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#46 (permalink) | |
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Lest we forget
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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Tao |
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#47 (permalink) | |
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Why do cows say MU?
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Pacific Ring of Fire
Posts: 1,852
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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#48 (permalink) |
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Wannabe Farmer
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Earth
Posts: 2,076
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
Is the uprising in Tibet and China about Buddhism? Is it about culture? Or is it about something more basic than both of those: food?
The most dramatic change on the landscape is neither the recent failure of Bear Stearns nor the dramatic action taken by the Fed in response to it. The most important development on the global economic landscape is that the inflation problem in China is now so great that it is giving rise to social unrest on a scale that requires a military response.That is an excerpt form a report that you can buy online for fourteen british pounds: mi2g If anyone decides to buy it (I won't because I have to save my money for food), please give us a summary. Thanx. |
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#49 (permalink) | |
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Why do cows say MU?
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Pacific Ring of Fire
Posts: 1,852
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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Since there is hostility among the Han Chinese towards the Tibetans, could this move by the Chinese government be a preemptive move to make possible future economic protests (due to inflation) 'distasteful' to the majority Han Chinese citizens? (By associating them with what the 'distasteful Tibetans' do?) From Investor's Business Daily: Investors In Chinese Stocks Eye Tibet |
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#50 (permalink) |
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Why do cows say MU?
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Pacific Ring of Fire
Posts: 1,852
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
You know, Pathless, your angle becomes very interesting when you bring in the recent protests in Burma for comparison. {Which, incidentally, were spurned by the junta doubling fuel prices so they could sell more of the natural gas resources to other countries...}
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#51 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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Between Here and There
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: A Bit North of Lovely Seattle
Posts: 1,544
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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It is not like I first read about agape and then said, "Oh, now I can be compassionate!" Compassion started growing in me when I was but a small child and had no way to express that which was experienced. Only later did I find the word agape, which mostly matched what I experienced. I had similar experiences for other such experiences as multiverse, infinite, etc. First the experience and the lack of being able to express *at all* that experience to others, then the learning of a word or concept that helped me to express it, though imperfectly. Maybe I'm an oddball case, but it does happen. Quote:
I suspect some other languages had the equivalent. However, if there are no words to express an experience or state of consciousness, that does not mean it does not exist. We invent words to express what we experience. If it were otherwise, our own (first) language would so dominate our experience of the world, we could not adequately learn another culture or language. However, people do this all the time. So while language may influence our later experience, it is not the root cause of it. Quote:
Well, that is just not the case. We can define what we mean by affection and the standards of measure by which we decide if a behavior qualifies or not. Affection as a behavior is certainly measurable. Now, on the other hand, I distinctly said that compassion (as a state of consciousness) is not the same thing as affection, nor can it necessarily be related in a way that can be testable. You were the only who initially brought up the arguments about affection, related to compassion. I pointed out that the two were not equivalent in my understanding, but that the evidence for affectionate behavior among species was available. Quote:
Sitting in the same room together and allowing co-existence is one thing. A dog or cat nursing baby squirrels is another. A blind horse being led by a dog or vice versa is another. A bird taking care of a kitten feeding it worms and keeping it off the highway is another. None of those actions is co-existence, but rather something quite beyond it. You can say "that's not affection" but then I would say, define what affection is (and it's measurable behavioral standards) and what you define these other behaviors as. Speaking in vague terms makes everything unscientific and we can go 'round all day. Quote:
That is not true, either. Cats attack for fun sometimes. My cat used to love to "play" with the field mice she found and she never ate one of her kills. However, overall humans are a rare type of animal that seems to enjoy inflicting suffering more than other types of animals. Quote:
Doesn't seem to stop other such cases from occurring and going in the opposite direction, resulting in injury. Animal behavior is varied just as our own is. In the vast majority of cases, you can find evidence of certain behaviors and against certain behaviors. Individual variation is the name of the game. Quote:
