim was to clarify that fact and how it related to the given scenario. happy

I realize we're going far afield of the OP, but I'm wondering if you feel that it is even possible to "cure" the root cause of the problem. That is, to actually rehabilitate one's ability to make that separation/differentiation at will?


how did the romans cure themselves of the arena sports?

SkyHook5652's photo
Sun 10/19/08 10:51 PM
I realize we're going far afield of the OP, but I'm wondering if you feel that it is even possible to "cure" the root cause of the problem. That is, to actually rehabilitate one's ability to make that separation/differentiation at will?
how did the romans cure themselves of the arena sports?
I'm not a student of the Romans and I'm too lazy to do the research, so I'll just take a wild stab - complete collapse of the entire Roman empire?

If that's the case then we really need to come up with another plan!

Decpitation strikes me as a pretty poor cure for a headache.:laughing:

splendidlife's photo
Mon 10/20/08 08:31 AM

I realize we're going far afield of the OP, but I'm wondering if you feel that it is even possible to "cure" the root cause of the problem. That is, to actually rehabilitate one's ability to make that separation/differentiation at will?
how did the romans cure themselves of the arena sports?
I'm not a student of the Romans and I'm too lazy to do the research, so I'll just take a wild stab - complete collapse of the entire Roman empire?

If that's the case then we really need to come up with another plan!

Decpitation strikes me as a pretty poor cure for a headache.:laughing:


Have you heard of Post-Decapitation Phantom Pain?

SkyHook5652's photo
Mon 10/20/08 08:47 AM
I realize we're going far afield of the OP, but I'm wondering if you feel that it is even possible to "cure" the root cause of the problem. That is, to actually rehabilitate one's ability to make that separation/differentiation at will?
how did the romans cure themselves of the arena sports?
I'm not a student of the Romans and I'm too lazy to do the research, so I'll just take a wild stab - complete collapse of the entire Roman empire?

If that's the case then we really need to come up with another plan!

Decpitation strikes me as a pretty poor cure for a headache.:laughing:
Have you heard of Post-Decapitation Phantom Pain?
Nope, never heard of that one. I guess it means that even decapitation won't cure the headache, huh? Or maybe it just trades a headache for a pain-in-the-neck? :laughing:

no photo
Mon 10/20/08 09:04 AM
I may have had my head decapitated via a guillotine in a past life. I remember it because I had a very vivid dream about it.

There was a crowd of people watching the executions. The guillotine was standing next to a building. In front of it there was a small wall, looked like metal, that caught the head and prevented it from rolling out into the crowd. There was a metal ramp for the head to roll down.

I was asked if I had any last words. My last words were: "No, lets just get this over with." The horror of the scene was not one that I wanted to linger in.

The blade came down and hit the back of my neck. There was a very brief sharp pain. My head rolled down the plank. My conscious awareness remained with the head.

I was aware momentarily that my head was not attached to my body. I could still see out of my eyes. For a moment I wondered if and when I would die. I did not want to remain attached to a severed head.

Then I rose from the head and viewed the scene from above it and breathed a sigh of relief. I am free.

JB


splendidlife's photo
Mon 10/20/08 09:34 AM
Edited by splendidlife on Mon 10/20/08 09:34 AM

I may have had my head decapitated via a guillotine in a past life. I remember it because I had a very vivid dream about it.

There was a crowd of people watching the executions. The guillotine was standing next to a building. In front of it there was a small wall, looked like metal, that caught the head and prevented it from rolling out into the crowd. There was a metal ramp for the head to roll down.

I was asked if I had any last words. My last words were: "No, lets just get this over with." The horror of the scene was not one that I wanted to linger in.

The blade came down and hit the back of my neck. There was a very brief sharp pain. My head rolled down the plank. My conscious awareness remained with the head.

I was aware momentarily that my head was not attached to my body. I could still see out of my eyes. For a moment I wondered if and when I would die. I did not want to remain attached to a severed head.

Then I rose from the head and viewed the scene from above it and breathed a sigh of relief. I am free.

JB




Wow!

That's an incredible opening scene for a dark comedy!

JB...

I see huge potential for you to be a fantastic screen writer.

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