Friday, November 12, 2010

Time: What It Is and What To Do About It

Although we have a single word for it -- "time" -- it has three equally distinct and mysterious modes (past-present-future) which appear to be as different from each other as, say, mind is from matter. If one considers mind and matter apart from each other, it seems that there could be no way to put them together. And yet, there they are harmoniously entwined in Life, living in wholly matterimany.

The point is that mind and matter are human abstractions, just as are past, present and future. In fact, life is a kind of link between spirit and nature, just as the present is a link between past and future. But this is to speak only horizontally. There are also vertical links throughout (↓↑), both in time and space (another duality that can only be artificially abstracted, for if One is present, so too is the Other).

The present is the "place" where the past brings the future into being (→), but also where the the future flows into the now and becomes the past (←). As Bolton writes, "everything in the past was once future, and then present; everything present was future and will be past; and everything future will be present and then past."

Based upon this, the past would appear to be fixed, but is this really so? Not if the past is inherently entangled with the future. Future events can occur which will give the past an entirely different meaning, always predicated on human choices in the now. For example, if one wrote a history of the 19th century prior to World War I, it would look very different than a history written after World War I, because only as more of the future became the past could one understand events that were implicit in the past, but yet to play themselves out in time.

In other words, the past had hidden potentials that were still playing themselves out in the future. As Bolton writes, "the contents of the past are thus in constant change by virtue of their changing relationship to the present."

In so many ways, the mission of MSM state-run media is to enclose the now so as to define the past and therefore control the future. But that's a subject for a different post.

In physics, there is only a one-way arrow of change, from past to future. But as Bolton explains, "to give the experience of change," time "must form a combination of static and dynamic elements. A time series which consisted of pure dynamism could not supply any kind of experience because every element in it would have become something else before it could be known." Alternatively, "a purely static time would not be temporal at all. Only a mingling of the changing with the unchanging can constitute time..."

This is why I not only believe music to be the most adequate way available to us to think about time, but why we are so drawn to it: because it reveals the very form of time, which in turn brings inherent pleasure, similar to the epistemophilic pleasure of discovery, or "erotics of being." We love it because it is true, or conveys principial truth about the nature of things.

In short, the ear can tell us much more about time than the eye, but all of science is biased more toward the eye in its mapping of reality. Indeed, science ultimately aims to map all of reality in such a way that it specifically excludes time.

For example, a "grand theory of everything" would consist of a single equation that unifies all of the forces in physics -- forces which result in the "illusion" of time. But what if the cosmos is more like a grand symphony, which has a complex vertical structure (i.e., the "spatial" chords) and a more open and horizontal "melodic" aspect that wends its way through the chords, like a jazz soloist?

Zuckerkandl writes that "The knowledge of space that hand and eye possess is exactly matched by their ignorance of time.... A true image of time must be an image for the ear, an audible image made of tones.... Thanks to music, we are able to behold time."

Now, a work of serious music is obviously a "whole," but it is again a temporal whole with a complex array of vertical and horizontal relations. In fact, in rereading Eliot's Wasteland yesterday, I could hear how very "musical" it is, with complex motifs recurring and commenting upon one another as the poem unfolds, just as in a symphony. Thus, it seems that poetry in general would represent a closer approximation to the structure of reality than any ordinary linear prose.

I am sure this is what Schuon means when he says that a simple believer in literal creationism is surely closer to the truth than any form of materialism can ever be. To say that Genesis is "poetry" is hardly to denigrate it; rather, it is to point out that it employs the appropriate modality to even begin to talk about ultimate reality. It does not pretend to be able to capture the unsayable in language (unless you have no poetic sense and have missed the point), but to use what can be said to disclose what otherwise can't be said or even thought about.

The word became flesh and dwelt among us. Language, like music, is deployed in time. Because of this, you cannot comprehend the meaning of a statement by analyzing its constituent parts, i.e., by breaking it down into its individual words and letters. It is not that the words and letters additively reveal a meaning; rather, they are all in the service of a higher meaning, and were chosen for the very purpose of conveying it.

Here again, much of the pleasure in writing is searching for and "discovering" the correct word or phrase for the meaning one wishes to convey, very much as a musician will try to find the proper notes to say what he wishes to say in a solo. This is one more reason there can never be "artificial intelligence" except in its linear sense, but never in the holistic way in which the higher mind operates.