But aren't humans just another type of animal? I mean, really, why put us in a different category? It is a matter of degree, not categorical difference. Some primates (the apes, for the most part) are very much like humans. Other types of primates (prosimians) are very much like intelligent rodents. In between, monkeys range the gamut from pretty complicated and ape-like in behavior to pretty boring and animal-like. It's a range. Quote:
As for the research on emotion and biology, it doesn't matter if you buy into it. Science is science, and the way the body works is how it works. Apparently, you do not "buy into" gravity as a law of physics but rather just a construct, too. But until I see someone free themselves from gravity and just float away, I'll stick with the science. It's similar to all the conservative Christians that don't "buy into" evolution. People regularly distrust scientific findings or refuse them because they don't easily integrate into their current worldview. I just throw out the findings I have had or have read in peer-reviewed journals and books by other, recent, well-respected scientists. If someone doesn't want to "buy into" it, it doesn't much matter in the long run. It's their perogative. Quote:
If there is no justification, the statement is belief but does not stand up to scientific methodology. Which is OK. But then we're talking apples and oranges. I am exploring human cognition, perception, and culture (and animal behavior) through the lens of testable, observable stuff, separating out what falls outside this bucket (compassion, states of consciousness, etc.) and you are exploring these things through belief systems and philosophy. Quote:
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A beansprout sprouts in the correct conditions whether we believe it will or not, have been taught it will or not, indeed, whether we even acknowledge it or not. We could create better conditions to help the beansprout to grow, but this will occur in some places in the world whether we are involved or not. Culture has nothing to do with the process, with the actuality. Only with one's perception of that process. There is the "thing" and then our perception/interpretation of it. That said, I don't think love is that much like a beansprout, but I'll work with the analogies I'm given. Quote:
![]() You seem to be saying that all natural laws and science are simply conditioned ideas and no reality or laws exist at all. Well, you can think that. But I don't see you walking off a cliff to prove that theory, either. Quote:
Is this based on my life (social, environmental, and otherwise)? Of course. But that does not make it all *conditioned.* Just because we are interacting within a system, does not mean we are made automatons by the system. I am not saying everyone (or anyone) is not conditioned. I am saying that reality is what is beyond the conditioning. It is a black box none of us can fully get into, but we can get closer by examining our own conditioning. But to say that nothing resides beyond the conditioning is just an excuse to avoid self-examination. And it is simply untrue. People were conditioned to think the world was flat. But someone eventually broke free of the conditioning in some small way, looked at the real evidence beyond the fog of culture, and said, "Hey, but it seems round!" I never railed against your argument that conditioning happens to everyone. What I am saying is that 1) it's not about reward/punishment all the time and 2) conditioning is not all there is, or no one would ever generate something new that is against their conditioning (which, to the contrary, people do all the time). |
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#52 (permalink) | ||||||||
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Between Here and There
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: A Bit North of Lovely Seattle
Posts: 1,544
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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I feel that yes, everyone is "stuck in conditioning", but, rather than believe there is no escape I say there is... Quote:
However, escaping one conditioning presents us with others. So, simply put, I tend to think it best that I am vigilant to examine my own conditioning and bounce it off the evidence and others' interpretations of that evidence. Quote:
You say prayers, so you are being rewarded even though you think you're not. Which is why you say prayers... You claim to know motivation by action, and then that motivation begets action and action is evidence of motivation. It's just not a reasonable or logical argument at all. Quote:
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That we can do this, means that conditioning is a veil between us and reality, not reality itself. Quote:
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#54 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: liverpool, the 2008 winners of the capital of culture, england
Posts: 974
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
what I mean, Tao, is...
if the earth was a game, then physics, and concepts such as gravity would be the rules... now, the rules may hold in a general, every-day game, but the rules themselves are not true- they are just parameters for the game. Twenty years ago people said- nothing could travel faster than the speed of light. For the past ten years, some scientists have been experimenting with teleportation. So far, they have managed to teleport light. Or rather, they can make light travel faster than the speed of light... curious... |
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#55 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: liverpool, the 2008 winners of the capital of culture, england
Posts: 974
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
Path-of-one.. I do not think that you first read the word agape, and then decided to be compassionate- you are taking me far too literally, I think...
