Monday, September 21, 2009

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The Lost meaning of Avijja / Avidya (agnosis)

The 'secret' principle behind Emanationism (Monism, Platonism, original Buddhism, and Advaita Vedanta) Copyright 2006 Author: Webmaster attan.com

What is avijja (agnosis) specifically? To refer to said term as merely ‘ignorance’ is a misnomer. This very short exposition of the lost and metaphysical meaning of avijja is meant to expose the philosophical and secret ontological significance that the term avijja refers to in the cosmological model of original Buddhism, Platonism, and encompassing both (these Monistic systems), that of Emanationism, the only true model of totality.

Avijja is literally meant Emanationism, the extrinsic attribute of the Absolute which is the indefinite dyad (aoristos dyas) for all creation, if the Absolute were devoid of an attribute, creation would be impossible, for even the most simplex of things have at least one attribute, the illumination of light and fluidity of water, for example (both attributes of a simplex principle). From the perspective of the Absolute, the very ‘stuff’ of will (citta/Brahman), there is no attribute, it is will utterly and only; as such the nature of the Absolute and its ‘act’ must be wholly indistinguishable, otherwise the presupposition of two subjects, the Absolute and X, would be posited and the very premise of Monism (Monism in meaning = 1 only) and of Emanationism would be utterly negated.

Avijja is a compound term composed of the privative A (not, opposite to, other than, lack of) and VIJJA (Light, Soul, Atman, Brahman). The very nature of the Absolute (vijja), which is objectively directed (a) away from its very Subject (vijja/Brahman), which is also that very same nature of the Atman (“Atman is [of the nature of] Brahman”-Up, and Buddhism: ‘Brahmabhutena attano’).

The confusion over avijja lies in the fact that it is both subjectively and objectively directed simultaneously. Avijja itself being the “light from itself (directed)” is meant that avijja has the Subjective (Self and Absolute) as its object, namely the concealment or privation (a) of the Subject (Atman) from itself. Avijja is objectification by its very definition, i.e. Emanationism. The object of avijja is the Absolute (the light, or vijja, from itself, a), meaning that the Subject, the Absolute, is self-objectifying, i.e. the very nature of will (citta,chit,Brahman) itself, being ‘to will’, not to itself, but to other. Avijja is itself objectification (by the Subject to other), but the very lack of (a) wisdom (vijja) in the will of a being is as pertains its nature, the Subject to which avijja is the very object of.

Brahman is Atman, and Atman is of the nature of Brahman and in no doubt the very premise of both the Upanishads and of original Buddhism, the only differentiation between the two is Atman is devoid of the objectively directed attribute of Brahman, such that the Atman is self-reflexive and self-assimilative, i.e. completely dis-objectified =self-actualization,... the actualization (Atman) of what was before merely potential due to the objectively (avijja) directed nature of the Absolute. Atman is the actualization (by wisdom, self-assimilation) of Brahman which is sheer potential and unmediated (avijja).

Just as one cannot differentiate light from its attribute (to illumine), neither can the nature of the Absolute be thought different or a separate entity from its attributive or extrinsic principle, that of self-objectification, that will wills (citta cetasa). Agnosis is Emanationism itself, the objectively directed “light” from itself to other. Avijja is not a thing itself, but a privation, the uncaused cause for all becoming (bhava).

Unlike Creationism which posits a sentient all-aware Superbeing (God) as the principle (1st cause) behind the complexity we see in nature, Emanationism differs to the logic necessity of merely the extrinsic side of the nature of the Absolute as such that it is, by its very attribute, the “unmoved Mover” behind all things composite, phenomenal and noetic. Complexity in nature and the cosmos at large is in dispute by none, neither by Creationist, Nihilist, or Monist (Emanationist), only the nexus for said complexity is disputed. As pertains the Absolute, its nature and activity are inseparably one thing only, this is the long lost ‘secret’ behind avijja. There is no first cause behind the phenomenal cosmos nor for the spiritual, the noetic will(s) which encircle and underlies the visible world. With attribute as ‘cause’, all things are manifest as the artifice (maya) of the visible world we covet in ignorance (avijja). First cause necessitates an irreconcilable duality, which cannot be enjoined in Emanationism, that A: something other than the Absolute is cause for all things become, or that B: the Absolute is complex being (God) that chose and created the cosmos. The reconciliation of the ignorant proposition of a “first cause for all things become” is merely that of the attributive and extrinsic nature of the Absolute itself, avijja, or the will to other, the ‘lighting outwards of the nature of light itself’, or as is meant here, the Absolute, which is of the nature of will (citta).

“Bhavanirodha nibbanam” (subjugation of becoming is meant Nirvana) is absolutely identical in meaning to “Yoga chita vritti nirodha” (Yoga [samadhi/assimilation] is the subjugation of the will’s [citta] turnings/ manifestations/ perturbations); as such becoming (bhava) and vritti (perturbations) are meant the inchoate nature of the will to objectively direct itself in perpetuity is the beginningless and the primordial principle of the Absolute to other. Overcoming the attributive privation of the Subject to have itself as an object (an impossibility) must be surmounted for liberation to occur such that the Subject has itself as object indirectly thru the via negativa methodology wherein the will ‘knows’ itself as ‘none of this’ and becoming is halted and Self-objectification ceases (nirodha).

Avijja and anatta (Skt. Anatman) are interchangeable terms, the principle of the Absolute to objectification (a-vijja) is meant anatta, for what is other than the Atman, the Light/Vijja than all the 22 named phenomena which are not (a/an) the Soul (vijja/atman)? The finer distinction however between anatta and avijja is that anatta is the purely phenomenal manifestation of the ontological attribute of the Absolute, avijja.