Consider the vast differences between a chess-playing computer program and a chess master. The computer program must consider trillions of possibilities before deciding on a single move, whereas "even the greatest human player considers at most a few thousand, and usually far fewer." Thus, this "billion-to-one advantage in calculating power is nullified by the human grandmaster's power of understanding" (National Review). It is this depth of understanding that instantaneously excludes literally billions of blind alleys.

As does a profound philosophy of life. In particular, I'm thinking again of how revelation is intended to provide a musical structure with which one may adequately play the "cosmic suite." No computer program could ever do this, because in life, the choices multiply exponentially as compared to a chess match. How do we reduce the chaos to meaning, without reducing meaning to meaninglessness, as does scientism?

Religion begins with the idea that ultimate meaning exists, and that it is this meaning that "sponsors," so to speak, all of the meaning we encounter on a moment-to-moment basis, no matter how trivial. Meaning is meaningful because Meaning is always there propping it up; or words are there (including everything from DNA to the mathematical constants that govern physical reality) because the Word is there "behind," "beneath," "within," or "above" them. "Meaning" and "Wholeness" are two aspects of the same principle, since meaning is only grasped by sensing the wholeness of parts.

In fact, in the absence of wholeness there could obviously be no parts, because they wouldn't be parts of anything. They would be their own wholes, which is what existentialism pretends to be on the human plane, in which each person is a total assoul.

This is patently true of "spatial" objects, but what about temporal ones? If we try to analyze time by dissecting it into its constituent parts, do we not eliminate the very melody we are attempting to hear, the Song Supreme? This is the domain of metahistory, which is apparently no longer fashionable, except that it actually is, in the same way that the Left presents us with a counterfeit version of any profound truth. Leftism is like an inverted mirror of falsehood, through which deep truths are presented upside down and backwards, for example, the doctrine of materialism. Materialsm is just an ass-backward religion that starts at the wrong end of reality and proceeds to elevate its absurd error to an absolute.

But the moment one treats parts in an atomistic way, as if they are unrelated in time, one has falsified reality. This is precisely why physicists are powerless to understand the most profound and shocking facts of the universe, e.g. Life, Mind and Spirit. They cannot even discuss these things without a priori turning them into something they are not. But as we wrote in OCUG, "Only by changing our perspective to a 'top down' one, from spirit to mind to life to matter, does the cosmos become intelligble in its totality, a totality that unquestionably includes biological and psychological dimensions."

Thus, in the Raccoon view, "when we talk about a 'relationship' between Life and the cosmos, we are dealing quite literally with a tautology, a statement of equivalence." Given the temporal entanglement of the cosmos, in order to not mislead, we cannot refer only to "the universe," but to something along the lines of "the living universe" or "the universe in the process of becoming locally conscious," because only in such a way do we not exclude the most important fact of the cosmos, i.e, the observer expressing this truthful statement.

The universe is intrinsically and not just accidentally conscious. It has never been unknown to human beings that this can be proven in mystical experience, but I believe it can also be proven through transrational logic. Certain things must be, and one of them is that our individual consciousness partakes of a much greater consciousness, in the same way that our little ego relates to the cosmic Dreamer who dreams us. One image Alan Watts used to employ is that of a lampshade with hundreds of pinholes. Viewed from the outside, it will look as if there are hundreds of little lights, but in reality, there is only the one bulb at the center.

Oh yes, about that little "slot" where we dilate time and gain a more expansive view of the cosmic goings-on. Mouravieff writes that this slot is like a keyhole -- or key to the whole -- that opens many mysteries.

I've written about this before -- about the "A influences" and the "B influences," the former coming "from the world," the latter from outside or "above" it.

One of the first steps in any spiritual practice is, of course, to tap into a stream of B influences, through which one begins to liberate oneself from the chaotic A influences (which are alternatively coercive, seductive or hypnotic, but always average out to "zero"). As one begins to actualize one's own latent esoteric center (which I symbolize as (¶) in my book), it proceeds to operate as its own "magnetic center" which draws nonlocal assistenance from other Coons, both living and technically dead. Now that you are plugged into Coon Central, I am sure this has become a basic fact of your day-to-deity life.

