 Originally Posted by shadowofwind
"Current human comprehension" isn't easily known or defined. I guess you knew that. I already comprehend things that the overwhelming majority of people do not comprehend, while at the same time other people comprehend things that I do not. Also, many common experiences are beyond 'current human comprehension' in the sense that they are not scientifically understood. The experience of color is an example.
I meant human comprehension as a collective statement -- that a transcendent experience exceeds all the metaphor we currently have on hand to associate the event to something we can understand. In other words, there is literally no reference available to explain what happened. This is especially true on a personal level, because it implies that a transcendent dream cannot be remembered, simply because your mind has no metaphor on hand to reference what happened. So, someone has a transcendent dream, or sees God (as Saul did above), and the best that your mind can do to describe it, after the fact, was "bright light." You know something bigger happened, but you simply cannot describe it. And yes, even someone who knows more and comprehends more efficiently than others will wind up in the same position, if he has a transcendent moment. It isn't about a particular human's ability to comprehend, it's about the experience exceeding that ability, regardless. I think that in a nutshell is the definition of transcendence.
Oh, and science, in my opinion, doesn't play a part in any of this.
I think that having an experience that is beyond anything anyone has experienced before is probably an unrealistically ambitious goal. People have been having remarkable mystic experiences for a long time. Plus a significant element of grace is necessary.
Ah, but I think I said somewhere above that people have been having transcendental experience for a very long time. I may even have said that we all might be having them in our dreams frequently. If I did not, I should have. It isn't that the events are not happening; it's that we are incapable of remembering them properly, if at all.
Yes, people have been having mystic experiences since the first caveman said "I am." Some of them even had them on purpose. The trouble is, more often than not these mystic experiences get translated into something that the person who had them wants or interprets them to be (Saul saw God, for instance), rather than what they truly were. Hell, you called them mystical experiences yourself, applying an almost religious note to an event that could be little more than seeing a new color, or feeling a new form of energy.
I have a feeling that most religions stem from one person's misinterpretation of a transcendental event -- many of them dreams. That translation comes when the person who had the experience attaches existing metaphor (God, light, love, dead relatives, etc) to describe an event that defies description, even to himself. It was too big a moment for "you had to be there," yet still it needed to be described, understood, but there is no way to remember it... Until, perhaps, now:
I do think its realistic to aspire to understand something that nobody has understood before however. Those words aren't quite what I mean, I'll try to illustrate with an example. My awareness of re-existence is undoubtedly quite dim and limited compared to what some other people have been experiencing for millenia. However, since my topological imagination is more sophisticated than that of most mystics, I might experience it in ways that they can not. So potentially I can gain new understanding about our place in the larger scheme of things. As I indicated earlier, applying the experience to form definite thoughts seems to me to be an essential part of the process. And it seems to me that every person is uniquely positioned to do that, in one way or another.
Seeking and finding experience that lies beyond human comprehension is by no means anything new. Aspiring to understand what was previously unknown is to me a symptom of sentience itself. But aspiring and doing are two very different things. It has certainly happened many times throughout history. I would guess that every human who managed to successfully attach metaphor (or math, as it were) to what they "saw," and therefore further extend the limit of human comprehension, has a name that still rests on the tongues of most of us, even if we don't really know why (i.e. Socrates, Jesus Christ. Buddha, Lao Tsu, Copernicus, Da Vinci, Tesla, Einstein). But these "transcendence translators" were each very likely possessors and purveyors of great and rare genius (grace, as well, I would imagine), and they pop up very very rarely in the general population. I wonder myself if the world has seen any since Einstein, even though there are so many billions of us. It's that rare.
But, as you say, new tools are always emerging, new forms of understanding, and of course freer access to knowledge than ever existed before. In a sense all the enlightenment shared by those few geniuses has become accessible to all. The limit of comprehension is expanded, but it is still there: we still regularly have experiences that defy all comprehension, even at its current advanced stage. And we have no geniuses around, it seems, to push that comprehension envelope further.
But maybe we no longer need genius.
LD'ing, when combined with that innate comprehension we all (potentially) possess, might be just the tool for any idiot to successfully recognize and remember transcendent experiences. Why? In all honesty, I'm not sure. I imagine if I were sure, I would not be posting stuff on websites, having better things to do. At this point I just think so. Perhaps because our minds may be accustomed to transcendental experiences in our dreams, and LD's serve to link our self-awareness with this condition. Perhaps because we might be able to assemble metaphors in our LD's that work in both directions, so that during the transcendental experience we have something to attach to it to make it real to us upon waking without diminishing its truth. Yes, this can also be done in waking-world states of deep meditation or mathematical nirvana -- but they require some genius we idiots do not possess. LD'ing can be mastered by anyone with a sense of self and a great deal of time on their hands.
Again, I don't know. But I do know that dreams of transcendence are more than just curiosities, when considered in the context of lucid dreaming. Which is why, I suppose, I started this thread.
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