[MD] Is it serious?

Ham Priday hampday1 at verizon.net
Fri May 29 13:16:34 PDT 2009


John and Andre --


[John to Andre]:
> "I don't see a conflict between the concepts of "unique I" and "we are
> One". I see a continuum between the dynamic whole and static granularity. 
>  > We humans seem to have the ability to choose to traverse this continuum 
>  > at will."

[Andre responding]:
> Thank you for your kind words John and we are here to share (if this
> doesn't sound too fluffy for you or others).
>
> I also like M K's response and I agree with his observation. At the same
> time it made me realise why I was so questioning this emphasis on the 'I'
> and all the individualism associated with it: there seems really too much
> of it nowadays... it divides, creates conflicts, asserts differences 
> rather
> than similarities etc etc. ...

If we're talking philosophy and not politics, "emphasis on the 'I'" 
certainly does "divide, create conflicts, and reveal differences."  But 
that, gentlemen, is precisely what a "point of view" does.  Individuals are 
cognizant points of view, as I said to Krimel, and the Self is the agent of 
value.  I define individuality as "differentiated value-sensiblity".  It 
means that each of us has a unique set of value preferences and the freedom 
to choose and act accordingly.

If conscious sensibility were the same for all of us, there would be no 
point to difference, separate brains, and separate life experiences.  "Some 
things are better than others" would be a meaningless euphemism, as we would 
all prefer and seek the same values.  Individual life would serve no purpose 
because wanting, knowing, and experiencing would be a collective identity.

Instead of trying to sweep the knowing Self under the rug, try appreciating 
the value of difference in your own life.  Realizing and discriminating 
between values is what existence is all about.  Why are men different than 
women?  Why is love the opposite of hate?  Why is excellence better than 
average?  Why do we look for beauty and order rather than the gross and 
chaotic?

The French have an expression for this: "Vive la difference!"  I suggest you 
consider what that really means.  Otherwise your life is cast in a uniform 
shade of gray, marching in lockstep with the collective mind.

Essentially yours,
Ham





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