I can't possibly do justice to this topic in a slotted time, but let's just highlight the fact that spiritual knowledge can never be reduced to "know how" in the absence of "be who," for it always involves an expansion of being, not merely the accumulation of intellectual knowledge, or (k).

Furthermore, once this be-who (n) is assimilated, it works on us in a way that (k) never can; in this regard, it is much more analogous to medicine, or perhaps a catalytic enzyme. But as it figuratively impregnates us, it literally impregnates us, and in spirituality one can definitely be "a little bit pregnant," as (¶) grows and expands within our womb with a pew.

Now, the present can be so narrow as to be functionally non-existent for the average person. So distracted is he by the world of A-influences, that the slot of the present -- the only place where be-who can occur -- narrows down to nothing. It might as well be the past, which is why people in thrall to the A influences are technically dead, and why Jesus said that they should just bury their fallow trivialers.

But there is another present -- I believe this is the present Petey was referring to on page 15, where he axes, You haven't perceived the hologram to your private particle? Come in, open His presence, and report for karmic duty. Why, it's a Tree of Life for those whose wood beleaf!

Mouravieff writes that the present "necessarily has extension," but that for exterior man, "this extent is very short.... if we reduce this Present to the zero we think it is, it becomes purely and simply cessation of existence. It is thus that death actually occurs."

Ah ha! Life, therefore, has something do to with the expansion of the present. But for someone who abandons himself to A influences, the gift of the present is taken away. D'oh!

But all forms of concentration, meditation, intellection, and prayer, are aimed at enlarging the present, which is in reality the only "place" that is outside time -- or "above" it, so to speak. If time is a line, this allows us to exist at a right angle to it, where we can begin to perceive time in its fullness, exercise a more profound degree of free will (verticalisthenics), and make deeper connections with the non-temporal realities that vertically flow into time (gymgnostics).

This is what Mouravieff believes Jesus meant when he cracked about the "strait gate": For wide is the door and broad is the path that leads to perdition. Many are they that enter it. For strait is the door and narrow is the Path that leads to life, and few are they that find them.

And this is precisely where Jesus and J.R. "Bob" Dobbs merge, for this narrow path is the way back "upstream" to the source of our cosmic s'laq.

25 comments:

Van Harvey said...

"Based upon this, the past would appear to be fixed, but is this really so?"

Well... yes, the past is fixed, but our understanding of it, and it's implications, and our willing to pay attention to it, or pretend it didn't exist and so could have no implicaitons for the present or future... that changes.

Or rather, our choices, here and now, are always in the process of becoming what we will some day say, was.

But... past experience says... I should probably finish reading first. But of course, past experience also says, that sometimes I choose not to learn from past experience, even though future me may very well be very annoyed at past me... but that's not really my problem now... only then.

Time.

What a concept.

Magnus Itland said...

Thank you. I know you have written before about the expansion of the presence, but it bears repeating and putting in context. For if humans were to understand just this one fact, on the level of the soul, just a bit below their flickering surface consciousness, they would stop being parodies of themselves and start to become human for real. Or in other words, they would start to realize their human potential, not just their naked ape potential.

Another way of saying this is that they would start adding a new dimension to their life.

In a sense, I believe time to be a semi-spiritual dimension in its own right. I base this on the fact that only humans seem to have a well developed concept of time, while any bird is well aware of all three space dimensions. But humans seem to need to create or synthesize time, and different people do this differently and to a different degree. From this I conclude that it is a psychic function, at least in part. That science also operates with time is due to the lucky "accident" that science is currently done by humans. I severely doubt that we will ever be able to teach our computers about time.

The reason why we can view the three dimensions with any clarity, rather than just being immersed in them, is that we are above them, by partaking in the fourth dimension of time. Likewise to have any clear sense of time we would need rise above it, by extension into the fifth dimension, whatever your name for it. Thus the various spiritual practices of the world, which support exactly this, the extension into a fifth dimension (spirituality, for lack of a better name) which puts the first four dimensions into perspective.

But I guess you've got to have been there, which is why it is hard to talk about without sounding crazy to those who have their goals firmly planted inside the 3D world.

Magnus Itland said...

Also, this is where some adherents of Tolle can go horribly wrong: Deciding to live in the Now without any sustaining spiritual aperture science, they sink to the level of animals immersed in the 3D world rather than rising to the 5D world, in which, by transcending time, they would come to own all of it rather than none of it.

julie said...

