OneTwoSeven
Greenlighter
The goal of spiritual seeking seems to be the discovery, realisation and living in Absolute Truth, Absolute Enlightenment, the Ultimate, union with God, All-Knowing or whatever you want to call it.
My question is - is there even such thing as Absolute Truth / Enlightenment?
Although I would certainly like that, since if there was, that would be indeed worthy goal to pursue, but I cannot see how could that be. Life and Absolute seem to contradict each other. Life is ever-changing, renewing every moment, so even if one would reach the enlightenment it would be outdated a second later, it seems to me.
Anything absolute seems static and dead to me. Perhaps the Absolute is available only outside of time-space continuum, where the time supposedly stops? Therefore it would be outside of life as we know it. So, would one need to die to reach that state? Sages like Jesus or Buddha appeared to be inside of space-time though, while still claiming the Truth. Were they delusional?
It seems to me that in this time-space reality, everything is subjective and all the truth we can hope for is the subjective truth of "ourselves" - meaning, striving to meet our own standards, being true to our conscience, which, although highly subjective, doesn't seem any less valid than any other "truth".
Granted, our standards and values might not be ours to begin with, eg. conditioned by parents, society etc., so there might be some work involved in finding or setting one's "real and true*" values and living according to that. (* true for the time being)
Or perhaps what seekers are really striving for is the experience of the Absolute, the ultimate thrill, however brief, after which they are back when they started in the first place.
What do you think?
My question is - is there even such thing as Absolute Truth / Enlightenment?
Although I would certainly like that, since if there was, that would be indeed worthy goal to pursue, but I cannot see how could that be. Life and Absolute seem to contradict each other. Life is ever-changing, renewing every moment, so even if one would reach the enlightenment it would be outdated a second later, it seems to me.
Anything absolute seems static and dead to me. Perhaps the Absolute is available only outside of time-space continuum, where the time supposedly stops? Therefore it would be outside of life as we know it. So, would one need to die to reach that state? Sages like Jesus or Buddha appeared to be inside of space-time though, while still claiming the Truth. Were they delusional?
It seems to me that in this time-space reality, everything is subjective and all the truth we can hope for is the subjective truth of "ourselves" - meaning, striving to meet our own standards, being true to our conscience, which, although highly subjective, doesn't seem any less valid than any other "truth".
Granted, our standards and values might not be ours to begin with, eg. conditioned by parents, society etc., so there might be some work involved in finding or setting one's "real and true*" values and living according to that. (* true for the time being)
Or perhaps what seekers are really striving for is the experience of the Absolute, the ultimate thrill, however brief, after which they are back when they started in the first place.
What do you think?