How can what does not exist in anyway be the cause for all things and namely for suffering itself? Surely as a man lost in a barren dessert suffers thirst by the non-existence of waters in said barren lands; so too does the Samsarin (person lost in samsara) suffer at the ‘hands’ of his will which is objectively (avijja) directed to the world of phenomena and sense pleasures, all of which are anatman and which is meant by the very term avijja, for avijja is the privation of illumination/revelation/ditthi in the being as relates to his very nature and true Self, of which the Atman is vijja. That his will (the very Self) is objectively (anatta) directed, instead of Subjectively assimilated (vijja, Atman), “therein does he suffer” -Gotama. Liberation via wisdom (vijjavimutta, i.e. pannavimutta) is the actualization of the light of the will upon itself (vijja) instead of, as primordially and without beginning from the Absolute, objectively (avijja) directed.

Avidya (avijja Pali) has befuddled (and continues to do so) Vedantists now for thousands of years as witnessed to in lively debates we still have record of. Namely it was impossible for them to come to odds with the nature of avidya, such that “how can what is mere privation (lack of gnosis, avidya) be the cause for all things? Was Avidya real or unreal? Was it both or neither? What is the locus of avijja? Is it the Absolute, or the Atman, or the mere (phenomenal) self, or neither, or both?” None of these questions are tenable, for avijja is not a thing in itself, but the principle of the Absolute, the primordial principle antecedent to being, or the empirical principle of avijja as manifest in the composite being. What would the locus of a shadow, the privation of light, be? Certainly we can point to X shadow, but that cannot be the locus of avijja, for something precedes the shadow, so would it be that which casts the shadow? No, for that shape which casts the shadow is preceded by the light which is blocked by that shape. The shadow belongs neither to the form nor the light, but is the objective construct of both. Avijja is subjectively directed and objectively manifest.

Since avijja is merely the extrinsic and Subjective attribute of the will (willing to other [object] = avijja), there is no locus for avijja, for if one were to say: “avijja is the attributive principle of the Absolute, therefore avijja’s locus is the Absolute/Brahman”, this is a nonsensical statement since the locus for illumination (avijja) as pertains light, is also unanswerable since neither the object of illumination, nor the light itself is the locus of illumination. Avijja is act, nature and necessity of the Absolute, all three, for its as impossible to separate illumination from light as to separate willing from will, or avijja from vijja, for avijja implies vijja, just as anatta implies the attan! Would so the fool speak of avijja or anatta without attempting to (in negative dialectics) point to the vijja, the attan (Atman. Skt.)?

Avijja has no meaning outside the conjunct of will and matter, the empirical consciousness (vinnana). The very nature of the Light (vijja) is its outwardly principle to illumine (avijja), principle nor privation have a locus. The Absolute, or Brahman is most certainly vijja, simplex in every way, so to proclaim that the locus of avijja is “in the Absolute” would be both untrue but also illogical. Light (vijja) and illumination (avijja) are inseparably one thing only; this is the indefinite dyad (aoristos dyas) of the ancient Greek Platonists. Specifically ancient Pali is revealing, for the very word for consciousness, vinnana, is literally meant agnosis (avijja): vi (opposite to, contrary of, other than) + ñana (gnosis, vijja, Knowledge, Light, Atman, Brahman), i.e. Vi+nana (vinnana). For the “unknowing” (vinnana), the consciousness of being is the resultant manifestation directly attributive to the Absolute and its very extrinsic nature. As pertains Buddhism specifically, avijja is the first position in the chain of contingent manifestation (paticcasamuppada), however one need ask: “agnosis (avijja) OF what and BY what”? Ignorance itself is not a thing, but an attribution of something, be it in one of two modalities, primordial agnosis (avijja), or empirical agnosis. Samyutta 2.4 specifically (as well as countless other passages) equate avijja with agnosis (anana): [Katama ca, bhikkhave, avijja? yam kho, bhikkhave, dukkhe aññanam”].

Two entirely different levels of agnosis are at play in the model of being, one being the primordial agnosis which is beginningless, and the agnosis which is willed by a being from second to second, as pertains his will (citta), be it by wisdom or lack thereof ; ignorance is manifest which either perpetuates becoming (bhava) and actions (karma), or wisdom in its place which subjugates (nirodha) them; specifically [SN 5.127] speaks of the empirical side of agnosis in the being who so wills them at the discretion of his (level of) ignorance. “As above, so below” this is true of the Absolute that primordial agnosis is the higher principle behind empirical agnosis as manifest in being. The self-privative avijja of the nature of the Absolute that it is subjectively directed inwards, and the empirical ‘shadow’ of the being who marvels in the logos of Emanation as cast by the Absolute, but is unknowing (avijja) as to the Subjective “light” of which he is by nature which is also identical to the Absolute itself, being will (citta).

Entirely in line with Platonism, Buddhism proclaims: [AN 5.113] “Followers, the beginning of ignorance can never be discerned (beginningless) such that it cannot be said “Here is the First where ignorance is not, here is the contingency which generated it.” Such that it should be discerned, followers, “ignorance is a condition” (Purima, bhikkhave, koti na pañña’yati avijja’ya– ‘ito pubbe avijja’ na’hosi, atha paccha’ samabhavi’’ti. Evañcetam, bhikkhave, vuccati, atha ca pana pañña’yati– ‘idappaccaya’ avijja’’ti.).

