Essay: What Was the QuestionA Story by runningturtle87Entangling questions and theories of realityI think it's interesting that we formulate questions in terms
of what we believe to be our human experience, and yet we know that humans have
had major shifts in consciousness that totally blew our former conceptualizations
all to smithereens. We think that how we
think about things now is how it has to be.
We want our vision of what we think to carry us on forward, just like we
did as children, and teens, and young adults, and never imagining ourselves
lying on our death beds ready to go. When Hubble looked out and viewed the Doppler shift at work
among the stars and identified the universe as being at various stages of
expansion, it exploded the world view of a stable sky. The entire picture, the context of humanity,
the pyramids, Stonehenge, all the myriad ways that we have counted on the stars
and what we have projected with astrology, all of that instantaneously became a
shifting contingency. There really is no
stability in the universe. When Kandinsky, or whoever, first formulated the notion of
abstraction, that there can be a deletion of human subjects like tress, and
people, and recognizable content and only abstraction viewed, that was a blow
to human self-centeredness. It had
always been throughout human history that we could always understand in human
terms what we were looking at. Even now
when we don't understand the content of a painting or object we say that it is
an abstract object. We don't
philosophically understand it. "What
can it mean in human terms?" we ask ourselves anthropocentrically. So, we pose questions to problems and think that our
questions are the most sensible things in the world. What else would we have thought about the sky
or the subject content of art before 1900?
It's all we knew. We formulated
our questions based on our limited experiences.
A civil war soldier did not understand unmanned drones from 3,000
miles. Cavemen did not understand light
speed. Experience teaches us that our
questions limit what we perceive. They
filter our perceptions from the outset. We give ourselves choices that are false dilemmas, and then
we argue over them to the death. Is it
this or that? Creationism or cosmic soup
and monkey talk? 7 days of creation or
big bang? This dogma or that dogma? Did Hitler escape to South America? Where is Jimmy Hoffa? Who killed
Kennedy? We formulate questions based on
limited experience and information and then when we get to the moment where the
data reveals the lack of relevance of the questions we always asked to the
problem that is set before us, and we regret having wasted all that time on it. Investments, hobbies, addictions, relationships, contracts,
parties, sidesteps, plans, concepts, religion, philosophy, entanglements,
decisions, dogmas, getting in the car, shaking hands, glancing to the side,
seeing an event, anything and everything is a potential for a shift in our world
view. Now, to be absolutely fair, some
people are excellent at covering up any changes and at keeping from having to
consciously admit to themselves that the world has gone on without them. Stuck in the 70's. Dresses like a teenager. Still lives at home
with his parents. Got a job and thinks
he is set for life. Just got married and
now they are going to have smooth sailing.
That's finally over. We pose questions based on our limited experiences. Even experts disagree. There are thousands of versions of every
religion. There are hybrids of every
thought form. Subject and form switch
positions all the time and semantic relationships shift like ocean water on the
shore in a hurricane. So, when we ask a question, we can acknowledge that it
goes without saying, IMHO. In my humble
opinion. If you don't really think so,
wait a while. Is there any time in
heaven? runningturtle87 © 2013 runningturtle87 |
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Added on January 30, 2013 Last Updated on January 30, 2013 Tags: questions, deconstruction, perception, quantum psychology Authorrunningturtle87AboutIntimacy is the highest value. I work as an inner-mediator and deal with very personal stories; much of my writing reflects the work I do. more..Writing
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