Wow - now that's what I call a feast!

Oh yes, about that little "slot" where we dilate time and gain a more expansive view of the cosmic goings-on. Mouravieff writes that this slot is like a keyhole -- or key to the whole -- that opens many mysteries.

I was thinking about this little slot while reading. Viewed one way, it's a line, another a disk, but what it really represents is so much more than even the light years of vastness shrunk down to a speck of light visible to a human macroscope. With a different lens, perhaps it even resembles this our home space.

Tens of thousands of light years from one edge to the other, and yet the whole is a unified structure, moving as one like a school of fish or a flock of birds.

Magnus,

For if humans were to understand just this one fact, on the level of the soul, just a bit below their flickering surface consciousness, they would stop being parodies of themselves and start to become human for real.

But I guess you've got to have been there, which is why it is hard to talk about without sounding crazy to those who have their goals firmly planted inside the 3D world.


Yes!

Gagdad Bob said...

Van: what I mean is that if the past cannot be separated from the present and future, it is always becoming something different. It can only be fixed to the extent that we artificially cut it off from the rest of time.

julie said...

Today's Bleat contains some timely notes:

It’s interesting how we can imagine them, and they’ll be able to imagine us [people of the future, that is - J], but people in the centuries before the 19th couldn’t imagine us, or at least didn’t bother. Perhaps I’m just unaware of the roots of proto sci-fi, but I don’t think there were novels in the 8th century imagining life in the far-distant, fascinating future of the 10th century. Most people probably didn’t even know what year it was. No one in 967 AD ever said on January 7th “I’m still writing 966 on my checks.”

Open Trench said...

I get what Van is saying. What actually happened is not liable to any changes.

We all intuitively know and believe in the Akashic record, a huge library where all events are fixed, in storage, and can be retrieved and replayed.

We have all accessed the Akashic records for various reasons.

Yet, another part of our minds says "that's outlandish. There's no evidence of that."

But, you can bypass the skeptic and you realize, "yes of course it is all there, permanantly, just as it happened. I've seen it."

So, not to fear. Nothing is lost, nothing is later distorted. It is pristine, pure, eternal.

And I get what Magnus says about Tolle "The Power of Now." Tolle thinks that if you succeed in dropping the past and future, the ineffable will come flooding through the slot without any further action needed, and sweep you up.

That's because that's what happened to him, but he commits the fallacy of attribution and believes it will be the same for all.

G'day then.

anon said...

This is one more reason there can never be "artificial intelligence" except in its linear sense, but never in the holistic way in which the higher mind operates.

Why not?

If God created man in his own image, then it is entirely proper for man to be creating in HIS own image.

Never is a long time. The current efforts at artifical intelligence may be pretty crude compared to a human mind, but there is no reason to think that that will be the case forever.

black hole said...

Anyone know what time it is?

Missing my watch.

Kurt said...

Boy, I'm glad it's the weekend because this is one post I'll be chewing over for a bit. It's interesting that I've been thinking a lot about time recently, too. But regardless of that, you had me at:

"...spiritual knowledge can never be reduced to 'know how' in the absence of 'be who', for it always involves an expansion of being, not merely the accumulation of intellectual knowledge..."

That, my friends, is good writing, good because it is clear, concise, clever and true. Thanks, Bob!

Kurt

Magnus Itland said...

Chewing is definitely in order. In this post, the Gagdad brings together threads that each could be the topic of a a library, and quite possibly is. I have not even touched on his mention of the nonlocal operators standing by to help, a recurring topic in its own right. When we begin to attain an accumulation of "grace particles" (B) that forms a personal center of antigravity, the mere presence of other people's personal centers cause ours to strengthen and grow organically. I usually refer to this as riding people's coat tails. It is cheap and practical, although some of the people that act as growth hormone for our personal center are... weird. Really, really weird. Sometimes unpleasant in some way or another. Or dead. Or several of the above.

All of this follows from the lampshade effect. Such a simple image, and you could fill a library with its implications. Albeit, sadly, a library with very few customers.

Van Harvey said...

What Kurt said. And Magnus.

Chewing... indeed.

And struggling to maintain balance too.