In Buddhist sutta, avijja is forerunner, as it should be, being first in paticcasamuppada: [AN 2.12] “Above karma, becoming, and views, ‘agnosis encircles (all of them)’ as the (source for) samsara.” (“Ka’mayogena samyutta’, bhavayogena cu’bhayam; ditthiyogena samyutta’, avijja’ya purakkhata’”). Also: [SN-Att. 1.236] Nanajotim (the light of gnosis) = atman; meaning that the wisdom (vijja) made manifest in the disciple is the very premise for liberation as such that agnosis (avijja) has been cut off = end of Self-objectification (avijja, also = atta-an, i.e. anatta). In fact, in Buddhist doctrine the only noun “freed” of avijja is the citta, which logically presupposes the fact that as pertains our earlier question: “agnosis (avijja) OF what and BY what”? , must be meant avijja of the will’s nature (atman) by the will (citta): [AN 1.196] "With mind (citta) emancipated from ignorance (avijja)…this designates the Soul is having become-Brahman.", [AN 1.195] “Citta is freed of the sensuous taint, citta is freed of the taint of becoming (bhavaasavaapi), citta is freed of the taint of nescience/ignorance (avijja), Liberation! Gnosis is this, therein (utter) liberation.” [MN 1.279] “When his steadfast mind was perfectly purified, perfectly illumined, stainless, utterly perfect, pliable, sturdy, fixed, and everlastingly determinate then he directs his mind towards the gnosis of the destruction of defilements. Knowing thus and seeing thus his mind is emancipated from sensual desires, his mind is emancipated from becoming, his mind is emancipated from ignorance.” “This said: ‘the liberated mind/will (citta) which does not cling’ means Nibbana”[MN2-Att. 4.68]. "Steadfast-in-the-Soul (thitattoti) means one is supremely-fixed within the mind/will (citta)”[Silakkhandhavagga-Att. 1.168]. “'The purification of one’s own mind/will', this means the light (joti) within one’s mind/will (citta) is the very Soul (attano)” [DN2-Att. 2.479].

The Genuine Aryan Truth-Seeker

Nearly 100% of all those who, later in life of their own independent and free will, came to a new religion, or to religion for the first time have gravitated to that very same faith via personal convictions and/or personal likes/dislikes; this error is grand and only borne of ignorances. A true Platonic truth seeker does not gravitate towards religious beliefs or dogmas because those same religious systems are personally attractive, but rather, thru logical and abductive examination, a certain position is reflective of what is true as a model for totality and the furthest position from absolute absurdity (such as Creationist views of a sentient being as the Absolute, or the other extreme, Nihilism/Atheism).

One undeniable fact of the cosmos is its incredibly complexity, both biological and inanimate; the only contention lies, amongst all religions and non-religious materialistic views, is the nexus for this limitless complexity. While the creationist illogically posits a divine and sentient hand at the helm of said creation, the nihilist/atheist in equal ignorance posits random happenstance for its appearance. With the countless plethora of ‘faiths’ (blind), and religions which lie at either end and in between of these extremes, humans window-shop for that faith which many admit ‘suits them best’, or ‘rings personally true’, or which ‘appeals to them’. Wisdom never plays any part in that which they call their own (view/faith/belief), nor examination. The self-reinforcing delusion of mankind’s religions is not one based in truth or wisdom, but in comfort, or respect that it is their inheritance of their parents, or some other likewise reason.

The genuine truth-seeking Platonist, be he an Indian Advaita-Vedanta Monist, or a Neoplatonist is equally pleased if he is proven wrong, either by the wits and wisdom of another in refutation, or by his own hand thru the expansion of wisdom, for both ends only serves to bring this Aryan truth-seeker closer the truth. Either self-refutation or an increase in wisdom brings one closer the truth and the true Aryan desires this above all else. Those ignorant demons, the common and profane manyfolk will cleave with their hearts and souls to untruths, which many times they themselves know to be untrue, but for no other reason that “they were born in this faith/belief”, or an equally ignorant sentimentalism. Close-minded religiosity is based in a comfort, a delusion which is hard to break and enforced by ignorances which are never countered or eliminated in the life of the profane manyfolk. Pythagoras, Plato, Plotinus, Gotama, authors of the Upanishads, and few others were genuine truth seekers the wise emulate with all their being. Wisdom cannot be handed to another via book or word, but the insight which only comes from an unquenchable desire for wisdom and uncovering the truth of genuine being which lies under and above the façade of empirical being, this consubstantial puppet fashioned in the winds of time and which is rented but for a while and is lost again in the winds of time.

The disobjectification which culminates in liberation self-granted by the sage who bears the Aryan sword of wisdom is something far far more rare than any could imagine in the land of lemmings who use and cleave to false religions which brings only placebo comforts to those same profane and common manyfolk who are the zombies of samsara, the walking dead in the land of the Subjective light which is never seen by those same whose will is always directed into the dark of the objective and temporal world of flux and reflux.

“I don’t know where my soul is”

There are four errors in this statement, and one axis of truth upon which all four rotate round copyright 2007 webmaster attan.com

“Where is my soul” is the most common question in reply by the ignorant and profane when discussing metaphysics, Buddhism, or other forms of Monism; being the abbreviated version of “I don’t know where my soul is”. Within this simple sentence can be found four grand errors of egregious presumption and one axis of truth upon which these four satellites of error go round.

