A JOURNEY IN BEING
…or The Way of Being
Briefest version—not currently intended as a stand alone version

Anil Mitra, Copyright © October 16, 2019—October 27, 2019

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CONTENTS AND OVERVIEW

Being

Being (capitalized) is existence.

A being is an existent.

The Universe and the Void

The universe is all Being.

The void is the null being—the being that contains no beings.

The void exists.

The fundamental principle of metaphysics

A (natural) law is a pattern immanent to a region of the universe (i.e., to a being; e.g., to a cosmos).

Possibility is that which can obtain or occur; possibility is an inherently consistent concept.

This implies the fundamental principle of metaphysics and Being—

The universe is the greatest possible.

Necessity as the cause of the universe

The universe is the realization of logical possibility.

Necessity is cause of the universe.

The Universe and the individual are limitless

The universe has identity; the universe and its identity are limitless in its realizations.

The individual inherits this limitless (the contrary would be a limit on the universe).

Paths to the ultimate

There are paths from the present apparently limited identity of the individual to the limitless ultimate.

The experience of the universe and the individual is ever fresh.

Reason is the means of realization

Tradition is what is valid in all cultural systems over history.

Reason is the best developed and developing way to know and act in the world and universe.

Reason is the means of realization.

 

A JOURNEY IN BEING

Being

Being (capitalized) is existence.

There is Being.

A being is an existent.

The Universe and the Void

The universe is all Being.

The universe exists.

The void is the null being—the being that contains no beings.

Existence and nonexistence of the void are equivalent; therefore the void may be taken to exist.

The void exists.

The fundamental principle of metaphysics

A (natural) law is a pattern immanent to a region of the universe (i.e., to a being; e.g., to a cosmos).

Laws are beings.

The void has no laws.

Possibility is that which can obtain or occur; possibility is an inherently consistent concept.

All possible beings emerge—all possible Being emerges—from the void, for the contrary would be a law of the void.

This implies the fundamental principle of metaphysics and Being—

The universe is the greatest possible.

Necessity as the cause of the universe

If a being is logically possible it must be among the greatest possible.

If a being is logically impossible, it cannot obtain at all.

The greatest possibility is logical possibility.

The universe is the realization of logical possibility.

The existence of the universe is necessary; necessity may be said to be the ‘cause’ of the universe and its manifestations.

Necessity is cause of the universe.

The Universe and the individual are limitless

The universe has identity; the universe and its identity are limitless in its realizations.

The individual inherits this limitless (the contrary would be a limit on the universe).

The limits of the individual are situational and apparent but not ultimately real—that is, they have reality but are not absolute.

Paths to the ultimate

There are paths from the present apparently limited identity of the individual to the limitless ultimate.

The experience of the universe and the individual is ever fresh.

Ecstasy and pain are givens—not to be excessively sought or avoided; the world is not perfect in the sense of 'ideal'; there is (at least seemingly) meaningless pain—as in the pain of cancer or of an infant; it is necessary to address pain where it is possible—but in balance with calm acceptance and with keen anticipation of the ultimate.

Reason is the means of realization

Tradition is what is valid in all cultural systems over history.

Reason is the best developed and developing way to know and act in the world and universe.

Reason is the use by Being of all Being to realize the ultimate; reason is reflexive in employing all dimensions of Being (and action) and the recursive use of imagination, criticism, and correction; reason includes tradition; it includes ethics—received and reflective; under reason, practice and action are distinct but integrated.

In the terms of eastern thought, and with ‘yoga’ defined expansively—just as reason is defined expansively above—yoga and reason are identical.

Reason is the means of realization.