I haven’t gotten much further in today’s post, after Magnus’s first comment, it became apparent that I was trying to walk the ships deck in a storm... while wearing roller skates.

The frontal lobe swirl was palpable... and then work turned into a duel with a pasta bowl of c++ loops through array’s of array’s... retreat became the better part of valor.

Takes noting away from the post, or the comments though... these are the ones that give the best ROI imaginable... just need to be sure to chew well first, which I’ll just take my time and work on it through the night, and if need be, on into the dei.

julie said...

Certain things must be, and one of them is that our individual consciousness partakes of a much greater consciousness, in the same way that our little ego relates to the cosmic Dreamer who dreams us. One image Alan Watts used to employ is that of a lampshade with hundreds of pinholes. Viewed from the outside, it will look as if there are hundreds of little lights, but in reality, there is only the one bulb at the center.

Oh yes, about that little "slot" where we dilate time and gain a more expansive view of the cosmic goings-on. Mouravieff writes that this slot is like a keyhole -- or key to the whole -- that opens many mysteries.


Going back to the book GE linked a couple weeks ago, what struck me at the time and has stuck with me was the idea of a certain kind of awareness - i.e. to hear hearing or see seeing. It reminded me of how one can be watching a movie and get completely caught up in the story - immersed in an exterior "reality," as it were - when suddenly something happens to "eject" the viewer from the story. Say, a speaker makes an unexpected sound, or something happens to the picture, or the plot takes a turn you simply can't swallow, and suddenly one is aware of the "real" world and the "real" self once more.

Proprioception, then, is like an internal experience of the same phenomenon. Who is it that sees with our eyes and hears with our ears, who entertains these thoughts and shuffles through those memories? The Dreamer, of course, shining a light through our little pinholes. And yet, it is possible to live an entire life and never have the faintest idea.

Rick said...

"even the greatest human player considers at most a few thousand, and usually far fewer." Thus, this "billion-to-one advantage in calculating power is nullified by the human grandmaster's power of understanding"

I have no way of knowing, of course, but could the human player's "decision experience" be similar to how you say a true mathematician has the ability to reject or accept an equation (apparently so quickly) based on it's beauty?
I mean, does this kind of chess player in a sense fall in love at first (mental) "sight" of a certain series of moves?

Rick said...

I may not be using the word telos correctly, but is this post also suggesting, like the "past", a person's telos can exist or "finally rest" in some future descendant many generations from the present person's present?

Rick said...

Other wise, what is the meaning of this B-dudes and non-local operators?
This is not my beautiful life!?

wv: pring
BRB

Magnus Itland said...

I really don't think genes are involved, apart from genes being necessary to be born human.

Open Trench said...

The crucial statement in this post (or it might have been in another one) is to "report for duty."

If you will chew that directive thoroughly you will have captured the meaning of Bob's writing in its entirety, from the books to all the posts in the arkive.

It is one thing to understand (and you don't have to understand all).

It is quite another to commmit, to act, to bring forth.

The writing is done for effect. The effect is to to increase morale, committment, and energy among the warriors.

Those warriors are you.

So ask: am I paying attention? Do I know my chain of command? Do I know what my standing orders are? Do I know how and where to recieve special orders? Am I committed? Do I know Who I am committed to? Do I know what the objective is? Do I understand why the objective is important?

Do I understand that I do not live for myself?

Etc. Etc. Please forgive the maunderings of a pompous old fool.

But I too am a warrior under the same Commander.

Rick said...

Who said genes?

Although I was trying to telos a joke about Forest Gump and his proJenny.

But I don't think the lineage needs to be direct.
That's how Bob often uses non-local operators. It's a wide noncategory.

julie said...

That said, there apparently can be some sort of familial connection. Though I suspect it's less about genes than environment.

Which maybe isn't so surprising - if a curse can afflict several generations, why not a blessing?

Mizz E said...

Speaking of familial coonections:

Happy Birthday Julie!

julie said...

Thanks, Mizze :)

Rick said...

Well, said as always, Father Stephen.
"Why not a blessing?" indeed.

Happy B-day, Julie!
May all your B-dudes be nonlocal!

julie said...

In the Scattered Brotherhood, they virtually all are ;)

ge said...

Sunday Funday
Toytown perfection writ by an American, done by these Brits

swedonca
was my name

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