Taking the first error “I”, or the empirical person so-and-so (Bob, Sue etc.) this compounded and material self of which there are “two selves” within us, the Person (spirit, Purishha) and persona (psychophysical, temporal); “two within us” (Plato Republic 604b, Phaedo 79, Timaeus 89d), or Philo’s “Soul of the soul”, or the Buddha’s “atta hi attano nathi” (Self is Lord of the self [persona]). This “I” of which cannot be, in metaphysics, the Knower of knowing, but rather the conscious (vinnana) living being whose conceptions and ideations are “dead when he dies”, that “I” is not the Person but the “self of which the Self is Lord”. This “I”, the objective and compounded self cannot ever come to know the Knower, which is the posterior and uncompounded Subject. The objective and temporal “I” cannot know the Subject which precedes it any moreso than a puppet can know That which pulls its strings. This “I” has ‘within’ (superficially so) it no means possible by which to have Knowledge (gnosis) of the soul, since its very principle, this compounded “I” lacks the Witness and Knower by which it can or could be known. There is no “I” whereby which it could be said of anyone that it, “I”, could Know (gnosis as opposed to the empirical knowledge of the mere material “I”, which is persona) the soul.

Taking now the second error “where”, or asking of how the soul is IN TIME, the magnitude and measure of which ‘where’ is but a delineation of things compounded and ‘taking up space’ (where is this soul? It is no-where). The quest for the uncompounded in spacio-temporal existence, and the objective cosmos of becoming, flux and reflux, could not be more illogical. Anything (quite literally ‘thing’ in the true sense of objectivity) which partakes of a topos (place), a locus in space and time which is syn. with magnitude and materiality cannot be the point of any metaphysical search, in this case the soul. Would we go hunting for fish in the desert? “Where” is syn. with space-time materiality of which something might be said to have “its place”, or a “where”, whereby which it (objectivity) might be found. The soul cannot have any such correlation whereby we might ask or inquire how it is “where”; for the soul is no-where, not in space, nor in time either.

Further along this line we come to “my soul”, of stated implication this uncompounded principle of ones noetic being as illogically meant a possession or slave (“my”) to either another subject, or worse still implication an objective possession. This inverse and topsy-turvy statement is the upside-down illogical attempt to gather insight pertaining the soul thru conception that same is property and possession by something else, of which the common fool implies himself, or as meant the existential and bodily self. This cryptic materialistic line of reasoning is indicative of the perversity of understanding relevant to the fool in his “fools quest”- Plato.

Lastly stands as final error “is”, to wit the fool in his questioning seeks knowledge of the Subject as an object of anatomies to which the Greeks, Buddhists, and Vedantists declared to be a quest among compounded and conceptive antinomies “is it, is it not, is it both, it is neither”, to which the Buddha was apposite to answer such fallacious lines of questioning which involved the “pairs” of dualities, the antinomies of existential reasoning as employed by materialists in linear and objective thought on or about the soul. The Soul is tat tvam asi, as = Brahman, the Absolute, is not “is, is not..etc.”, but That, the uncompounded Absolute as opposite to all antinomies. [SN 2.17] Gotama Buddha: “This world is carried on by a duality (dvayanissito). Etc.”

The tie which binds these four errors together, and which is true in the statement “I don’t know where my soul is”, is “don’t know”. [AN 5.113] “Followers, the beginning of ignorance can never be discerned (beginningless) such that it cannot be said “Here is the First where ignorance is not, here is the contingency which generated it. Such that it should be discerned, followers, ‘ignorance is a condition’. “This avijja (agnosis, avidya, nescience, ignorance) or ‘uncaused principle’ for the “descent of Being”, is the ‘black-hole’ (again: privation) around which these four satellites of errors spin round. Avijja being in Greek ‘tolma’; as meaning Emanationism, or the extrinsic side of the Absolute, or the attribute (avijja) to the Principle (atman/Brahman/Hen) between which no distinction can be drawn in that both attribute and Principle are one (point and line are in the mathematical theology of Platonism both together = 1) thing only (will-willing, light-illumination, between which what the Absolute ‘is’ [principle] and what it ‘does’ [attribute] can have no distinction lest the premise of Monism itself be obliterated). In the case of our ‘black-hole’ analogy this privation was the source and creator of these ‘satellites’ by which the fool objectively struggles with in objective conceptualization of the immaterial soul not only in space and time, but also as possession to another and as regards his (mere) self which the Upanishads are apposite in stating “for the mortal, there is no soul”.

On the profanity that is Atheism

copyright 2008 webmaster attan.com

The profane and pathetic nature of Atheism does not stem from its denial of a Creationist God, but as the Greek term itself defines same, atheos (anti-divinity) is a materialistic denial of all things metaphysical. This demonic Physicalism, or Atheism, derives its status amongst most as merely a vehement denial of God, however the case is that an Atheist is in true, a metaphysical Atheist who denies any immaterial and uncompounded Subjective principles as prior to, underneath or autonomous to matter (hyle).

The first mention of Atheism, is by the Greeks in the term atheos, which is in reference to Greek Platonism as refers to the Nous (will/mind/citta/spirit/soul) as found in passage: (Phil 26e-30d) and not to a supernatural persona, i.e. God. The immanent-only materialistic pantheism of metaphysical Atheism is an aphilosophical position holding that everything which exists is no more extensive than its physical compounded materiality; that is, that there are no kinds of things other than physical things. This anti-divinity of Atheism is the true and shadow-worshiping profanity that is the hallmark of Atheism, not its correct position that, as Plato and the Neoplatonists argued for as well, that there was no Supreme-Being as creator of the cosmos. Metaphysical Atheism is Atheism, in true and in whole. That some who deem themselves Atheists also admit to, as they would say ‘something’ is certainly not in question, however these people are not in fact Atheists but lazy Agnostics and in most cases crypto-materialists; calling themselves atheists in but they merely deny God, is only a measure of their ignorance in of which they do not know the full scope of the very term Atheism. The Greeks in coining the term as progenitor for Atheism had meant, as Plato, Socrates, and Pythagoras before both, the denial of spiritual and immaterial divinity a-theos, or anti-divinitism.

