THE POTENTIAL AND ELEMENTS OF BEING

ANIL MITRA PHD, COPYRIGHT © 2001 REFORMATTED May 2003

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Document status: May 16, 2003

Essential content absorbed to and no further action needed for Journey in Being; maintained out of interest


CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION: A JOURNEY IN VISION AND BEING

To Anyone Who Asks “What Do I Want From Life?”

BEING AND THE ELEMENTS OF BEING THE PHASES

1     What do I want from life?

2     What is the most that an individual can do, become?

3     What are the potentials and limits of being itself ... and how much of that is open to human being?

4     What is being?

5     Knowledge and Language

6     How do I get “there”?

7     The Elements of Being


INTRODUCTION: A JOURNEY IN VISION AND BEING

I want to present a journey in vision and in being. It is my journey. I share it because I have something to say - a new vision of being and of human possibility. Any truly new and significant idea or vision must, in the beginning, I think, rest upon tradition. I have learnt much from the modern western tradition, from the traditions of the east and from some native traditions. However, to be new, it is necessary to go beyond learning to discovery and beyond discovery into a journey. The process is essentially personal and communal: this presentation is a sharing and an invitation to others to join in what I have learned, to undertake their own path, to make their own contribution, to share and work together

I call my vision “new” but, perhaps it is not - perhaps all discovery is rediscovery. That may be true. However, rediscovery is essential - is renewal. Also, every path of rediscovery - whether that of an individual, a civilization or more - finds its own colorful, perhaps unique, expression

Where does a journey of becoming begin? Does it begin with awareness, with seeking, with both...? So as to address the interest of the reader, I will begin the description with a question:

To Anyone Who Asks

“What Do I Want From Life?”

...... especially

“What is the Most I can Know, Do or Become?”

...... or

“What Are the Possibilities and Nature of Being?”

 

 

...and to anyone who would undertake

An Exploration or Journey in Being

I use my process, my journey as an example - as a way to communicate, to share. I’m still in the process - there are many paths. I have come to realize that a person can do, become much more than I thought, much more than is commonly thought or even imagined. What is the source of this realization? It is a combination of experience and reflection. It is in the experience of my journey... in coming to places previously unknown and unimagined; and it is in reflection on the experience and on the nature of what is real. In reflection on what is real I have, naturally, drawn on the common tradition and that includes the traditions of science and philosophy. The journey is personal; the traditions are a beginning guide to what is possible - to the universal

It is a process, a journey, not a lesson - not one step. Each significant step results in a new vision, an unimagined place. The path that the journey traces is not known - cannot be known - in advance. The journey is not one of awareness or vision alone; it is necessary to commit my being, to allow for fundamental and unforeseen change. Some steps begin with an idea or a feeling which later becomes part of who I am; other steps begin in the dark and lead slowly to light. In the early stages my journey was not designed but, then, I discovered an approach to the process. Full design is not desired or even possible. Rather, the approach includes the growth of a feeling for when to flow and when and what to anticipate. The approach is not something I learned somewhere else [of course there are influences] but in the process itself - by doing and reflecting. This means that the process is open to all individuals

This version of The Potential of Being... and the Elements of Being is an outline for the general reader. Elaboration will be provided later. I have attempted to focus on the essentials. I have attempted to keep technical words and details to a minimum - these will be incorporated later by means of references and hyperlinks. However, the reading will not be easy for everyone. It should take time to absorb the ideas. This is because I have attempted to present a new vision or concept of being, knowledge and the universe - and of human possibility in that universe

About living in the moment - small things are important, necessary. Without that the big picture is empty. Moments color the process. I have had joy, pain - in life, in the process. I’m not saying that pain, “sacrifice” is necessary but I have not tried too hard to avoid them. The process itself - being involved in the process, learning about it - is necessary

There is a logic to parts of the process, to developing the concept of being, that is very neat. I have become amazed at what can be known through reasoning that starts with what is commonly known to be true. The reasoning could start with ideas from esoteric disciplines such as those in modern science and philosophy or in ancient religion. However, this is not necessary or even desired. It can be seen to be unnecessary when we remember that the roots of esoteric knowledge are in what is immediately visible. It is not desired because what is immediately visible is the firmest and the most meaningful foundation. When I provide the logic I will start with common knowledge and provide support and elaboration from the esoteric disciplines. “What is common knowledge?” - that is not clearly defined and we should be prepared to question its meaning while answering the question

There is a “toolkit” of ideas that I have learned from various places, traditions and disciplines. It is handy, a way to build new ideas from old. I have learnt about and tried to cover significant portions of human thought, concepts and experiments in being. A useful toolkit has an arrangement - this toolkit is organized by the concept of being that I have developed... and by the way to realization of the potential of being. There are phases to the process - they interact and, so, do not occur in a linear progression. Although the following phases are not a linear progression in time they are one - and only one - logical progression that illuminates the answer to the question “What do I want from life?”