what I mean is, it is impossible for compassion to spring from the ground without first being fed and watered first... without being presented with it, as an option, you would not have been able to adopt it for yourself... Affection as a behaviour is not measurable- we measure instead behaviours which we believe to represent affection... it is not the same thing at all.. In buddhism, there is a concept called... pratityasamutpada... you will have come across it as the 12 membered dependent arising, or the wheel of birth and death... the 12 limbs comprise the individual- name and form, circumstances of birth, etc, all of which are headed by consciousness... within consciousness, there are two seperate types- the cause consciousness, and the effect consciousness... this explains that the consciousness is composed of these two main strains- motivations- the cause consciousness, and conditioning mechanisms- the effect consciousness... these two things make the consciousness, and the consciousness is part of the 12 limbs. So, thats where I get this idea from... I did not mean for you to think I thought the beansprout was a conditioned response... what I meant for you to see via my poor anology was... we might think the cause of a beansprout/compassion relies on one thing (the seed/self), but really, there needs to be more than just a seed... or rather... you would not be able to be compassionate if you did not know what it was- i.e., if you had not seen such behaviours demonstrated, or upheld as admirable qualities of man... without the previous "words" from others, without witnessing their actions, you would not know what to do, or even if it existed... |
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#57 (permalink) | ||||||
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Between Here and There
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: A Bit North of Lovely Seattle
Posts: 1,544
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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We differ on that point. I believe that the Divine is perfectly capable by Itself of directly interacting with a human being, of revealing one's essence. I don't think that's the only way to compassion, but one of many ways. Frequently, human demonstration and ethics are not sufficient to fully develop compassion as well. These may begin with human demonstration (or inspiration from the natural world) and fully develop in mysticism, which is to say, direct Divine revelation or experience. This is where our religious differences come into play, because you would deny such experience as real (from what I gather), but as such experience is mine (and is the biggest cause of the growth of love for all in me), I cannot deny it. Quote:
Of course, it all begs the question... the first human to attain compassion... how did it happen? If it is all conditioned by other humans? In my worldview (upheld by my own experience), the Divine is the source of compassion, and there are myriad ways this is awakened in an individual. For some, it is through social conditioning and human inspiration. For others, through the natural world and the feeling of Wholeness it generates. For still others, direct mystical experience. Any can mesh with the others, and there may well be pathways I am missing. But to say it all is from social conditioning... this does not fit with my own life's experience. This is also the case with other concepts that are part of states of consciousness, and particularly some of the experience of trance states. I first experienced what infinity was before I even knew such a concept was named. It was several years between the experience and the social conditioning that allowed me to express the experience. Now, I cannot think of a way "infinity" was demonstrated to a kid under the age of 9, when the concept had not been discussed or introduced in math. Similarly, the experience of "emptiness" or "no-thought." |
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#58 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 484
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
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#59 (permalink) |
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here and now
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 2,785
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
This harrowing documentary was on British TV last night. “To make this film, Tibetan exile Tash Despa returns to the homeland he risked his life to escape 11 years ago, to carry out secret filming with award-winning, Bafta-nominated director Jezza Neumann (Dispatches Special: China's Stolen Children). Risking imprisonment and deportation, he uncovers evidence of the "cultural genocide" described by the Dalai Lama. He finds the nomadic way of life being forcefully wiped out as native Tibetans are stripped of their land and livestock and are being resettled in concrete camps. Tibet reveals the regime of terror which dominates daily life and makes freedom of expression impossible. Tash meets victims of arbitrary arrests, detention, torture and "disappearances" and uncovers evidence of enforced sterilisations on ethnic Tibetan women. He sees for himself the impact of the enormous military and police presence in the region, and the hunger and hardship being endured by many Tibetans, and hears warnings of the uprising taking place across the provinces now.” Channel 4 - News - Dispatches - Undercover in Tibet s. |
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#60 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: liverpool, the 2008 winners of the capital of culture, england
Posts: 974
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Re: Tibetan Uprising
I understand you Path... but from my point of view I would say that this thought you have, of the divine, and how it manifests, is another product- a way of looking at things which has been presented to you- but, as you point out, by the same token, my opinion is much the same- not original, but presented to me, also...