Plotinus, the founder of Neoplatonism (only an extension and condensing of Platonism itself), wrote extensively on the denial of the Absolute as not Being, but an active insentient dynamis, an unmediated divinity of which composite Being could not be said thereof; such that Being by definition must partake of more than an uncompounded simplex principle (such as nous). The goal of Vedanta, Advaita, Buddhism (all of which encompass Upanishadic Monism) have Brahman as the endgoal, of which this Absolute is most certainly denied as Being (i.e. God). Atheism in true is none other than materialism, the praise of the existential persona headed for the grave-pit, it cant be shown anything else but contempt for denial of any and all which is outside the scope of the narrow and fallible spectrum of the petty human senses. Gotama Buddha derided Ishvara (God) both in principle and those who aligned themselves in practice with same.

A voracious supporter of Atheism (not a mere God-denying agnostic as in the previous example) will in all instances adamantly deny the metaphysical, the divinity of which atheos, or Atheism is meant in its definition. A true agnostic (merely as meant agnosis, or ignorance! Or, deeming oneself as ignorant) is but an unlearned and unexplored supporter of metaphysics even if only indirectly; that some agnostics would foremostly deny God, does not make them an Atheist. That these ‘unknowers’ (agnostics) would firstly deem themselves as Atheists is but a further expression of their ignorance of the meaning of Atheism and not just of metaphysics.

Atheism is currently not a (sic) philosophical position that God is not, but that theology (again, the study of divinity, which Creationism is only a part thereof) is something to be despised and spit upon. To convince oneself of the insanity of Atheists, they need only watch a debate between Atheists and Creationists; one might gather that such rabid profanity-laced tirades could only be found amongst those made-become Atheists who had been raped over twenty years by Catholic priests. It is highly humorous that Atheists fight and spit so voraciously at the mention of a God whom they deny exists. In true definition further in modern connotation and example, Atheism is little more than anti-religiosity (theo-logy), and not simply the logical denial of God. Religion is merely the profane secular side of metaphysics; is but popularized metaphysics; as such it is true that religion is as was said “the opiate of the masses”. A modern Atheist is one who hisses like a snake at the sight of religious and or theological institutions of noetic, spiritual examination. He is, as Atheist, far more than one who denies the Creationists God(s); but were Atheism merely this alone, I and many others Platonists, Vedantists, would gladly proclaim themselves as Atheists! In connotation and definition both however to call oneself an Atheist is no different than gleefully calling oneself a demon materialist.

What the Atheists fail to realize is of the two ignorant positions as explanation for the extreme complexity in nature between the model of the Creationists, and that of the Atheists, the positions of the Atheists is far more so the implausible one. The extreme complexity in nature from macro to micro is not in question by even the lowliest of fools, however the Atheistic position that this complexity stems from time and random atomic convergence is highly ignoble and unintelligent. One might equally insanely postulate, from the same position of the Atheists, that random atoms, given a few billion years, will eventually coalesce to the point of creating Shakespearean literature. However Atheism in its extreme insanity is working on creating its own Gods, thru perfection of cryogenics and DNA manipulation wherein someday, they erroneously hope, will culminate in bodily immortality. Or even more insanely, as some demonic Atheists have postulated, that empirical consciousness is no more than complex and copyable network which could be transferred as software into a robot at the death of the body, thereby granting immortality in the form of a robot which could be repaired indefinitely. In the ranks of perversity, even Satanism hails as higher than Atheism, in that of its core Satanism admits to a full acknowledgement of immaterial and metaphysical subjectivity, or the divine, even if in praise of the dark side of divinity. Insanity takes countless forms, Atheism is but one highly miserable variety thereof.

Gotama is Mara, is evil, in sutra

Gotama is Mara, is evil, in sutra Or, the Buddha is still subject to desires, and sensual depravities

Or, “The Self (atman) is at war with self (anatman, not-self)” [B.G. VI.VI]
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As in most religions, the objectification and validity of the embodiment of evil is maintained as a persona in Buddhism, as existent and embodied in other than the empirical self. As against sutta, Buddhism in no way differs from modern connotations of Satan, or in Buddhism’s case Mara, wherein it miserably diverges from the doctrinal denotation that in fact one’s self, Gotama or any other persona, is none other than Mara (or Satan). It is true that Mara, in doctrine, is a persona (empirical self), however not as differentiated from the persona that is either Gotama or any person “who can be called by name”, against which the Buddha is a “not-person” [SN, common proclaimation]; this is yet another point of fine metaphysics which has been bastardized by the common and profane religionists over time, just as Satan is not a being in the Bible; but Satan, who remains an angel even in hell, can be called a persona, or, indeed, persons, since his name is "Legion: for we are many", that being the ‘many’ (= “Mara’s army”) which comprise the composite and existential persona which is ones self (Bob, Sue, Gotama, etc.). Of the two in us, one the "spark" of intellectivity (nous, citta, noesis) or Spirit, and the other, feeling or mentality, subject to persuasion, it is obvious that the latter is the "tempter,". That the soul itself, our "I" or "self" itself, should be the Devil whom we call the "enemy," "adversary," "tempter," "dragon," -- never by a personal name (Even the Hebrew Satan, "opponent," is not a personal name). 'Be simply and wholly bereft of self.'" For "there is nothing else in hell, but self-will (attabhava, ahamsome); and if there were no self-will, there would be no devil and no hell." In the Shaker hymn we have: But now from my forehead I'll quickly erase the stamp of the Devil's great "I." Just so is the case in Buddhism that Mara is not a being, nor an autonomous objective reality in sutta, but malady, plague, death (=Mara, “king of death”).