 

BEING AND THE ELEMENTS OF BEING
THE Phases

 

1       What do I want from life?

Is it all doing? It is also becoming, being

2       What is the most that an individual can do, become?

A variety of ways and degrees

How can I even begin to answer the question “What is the most that an individual can do or become?” This can be written as two questions:

3       What are the potentials and limits of being itself
... and how much of that is open to human being?

In order to answer this it is necessary to know:

4       What is being?

Being has common and technical meanings. In common, everyday meaning a being is an entity, a thing - something that is. The technical meaning is a reflection on the everyday meaning: what is it about an entity that makes it exist, what is its being? This question is abstract but important - it is necessary to understand the meaning of being as part of knowing what are its potentials and limits. I will make this concept of being accessible

5       Knowledge and Language

How does one know what is claimed in the working out of the phases? What is knowledge - and how this is question important?

What I want to show is that knowledge is not only what one has or does, it is what one is - it is a part of being

“What is knowledge?” is important - it determines whether we accept claims, especially claims about being and its possibilities, as valid. But how can that be? It is a new conception, not only of how to “test” for knowledge but, also, what is knowledge

...and, how can that be? How can someone say that what knowledge is according to the tradition is wrong? The response is that I do not say that the tradition is wrong. There are two ways in which the tradition says something about what knowledge is. First, consider various writers analyzing knowledge. There are many opinions here. Even the good ones are not in agreement. One reason for lack of agreement is that the analyses are incomplete. Another is that some disagreement is not real disagreement but looking at a complex phenomenon with many aspects from different perspectives. You can focus on why a knowledge claim is correct, you can focus on how people do research, you can focus on the nature of knowledge, and you can focus on individual knowledge claims or on systems of knowledge or programs of research, or you can focus on social or economic aspects of knowledge... If these different aspects or perspectives are viewed as the essence of knowledge, as may be expected from an excited researcher, then they may seem to be in conflict. Second, the tradition of knowledge itself “speaks” - how the knowledge is come by, how it is used, how it fits into the growth and development of society, of civilization

I am not saying that any of that is wrong. Instead, I am saying that there are many ways in which our usual perspectives on knowledge are limited. The problem, then, is not of overcoming those perspectives - they have validity - but of finding the broadest perspectives and understanding and placing the limited perspectives in terms of the broader ones. For example: day to day vs. long periods of time; knowledge as settled vs. knowledge as essentially transitional; knowledge as being about the world vs. knowledge as having a function... Is knowledge “just a set of words or pictures in one’s head” or is it something that is organically rooted in the being of the organism, and so of the universe itself? That is important for, then, it is important to act, to live out bold beliefs because knowledge itself is something that comes before an understanding of what it is. In other words, since our knowledge of “what is knowledge” is open to error and incompleteness we should not be too worried about criticism and “correctness”

In consideration of the nature of knowledge and being, and of the nature of the individual we are led to consider the relation between the limits of being and of human being. If individual being is identical with being, then the limits of individual being are those of being itself

Language is effective in expressing, recording, generalizing, arguing or deriving, communicating and using knowledge by description. Offshoots of language such as mathematics, when applicable, are especially effective

A preliminary to effectively understanding the way language is used in knowledge is to understand meaning

A key to the broader concept of knowledge is to recognize other, more inclusive, kinds - kinds that do not necessarily use language

