Though the philosophy and science of consciousness or true self-knowledge - that we're discussing in this thread - may seem to refute or deny the truth of all normal forms of human knowledge, but it does not in fact deny the relative truth of any other philosophy, science or religion.
It merely places them in a correct perspective.
In the grand scheme of things, everything has its relative place, and this philosophy of self-knowledge simply enables us to understand the relative place of everything in a correct perspective.
The truth is that the "grand scheme of things" - and everything that has a place in it - are all known only by our mind, and thus are ultimately only our thoughts.
Since we cannot know anything except in our own mind, we have no adequate reason to suppose that anything exists outside of our mind.
Even the idea that things exist independent of our mind, and are therefore more than just our thoughts, is itself merely a thought or imagination.
This is probably the most important insight: In our direct experience EVERYTHING that we seem to perceive and know is occuring ONLY inside our mind, inside our thinking, inside our imagination.
It is all simply a secondary process, where incoming DATA is created and interpreted by our mind, so fundamentally all we ever have is mind interpreting what the mind is creating through its imagination.
The false belief and assumption that our body/mind is the subject perceiving objects directly as they are is what keeps us confused in a major way.
In our direct experience this is NOT what actually happens.
There is nothing happening outside a human being or for that matter inside a human being.
There is no human beings in absolute reality.
All we ever have is mind, which is a function of Consciousness/Being...dreaming/imagining that it is a body/mind combo, and that it is physically real and that it perceives stuff that is separate from it, and that it perceives stuff inside itself in the form of thoughts and emotions.
But, fundamentally, all of this is a type of a dream occuring inside the mind, meaning that it does not really exist, meaning it is not real, in and of itself.
...similar to the dreams we have when we sleep.
The mind is simply a phenomenon occuring inside the Absolute-Non-Dual-Consciousness-Being, and is only relatively true, in relation to the mind that is having this dream of being a mind/body combo.
What the philosophy and science of consciousness refutes or calls into question, therefore, is not merely any particular thought, idea or belief that our mind may have about anything, but ultimately the reality of our mind itself.
All dualistic systems of philosophy, science and religious belief are dealing with the truth – but not with the absolute truth.
The truth or truths with which they are dealing are only some relative forms of truth, and because they are relative, the truths of one such system may appear to clash with those of another.
However, the conflict between all the countless forms of relative truth can be reconciled when each is seen in its correct perspective, which is possible only from the standpoint of the absolute truth of non-dual self-knowledge – the fundamental consciousness "I am", which is the impartial substratum and reality on which or in which all things appear and disappear.
Though the objective knowledge that we acquire by means of philosophy and science may appear to be true and valid knowledge from the relative standpoint of our mind, from the absolute standpoint of our real consciousness "I am" it is not true knowledge.
Whatever knowledge the human mind may acquire through philosophy, science, religion or any other means can only be relative knowledge, and not absolute or true knowledge.
Our mind is an instrument that can know only duality, relativity or limitations, and not that which is beyond all duality, relativity and limitations.
However, the limit of our knowledge does not stop with our mind. Beyond our mind, or rather behind, beneath and underlying our mind, there is a deeper consciousness – our fundamental and essential self-consciousness, "I am".
This essential self-consciousness or non-dual knowledge of our own mere being is itself the absolute knowledge – knowledge which is absolutely, unconditionally, independently and infinitely true, pure, clear and certain.
It merely places them in a correct perspective.
In the grand scheme of things, everything has its relative place, and this philosophy of self-knowledge simply enables us to understand the relative place of everything in a correct perspective.
The truth is that the "grand scheme of things" - and everything that has a place in it - are all known only by our mind, and thus are ultimately only our thoughts.
Since we cannot know anything except in our own mind, we have no adequate reason to suppose that anything exists outside of our mind.
Even the idea that things exist independent of our mind, and are therefore more than just our thoughts, is itself merely a thought or imagination.
This is probably the most important insight: In our direct experience EVERYTHING that we seem to perceive and know is occuring ONLY inside our mind, inside our thinking, inside our imagination.
It is all simply a secondary process, where incoming DATA is created and interpreted by our mind, so fundamentally all we ever have is mind interpreting what the mind is creating through its imagination.
The false belief and assumption that our body/mind is the subject perceiving objects directly as they are is what keeps us confused in a major way.
In our direct experience this is NOT what actually happens.
There is nothing happening outside a human being or for that matter inside a human being.
There is no human beings in absolute reality.
All we ever have is mind, which is a function of Consciousness/Being...dreaming/imagining that it is a body/mind combo, and that it is physically real and that it perceives stuff that is separate from it, and that it perceives stuff inside itself in the form of thoughts and emotions.
But, fundamentally, all of this is a type of a dream occuring inside the mind, meaning that it does not really exist, meaning it is not real, in and of itself.
...similar to the dreams we have when we sleep.
The mind is simply a phenomenon occuring inside the Absolute-Non-Dual-Consciousness-Being, and is only relatively true, in relation to the mind that is having this dream of being a mind/body combo.
What the philosophy and science of consciousness refutes or calls into question, therefore, is not merely any particular thought, idea or belief that our mind may have about anything, but ultimately the reality of our mind itself.
All dualistic systems of philosophy, science and religious belief are dealing with the truth – but not with the absolute truth.
The truth or truths with which they are dealing are only some relative forms of truth, and because they are relative, the truths of one such system may appear to clash with those of another.
However, the conflict between all the countless forms of relative truth can be reconciled when each is seen in its correct perspective, which is possible only from the standpoint of the absolute truth of non-dual self-knowledge – the fundamental consciousness "I am", which is the impartial substratum and reality on which or in which all things appear and disappear.
Though the objective knowledge that we acquire by means of philosophy and science may appear to be true and valid knowledge from the relative standpoint of our mind, from the absolute standpoint of our real consciousness "I am" it is not true knowledge.
Whatever knowledge the human mind may acquire through philosophy, science, religion or any other means can only be relative knowledge, and not absolute or true knowledge.
Our mind is an instrument that can know only duality, relativity or limitations, and not that which is beyond all duality, relativity and limitations.
However, the limit of our knowledge does not stop with our mind. Beyond our mind, or rather behind, beneath and underlying our mind, there is a deeper consciousness – our fundamental and essential self-consciousness, "I am".
This essential self-consciousness or non-dual knowledge of our own mere being is itself the absolute knowledge – knowledge which is absolutely, unconditionally, independently and infinitely true, pure, clear and certain.