Our whole metaphysical tradition, Christian, Vedantic, Buddhist, Advaitic, and other, all maintain that "there are two in us," [Plato, Republic 439DE, 604B; Philo, Deterius 82; St. Thomas Aquinas, Sum. Theol. II-II.26.4; St. Paul, II Cor. 4:16] this man and the Man in this man; and that this is so, is still a part and parcel of our spoken language in which, for example, the expression "self-control" implies that there is one that controls and another subject to control, or “at war with (rather implied ‘against’) myself”. Of these two "selves," outer and inner man, psychophysical "personality" and very Person (spirit, nous, citta, atman), the human composite of body (kaya, rupa), and soul (colloquially old English personage), and spirit (atman, nous, citta), the former is built up. Of these two, on the one hand body-and-soul (or consciousness, vinnana, jivatman, namorupa), and on the other, spirit, one is mutable and mortal, the other constant and immortal; one "becomes," (bhava) the other "is," (thita) and the existence of the one that is not, but becomes, is precisely a "personification" or "postulation," since we cannot say of anything that never remains the same from moment to moment that "it is” in any true sense. However necessary it may be to say "I" and "mine" for the practical purposes of everyday life, our ego in fact is nothing but a name for what is really only a sequence of observed behaviors. "How can that which is never in the same state 'be' anything?" [Plato, Cratylus, 439B; Theatetus, 152D; Symposium, 207D, etc.] "'Ego' has no real meaning, because it is perceived only for an instant.” This unfortunately is a point of supreme ignorance amongst modern ‘buddhists’ however who confuse and conceive of atman as = ego, of which no scripture, Buddhist or Vedanta ever makes the error thereof, for the composite and temporal persona (as = ego, or myself, literally person so-and-so) is “na me so atta” (not my Self, my Soul), which is arguably the most common refrain found in Buddhist sutta.

Buddhists, irrationally, like Christians, comfort themselves that their idols, Gotama and Jesus were “free of desires, imperfections, sensuous proclivities”, by rationalizing that Jesus was tempted in the desert by a genuine separate persona, Satan (i.e. evil personified), or that Gotama, in the many instances in sutta (such as the collection found in the Marasamyutta of SN book 1), was tempted by a similar persona, Mara, who commanded Gotama to “forego spiritual life and to seek after pleasures of the body, long life, and or enjoin himself in the endless streams of desires present to the living” (SN1). However by doctrine and logical necessity, the “great evil, king of death”, Mara was none other than the very personage Gotama himself [SN 3.195] “Mara’s-dharma, Mara’s-dharma venerable Lord, in what manner may you describe Mara’s-dharma? The five aggregates are what is meant by Mara’s-dharma.” Also: [SN 3.195] At one time in Savatthi, the venerable Radha seated himself and asked of the Blessed Lord "Mara, Mara I hear said venerable. What pray tell does Mara mean?” Just this, form, Radha is Mara, sensations are Mara, perceptions are Mara, assemblages are Mara, consciousness is Mara. Seeing thusly…this is the end of birth, the Brahma-life has been fulfilled, what must be done has been done." The Person who overcomes Mara, in the case of Buddhism, the Buddha, the Tathagata, is a spiritual sage of “two minds”, that being the self of flesh and blood, and the psycho-physical personage (namorupa) Gotama, and that nobler, better other, so deemed “conqueror, master, light (dipa), Seer!”. That Self which is “always at war with that other self which is foul, of the world, and subject to corruption and decay”, as parroted in: “The Self (atman) is at war with self (anatman, not-self)” [B.G. VI.VI]. The only difference between the liberated sage and the ignorant profane worldling is that the sage has overcome and subjugated the worldly self (bhavanirodha [self-subjugation, = overcoming becoming] nibbanam) by mite of the Self in wisdom. The spiritual and metaphysical adept is one who must be the “dead man walking” who has followed the commandment: “die before ye die!”, and is one who has died to that (mere) self and lives in the Spirit, or as is meant, the Self. This is the discernment between the Great Self (mahatta) and little self (alpatman); or the fair Self (kalyanatta) from the foul self (papatta) as mentioned in Buddhist sutta (Anguttara N.). The “dead man walking” as title of the sage, the wisdom-holder who, though liberated and residing in the unseen Self, yet still ‘walks around amongst the living who are as dead (of spirit)’ is a spiritual appellation of formerly great meaning now misunderstood. To the profane worldling this master-sage is a zombie such that he does not entertain worldly delights, but to that extremely rare sage, all others are the spiritually subjugated, the ‘walking dead (of spirit)’, and depraved who are the genuine zombies of samsara as seen by Him who has “left forever the burden of becoming” (bhava [becoming], as meant = samsarati, i.e. samsara).