it's not that I am trying to deny your experience has validity, but rather, I claim it to be "un-original"... that isn't meant to be disparaging- just a further example, for me, of how you have been presented with a specific world-view and have adopted it for yourself... (just like me and mine...) .... Snoopy... I also watched "undercover in Tibet"... at the same time, I watched a documentary series called... "a year in Tibet"... ...last night, number four out of five, a family group of five people; four men and a girl, decided to leave town to look for jobs elsewhere... their mum wrapped katas around their necks, and bid them goodbye- in much the same way as Mrs Pole has recently said goodbye to her well wrapped up Polish sons and a daughter, who have similarly gone "far away" to look for work and are living in my street, right now... due to economic neccesity... an abbot of a monastery was making cages and installing security cameras around his place- he'd been broken into a few times, recently... you know, just like the priest down my street has... by the junkies... ...another "scene" involved the building of a school, a tibetan school, just for tibetan kids, so they would not have to attend state school and be indoctrinated... the woman running the show was a "party" official... In "A year in Tibet" I saw people performing prostrations for the Buddha right next to Chinese police guards... neither of them seemed to resent the others' presence... am I to make the assumption that this series was Pro-China propaganda? The documentary "undercover in tibet" was hardly harrowing- I was hoping for some blood and guts, at least... but no! Only two people would speak to "Tash"... one had been sterlised-or so they said, and the other had had his hands whipped by the police...so he said... ...look how we use words to make our point seem more valid... Snoopy says... “To make this film, Tibetan exile Tash Despa returns to the homeland he risked his life to escape 11 years ago, to carry out secret filming with award-winning, Bafta-nominated director Jezza Neumann (Dispatches Special: China's Stolen Children). Risking imprisonment and deportation, he uncovers evidence of the "cultural genocide" described by the Dalai Lama. He finds the nomadic way of life being forcefully wiped out as native Tibetans are stripped of their land and livestock and are being resettled in concrete camps. Tibet reveals the regime of terror which dominates daily life and makes freedom of expression impossible. Tash meets victims of arbitrary arrests, detention, torture and "disappearances" and uncovers evidence of enforced sterilisations on ethnic Tibetan women. He sees for himself the impact of the enormous military and police presence in the region, and the hunger and hardship being endured by many Tibetans, and hears warnings of the uprising taking place across the provinces now.” ...risked his life to escape... emotive... so risky, and so dodgy, that he returned, with his secret cameras... such a brave boy...let's not forget the Bafta nominated director- woo! big licks- it all must be true then, right? I mean, this director is so cool... (he also did the Dispatches Special: China's Stolen Children- so we know he likes "that" kind of thing... ). Tashi finds the nomadic way of life being forcefully wiped out... ah, right...so forcefully that the issue never arose in "a year in tibet"... nomads? stripped of their lands... what, to feed the people? whats wrong with that? ...resettled in concrete camps (what, like they're living in sink estates...? like we do, the poor underclass of Britain, you mean? I don't see anyone waving banners for us...) "Tibet" reveals the "regime of terror" which "dominates daily life" and makes "freedom of expression impossible" (yet scroll up and look at "a year in tibet", and our tibetan woman and our chinese policeman coexisting in the same space without coming to blows...should I make the assumption that this is a rare occurance, and a show for the cameras..?) Tash meets victims of "arbitrary arrests, detention, torture and "disappearances" and uncovers evidence of enforced sterilisations on ethnic Tibetan women. and I can go along my road and knock on a few doors and find the same thing... arbitary arrests, detention, torture and dissapearances... I can only pray for enforced sterilisation happenning to the natives where I live... A lack of ASBO louts and third-generation welfare claimants spawning more teenage "hoody" peasants? I pray for these things to happen here... |
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