Knowledge by description - using symbol systems such as language, logic and mathematics - is an indirect and somewhat flat form of knowledge... and in this is its strength and weakness and its sometimes seeming inauthenticity. More direct forms are experience and perception; and, even more direct, the form of an organism that is adapted to the environment. This is an approach to seeing how knowledge is bound into the fabric of the organism, and to a broader concept of knowledge. The different forms of knowledge are not in opposition but function together as a continuum. Language provides a “picture” of what is depicted - so as not to enter any of the modern debates about the faithfulness of the pictures of mind and language, I note that the word picture may be used metaphorically. A sentence may express a fact about the world - this kind of sentence is a proposition or expresses a proposition. The ability of a sentence to express and communicate a fact derives from - at least - two sources: first, that the components of the sentence may be symbols for parts, components of the world - objects, processes, relationships... - and, second, that the structures of [systems of] sentences may represent structures and processes in the world. [It is not being said that every word or linguistic construction refers to something - or that such reference is the entire function of language; it should be noted, also, that viewing language as a function is not the only way to understand language - we can also look at a system of communicating individuals and ask whether the structure of their actions and interactions represents an adaptation of the group to the environment.] An individual may think, also, in pictures and this may be more faithful, more lively, more direct than expression through language which may be seen as linear and one dimensional. Language is not necessary for the knowledge or expression of facts - for propositions or propositional knowledge. Thought can be carried on in pictures and expressed through, e.g., a painting or, perhaps, evoked through music or poetry. Poetry is an example of a non-literal use of language; in poetry there is a use of the form and sound of words and sentences - not just of what words and sentences refer to or “represent”; parts of poetry or even an entire poem - or of any text - convey meaning or provoke an action that is not conveyed or provoked by the individual words or their mere juxtaposition. Such uses of language are non-atomic: the “meaning” or action of the whole is not derived from fixed individual meanings; the whole has a meaning or action of its own and, in part, determines the meanings and actions of individual words in their specific application - to the extent that they have individual meanings or actions. However, it is the atomic, linear, flat aspects of language that make it useful for communication - especially in the realm of what is sometimes called the objective, in examination for critical analysis, in generalization to realms where pictorial imagination fails. However, even in realms where language and its offshoots are especially effective, pictorial imagination and subjective coloring are in the background, binding further the linguistic forms into the mind - thought and feeling - of the individual. Part of linguistic ability is the partial capacity to translate back and forth between symbols and pictures... Even more basic than pictorial representation and feeling are, as noted earlier, the form of the organism that is adapted to the environment. That form has many layers that correspond, perhaps, to stages of evolutionary adaptation and includes all levels of “mind” and “body”. Imagination and language are also forms of adaptation - they represent a form of adaptation that can be called adaptability... an adaptability that is built in to the organism - the organism acquires, through evolution, a measure of control over its own evolution. Finally, somewhere between explicit imagination that the organism is able, to some extent, to control and maintain in consciousness lies dreaming and the unconscious. The unconscious is a vast territory covering many levels and modes but not the explicit conscious. There is a degree of autonomy to the modes - the adaptive functions are different in nature. The body and unconscious have their own knowledge and thus feeling and behavior are not under complete control of conscious thought and perception; one cannot will oneself to believe or “know” whatever one may choose. These different aspects of “knowledge” are not completely separate or in opposition; to repeat, they function together as a continuum

The broader concept forms a foundation for a concept of knowledge that is lived out rather than merely known intellectually. In science, for example, there is a separation between thought and experiment. The separation is not clear in for lived out knowledge. There is a transition from knowledge as something an organism does to something it is

A toolkit: A variety of civilizations and life forms. Their practical and theoretical arts, e.g. technology and science, and their forms of thought [symbol systems] and life, e.g. art, language, logic, mathematics, philosophy, law, politics and religion

6       How do I get “there”?

My discoveries: There is a way! [1] A way of navigating limits that includes questioning limits - the nature of limits and the nature of being as subject to limits. The distinction between real and apparent limits is called into question. After navigating some limits, new ones may appear... This way may be called the approach of incremental limits - [2] Realizing the broader, integrated concepts of knowledge and being

In cultivating these approaches one negotiates limits and then, by reflection and experiment, one learns the nature of seeming limits and how to negotiate them... and, so, enters into a dynamic relationship with what is real - one enters a dynamics of being

The nature of limits and possibilities: Caution leads us to be skeptical about possibilities but liberal about limits. This leads to many positive results but not to full realization of possibility and potential. Limits can be criticized - if I regard a limit as absolute, that is a form of absolute knowledge but that is what skepticism questions - but the best way to discover whether they are real is to see how far you can go with them. For example, how much of the world can I understand from science. The method of limit testing

The nature of the individual: Is the distinction between the individual and all being - the universe - absolute?