It is extremely common fare in ancient religious doctrine to find the sage, the master speaking by means of his Self to his mere personage, or self as an objective entity and temptor, rather than what is truly happening, that being the physical self tempting (in vain, obviously) that nobler Person, Gotama or otherwise; an excellent book on this very topic in ancient thought, is: “The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind” by Julian Jaynes. The bicameral mind of Person and persona are “at war” yet recorded and read (by religious zealots and fools) as though the master sage is at odds with an autonomous entity who personifies (again, self!) evil. Logically so, fully illumined or not, the body is unquestionably the major point of stupefaction for the spirit; however this is a religious heresy as conceived either by Buddhist or Christian, that their idols and masters are subject to bodily desires and its subsequent depravities; but this is nonetheless indeed the case in doctrine. There is in fact no objective autonomous entity which is tempter, evil personified as separate from Gotama the persona. Several of Gotama’s disciples who gained full liberation (or wisdom which fully separated Self from mere self) were said to have “taken the knife blamelessly” in so committing suicide and eliminating final removal of the empirical self which leads to continued stupefaction and potential fall from the grace of liberation. [SN 3.189]

The Mara Sutta is extremely important in that it is outright stated by Gotama that “Mara is not only the five aggregates, the killer, but also the one who is killed”; meaning obviously that all empirical personas are therefore Mara, just as it is said over and over, that all psycho-physicality = Mara, so too therefore is the phenomenal and objective self, or persona also = Mara. Any and all persons, Bob, Sue, Larry, and Gotama himself are indeed Mara. Obviously, logically so, the Buddha was not tempted by the desires and proclivities of his yet still remaining self of flesh and its own will (=vinnana, or empirical consciousness; as MUST be differentiated from ontological mind, or citta). The body is a foul and pestilent plague which no amount of wisdom can rectify; that the Buddha’s body (i.e. Gotama) was riddled with aches, pains, and flatulence in sutta cannot be debated. Like a drunken man whose sensibilities are askew to the extreme, so too this body is a pestilent “burden” (SN4) which must be carried up to death’s gates itself; the mighty sage, be it the Tathagata or otherwise has no recourse for, as has been said, “polishing the turd” this body of which he in ignorance formerly saw his Self as, but which was “not my Self”. In the end, Gotama was thrown upon the funeral fire, wrapped in linen, soaked in oil, and set ablaze like the worthless pile of trash it so genuinely was; this is an immemorial thing of “all which is born and subject to decay”.

Though wisdom may be full and “ripe” as is stated in sutta (in the case of Gotama), so long as spirit is coincident with the foul body whose fruits are lusts, depravities, desires, etc., there will logically and unquestionably be stupefaction and literal war between the self which is Gotama, and the Self which is the “non person” the Buddha, the Tathagata. That wisdom (as meant cittavimutta, liberation of spirit) has been attained, Buddhahood stated, there is still yet no manner by which physical suffering and its brethren desires and afflictions can or may be removed except thru final separation at death of the body. There is neither mention of an end to physical suffering in sutta nor evidence for same in either Gotama’s countless pains in the course of his life, or his bodily suffering and “tremendous pains” (mahaparinibbana sutta) shortly before his physical death. [SN 4.38] “Mara, Mara venerable Lord, in what manner may you describe Mara? When there is the eye, when there are forms, there then is eye-consciousness and phenomena to be cognized, there exists Mara and the what (is deemed) Mara.”


It is no coincidence that earliest iconography of the Buddha would be either an empty seat as worshiped by those gathered round it, a pillar of flame, a swastika (= Brahman), or a hovering wheel; and not was the Buddha represented as Mara, nor was Gotama the personage who was “that evil, that not-Spirit (anatman)”. For the Buddha is spirit (citta, nous), and never (as done so by earliest Buddhism) confused with the empirical Mara, or Gotama who was composed of the corporeal “Mara-aggregates”; “The purification of one’s own mind/will (citta); this is the Doctrine of the Buddha” [DN 2.49], “How is it that one is called a ‘Buddha’?...gnosis that the mind/will (citta) is purified (visuddham)…such is how one is deemed a ‘Buddha’.” [MN 2.144]. Rather fittingly, all present day “statues of Buddha” are in fact statues of Mara (= of Gotama!), those ignorant and profane demons who would presume we find them as Buddhists are in fact those who bow down and pay homage to an eikon Gotama, to Mara, to the empirical persona and self which is “suffering, an ill, as a plague, a boil, a sting, a pain, an affliction, as foreign, as otherness, as empty (suññato), as Selfless (anattato)” [AN 4.422]. That all current “statues of the Buddha” are in fact gold-covered or brass homage’s to Mara, or Gotama, cannot be denied and is most certainly fitting for an perversely upside-down corrupt materialistic pseudo-religion far diverged from its original, which praises Mara-Gotama over that of the Buddha who is spirit and his wisdom-attainment which culminated in the subjugation of the spirit over that of persona (= anatta, Mara, Gotama), or, as depicted in earliest iconography, the Buddha is undepictable, just as in sutta he is deemed a “non-person”; [SN 1.132] In contradiction to Mara, it is declared by Uppalavanna that she is “cittasmim vasibhutamhi”, ‘Lord and master of the citta’, and thereof conquered Mara’s and all his attributes (which comprise person-hood, or ahamsome). The next time one sees demon-‘buddhists’ bowing down before a mere mimesis, an eikon of empirical personage, i.e. a brass statue of Gotama, that same person should with outstretched wisdom recognize that these people are giving praise and worship to all which Gotama in his own words deemed foul, detestable, and evil, which he gave ample illumination against.

The spirit which is = Buddha is not confused in sutta which the Mara-aggregates (in this case of course, meaning Gotama) which is so keenly differentiated in sutta: [MN 1.436, AN 4.422] “Whatever form, feelings, perceptions, experiences, or consciousness there is (the five aggregates), these he sees to be without permanence, as suffering, as ill, as a plague, a boil, a sting, a pain, an affliction, as foreign, as otherness, as empty (suññato), as Selfless (anattato). So he turns his mind (citta, Non-aggregate) away from these; therein he gathers his mind (citta, non-aggregate) within the realm of Immortality (amataya dhatuya). This is tranquility; this is that which is most excellent!” [SN 3.234] “Followers, the desire and lust for formations is a defilement of the citta, the desire and lust for feelings is a defilement of the citta, the desire and lust for cognition is a defilement of the citta, the desire and lust for experiences is a defilement of the citta, the desire and lust for vinnana is a defilement of the citta. But, followers, when one abandons the defilements of the citta regarding these five stations (aggregates), then ones citta inclines towards renunciation. Ones citta is made pliable and firm in renunciation by direct gnosis.” [MN 1.511] “For a long time I have been cheated, tricked and hoodwinked by my citta. For when grasping, I have been grasping onto form, for when grasping, I have been grasping onto feelings, , for when grasping, I have been grasping onto perceptions, for when grasping, I have been grasping onto experiences, for when grasping, I have been grasping onto consciousness.”

