Dukkah and the Truth of Subjectivity - Discussion
Dukkah and the Truth of Subjectivity
Dukkah and the Truth of Subjectivity | H McElroy | 1/5/15 4:29 PM |
RE: Dukkah and the Truth of Subjectivity | . Jake . | 1/5/15 4:57 PM |
H McElroy, modified 9 Years ago at 1/5/15 4:29 PM
Created 9 Years ago at 1/5/15 4:29 PM
Dukkah and the Truth of Subjectivity
Posts: 17 Join Date: 9/25/14 Recent Posts
I've been thinking that, perhaps, the pure subjective nature of my experience - and my complete inability to ever prove to myself that other people's inter awairness is a "real" thing - is the primary source of dukkah. Any thoughts?
Jake , modified 9 Years ago at 1/5/15 4:57 PM
Created 9 Years ago at 1/5/15 4:57 PM
RE: Dukkah and the Truth of Subjectivity
Posts: 695 Join Date: 5/22/10 Recent Posts
Hmm...
I think that the notion that others' experience is unprovable (and its implicit co-notion that mine is) is certainly a flavor of dukha ;)
But that's all dukha on a very abstract level, isn't it?
What situations that you actually experience are clearly 'dukha'?
And what do they have in common?
Do they have solipsism in common?
What about experiences of dukha that involve our assumtion that we know what 'they' think or feel about us?
I think that the notion that others' experience is unprovable (and its implicit co-notion that mine is) is certainly a flavor of dukha ;)
But that's all dukha on a very abstract level, isn't it?
What situations that you actually experience are clearly 'dukha'?
And what do they have in common?
Do they have solipsism in common?
What about experiences of dukha that involve our assumtion that we know what 'they' think or feel about us?