Acting out one’s ideas and knowledge is important - living out the potentials and limits of being. A variety of kinds of experiments and experiences is necessary

A toolkit - a variety of approaches from various traditions and cultures: example, the Yogas. A variety of applications such as somatization and its cultivation in health; transformation of personality; the nature of charisma; Drawing from my own experience and from the traditions, I have developed a comprehensive system of experiments

7       The Elements of Being

What are The Elements of Being? The idea can be described as follows. A world with no variety or structure is dead. A universe with so much variety that there is no repetition of structure at all cannot sustain being or existence, life or sentience [awareness], or understanding. The repeated structures of a universe that sustain variety, being and understanding are The Elements of Being. The Elements of Being are what make being, becoming [growth, change, evolution] and understanding possible

Some common concepts of the elements of being are as follows. In physics, the elementary particles are “the elements”. Here, finite variety at a “microscopic” level - elementary particles - results in seemingly infinite variety at larger scale levels - there are more than one hundred atomic elements and countless molecules and more complex structures. In biology, cells and genes - DNA - are elements. In the philosophy of mind - sensation, emotion, thought can be taken as elements or kinds of elements. There are problems associated with these systems. The history of philosophy includes an, as yet unsuccessful, attempt to bring these systems into a coherent relationship. They do not address, fully, the core of the questions and desires of being

I described the universe, above, as containing both being and understanding. However there is no commitment to either as more or most basic. There is no commitment to the existence of both as fundamental kinds or to a real distinction - or lack of distinction - between them. I am comfortable with the idea that one or other or neither may be more fundamental and using both as ways of description. Instead of a substance or a process ontology a “cyclic” ontology is conceivable. For example, matter yields mind which then creates matter. This is not completely counter to modern science in that there is - as one example - a matter-energy conversion in nuclear reactors based in principles developed by human minds. An “empty” ontology is, also, not absurd: existence is equivalent to nothing: this contradicts neither logic nor physics. At the level of discussion in this section, however, there is no commitment to or against any such ontologies. This is not a minimization of ontology; rather the purposes of this attitude are as follows. The first purpose is to avoid an encumbrance with unnecessary detail and distinction. Thus, in the following paragraph on the levels of The Elements, there is no mention of being vs. understanding. The result is a way that is refractory to the question of existence and distinctions of being and understanding. The result is simple, actually and logically robust, and - in one important way - avoids a distinction between world and theory, between object and concept. There is, thus, no error to be committed in the question of reality content. I prefer distinctions to fall out of - and then interact with - experience rather than to be stamped upon it. Note, also, that the following paragraph also de-emphasizes the distinction between individual and world. The second reason to avoid a distinction is to avoid the mind-matter dualism and the associated problems and burdens on our systems of thought. The dualism exists even for the committed materialist in that what he or she may think of as the ghost of mind - of consciousness - cannot be shed

The Elements of Being exist at a number of levels. Consider two levels, the concrete and the abstract. The first is concrete or detailed - the various toolkits described above. Primary to the first level is the direct experience of the individual. The second is an abstract or general system that reveals the most fundamental ingredients or ways of being. An example of such a system is the triad structure-relationship-process or entity-meaning-action. Where do such a systems come from and what are their uses? The system is a distillation of thought from many areas - we can see its signature in ancient ideas from, e.g., Buddhism - the universe is a web of causation, the idea of Logos from ancient Greece. Structure-relationship-process is a fundamental explanatory system in science where it manifests, in one form, as object-force-motion or as entity-cause-change. There are entire philosophies - world views - that take as their starting point a fragment of the basic triad. The triad individual-meaning-action is adapted to the being of an individual. What are the uses of these systems? They show unity; and they provide sufficient distinction to allow a most general level of existence and understanding. The systems go beyond mere description to reveal a dynamics of being. The Elements of Being are elements of an approach to understanding the limits of being - and of realizing, building what is possible in being

It is necessary to say something about cause and change. First, causation is not a linear chain; the idea of a web is a better description. Second, the idea of causation does not mean that being is completely determined by its past; otherwise there would be no true origins, no real growth or evolution... In a non-deterministic system the distinction between existence and non-existence, the sharp boundaries of individual consciousness begin to fade. In such a system of understanding, concepts of understanding and being begin to merge in a concept of the real. Understanding and being merge in the real


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