pood
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Analytic idealism is the thesis put forth by the philosopher Bernardo Kastrup that the world is entirely mental.
With phenomenal consciousness the basis of everything, individual humans are characterized as “dissociate alters” that contain private versions of the cosmic consciousness. The external world we perceive on this account is also mental, and our perceptions of it are mere representations of what is, the way that an airplane dashboard represents external reality in condensed form but is not the reality itself.
In this paper for the peer-reviewed philosophy journal Disputatio, Kastrup addresses and rebuts the standard critiques of his or other variants of metaphysical idealism. Scroll down for a free download on the left.
Kastrup holds that our individual deaths are merely ego deaths, that we cease to be “dissociate alters,” and re-merge with the cosmic consciousness. His cites his own experiences with psychedelics to argue that while ego death is wrenching, the other side is unimaginable bliss. He argues that these experiences give insight into our ego death during physical death and what follows.
Subjectivity, whether ego/personal or cosmically unified, subjectivity never ceases, not even during deep sleep — in that case, he cites studies showing that while subjective experience continues during deep sleep, we simply lose memory of those experiences — and that we are all bound, in one subjective way or another, to “the vertigo of eternity.”
He does not regard the universal consciousness as anything like the god of the Abrahamic tradition or even necessarily cognitive, just phenomenal. He does, however, regard Christianity and other religions as symbolically and allegorically useful.
Of course this will sound like standard woo to the materialist, but reading his work might change your perspective at least somewhat. A lot of what Kastrup writes strikes me as not far removed from John Archibald Wheeler’s Participatory Universe.
I’d add that Kastrup has impressive scientific and philosophical credentials, and, for what it’s worth, in a debate with the physicist Sabine Hossenfelder, he (imo) rather impressively dismantled her advocacy of a superdeterministic class of theories to replace standard quantum mechanics. As an interesting and probably coincidental aside, Hossenfelder has lately offered that idea that the whole universe thinks and that thinking precedes life.
Discussion invited on the linked paper or on any of the information on Kastrup’s site, but, of course, this would entail reading at least the linked paper first. My summary above is very simplified of necessity and omits many important details, arguments, and evidence which can be found in abundance in both the linked paper and his numerous other works.
If nothing else I hope this thread lures at least some posters away from the standard squabbling about Jehovah, politics, abortion, etc. People can squabble about this instead.
With phenomenal consciousness the basis of everything, individual humans are characterized as “dissociate alters” that contain private versions of the cosmic consciousness. The external world we perceive on this account is also mental, and our perceptions of it are mere representations of what is, the way that an airplane dashboard represents external reality in condensed form but is not the reality itself.
In this paper for the peer-reviewed philosophy journal Disputatio, Kastrup addresses and rebuts the standard critiques of his or other variants of metaphysical idealism. Scroll down for a free download on the left.
Kastrup holds that our individual deaths are merely ego deaths, that we cease to be “dissociate alters,” and re-merge with the cosmic consciousness. His cites his own experiences with psychedelics to argue that while ego death is wrenching, the other side is unimaginable bliss. He argues that these experiences give insight into our ego death during physical death and what follows.
Subjectivity, whether ego/personal or cosmically unified, subjectivity never ceases, not even during deep sleep — in that case, he cites studies showing that while subjective experience continues during deep sleep, we simply lose memory of those experiences — and that we are all bound, in one subjective way or another, to “the vertigo of eternity.”
He does not regard the universal consciousness as anything like the god of the Abrahamic tradition or even necessarily cognitive, just phenomenal. He does, however, regard Christianity and other religions as symbolically and allegorically useful.
Of course this will sound like standard woo to the materialist, but reading his work might change your perspective at least somewhat. A lot of what Kastrup writes strikes me as not far removed from John Archibald Wheeler’s Participatory Universe.
I’d add that Kastrup has impressive scientific and philosophical credentials, and, for what it’s worth, in a debate with the physicist Sabine Hossenfelder, he (imo) rather impressively dismantled her advocacy of a superdeterministic class of theories to replace standard quantum mechanics. As an interesting and probably coincidental aside, Hossenfelder has lately offered that idea that the whole universe thinks and that thinking precedes life.
Discussion invited on the linked paper or on any of the information on Kastrup’s site, but, of course, this would entail reading at least the linked paper first. My summary above is very simplified of necessity and omits many important details, arguments, and evidence which can be found in abundance in both the linked paper and his numerous other works.
If nothing else I hope this thread lures at least some posters away from the standard squabbling about Jehovah, politics, abortion, etc. People can squabble about this instead.
