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Post by travis on Dec 6, 2010 15:26:14 GMT -5
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Post by enigma on Dec 6, 2010 16:12:30 GMT -5
Yes, it fits in nicely with the bunny delusion. The tendency to get caught in abstraction is strong. It's how we create the problem of suffering to begin with, and we do the same when we think we've found a solution. The problem is a very human problem. I used to say, nobody ever found their Divine nature by struggling with their human nature.
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Post by zendancer on Dec 6, 2010 17:12:19 GMT -5
What can you say to an advaita fundamentalist? Nothing. LOL.
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Post by enigma on Dec 6, 2010 17:18:13 GMT -5
And as a friend says (at the end of every sentence) "And not even that!" Hehe.
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Post by charliegee on Dec 6, 2010 17:27:27 GMT -5
or any fundamentalist, religious or atheist, politico or ardent anarchist (is that an oxymoron?), rabid sports fan or just plain know-it-all ...
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Post by zendancer on Dec 6, 2010 17:32:04 GMT -5
Amen!
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Post by enigma on Dec 6, 2010 20:57:54 GMT -5
That's the Truth and nothing anybody could say would change that! Hehe.
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Post by charliegee on Dec 6, 2010 23:17:18 GMT -5
and anybody that disputes has to go through me ...
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Post by Portto on Dec 7, 2010 12:05:06 GMT -5
This seems to be another version of: "First there is a mountain, then there is no mountain, then there is."
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