For the worldling “lost in the sea of desires”, his spirit is subsumed, sublimated like salt thrown into water, and subjugate (= avijja) in the self, for him there is no distinction between Person and persona, there is only this person ‘so and so’, he is not liberated of which it might be said of him [MN 1.160] “He has destroyed outflowings having intuited vision of wisdom. This followers, is called a follower who has blinded Mara the evil one. Having deprived Mara the evil one’s vision to behold him he has crossed over all desire for anything in this world.” The “temptations of Mara” as enjoined by the Buddha in sutta is the stupefaction of coincidence with Gotama the persona upon the Person, the Buddha, or as distinctly mentioned: [SN 1.103] cetoparivitakkamaññay “Mara…considering upon the reflection (of the Buddha’s mind)” wherein the empirical consciousness (vinnana) of Gotama wages battle with the spirit of the Buddha (citta); or the compounded consciousness at war with the uncompounded mind (citta, or spirit) of the Buddha. To which the Buddha is apposite and replies by means of his wisdom: [SN 1.105] nihato tvamasi antaka’ “Thou-ness maker of ends, (thou) art defeated”, often translated as “You are defeated endmaker”, but which however in the Pali refers not to another persona, but the personage itself (in this case Gotama) who is rebuffed by the Buddha; this again being meant the bicameral mental battle between Gotama-Mara and that of the Buddha who is “no longer subjugate to the whims of objective selfhood” which is ‘na me so atta’ (not my Soul, or Self). Just as the main and subtle differentiation between the criminal murderer and the freeman is the freeman has “self-control”, is “Charioteer” (JN); which in contrast the criminal is subjugate to act willy-nilly without second thought (= reflexive ‘self-control’) upon the whims and desires of his very self, and “does not hold the reigns (of his senses)” (SN1). But in so being coincident with Gotama, the psychophysical person who “is Mara”, the Buddha is therein tempted over and over, but rightly so, does not succumb. This is of course the “inner war”, the “inner struggle” between “a self divided against itself”. [MN 1.227] “Followers, I am an expert in this world and the next, am expert in Mara’s realms and what is outside of Mara’s realm, am expert in the realm of death and what is outside of the realm of death.”

What else would the Buddha make proclamation of in so stating ‘na me so atta’ (this/these are not my soul) than his empirical self, composed of the five khandhas (aggregates) which make up the personage we know as Gotama or any other person? It cannot, logically, doctrinally, sensibly, be another than this. To think, as modern ‘buddhists’ so ignorantly do, that Mara is a genuine personage as autonomous and external ‘boogey-man’ to the already external, objective, and empirical self (Gotama), is none other than ignorance heaped upon ignorance over time immemorial as fool taught fool who in turn taught the ever the more so foolish, the incorrect meaning or earliest and original Buddhism. [MN 1.141] "What do you suppose, followers, if people were carrying off into the Jeta grove bunches of sticks, grasses, branches, and leaves and did with them as they wished or burned them up, would it occur to you: These people are carrying us off, are doing as they please with us, and are burning us? No, indeed not Lord. And how so? Because Lord, none of that is our Soul, nor what our Soul subsists upon! Just so followers, what is not who you are, do away with it, when you have made done with that, it will lead to your bliss and welfare for as long as time lasts. What is that you are not? Form, followers, is not who you are, neither are sensations, perceptions, experiences, consciousness (the five aggregates)."

Mara is none other than the mimetic (mimesis) personage as opposite to, against, and coincident to the eidetic Buddha who is spirit. It is absolutely no coincidence that it is remarked of wise sages that they are indeed “tortured souls”, however the meaning or source of this comment is unknown to most, but which logically stems from the fact that the common fool is not one who is “of two minds” or is divided against himself in that he is both willing and complicit in the bestial and desire-based proclivities of objective personhood, or psycho-physical life [Dhm 7] “Whosoever dwells only in what is pleasureful and sweet, with one’s senses unleashed, fat, lazy, lacking moderation, slothful. Herein one is overcome by Mara the evil one, just as a small tree is swept away to destruction by the great storm”, or [Dhm 46] “Know this, the body is merely foam, a phantom. Verily by perfect knowledge, know that the body is merely a collection of phenomena and a mirage of what is genuine. Destroy the sensuous desires, those flower arrows of Mara the tempter and depart forever from the King of death, go unseen”, or as it is said of this fool, “the wicked have no quarrel with the Devil!”. Not is it the case of the Buddha who, so long as life lasts, must be perpetually tempted by his former identity, Gotama who is none other than Mara [SN 1.115] “the eye is Mara’s, so too are formations, eye-contact, consciousness, ear, sounds, nose, smells, tongue, tastes, the body, all objects, thoughts, mental phenomena; all these are Mara’s”, all of this of course belongs to Gotama. The commoner does not seek after liberation or wisdom, but for continued existence (bhava) as embodied in [SN 1.108] the Sassatavada (perpetuosity, or eternal becoming) heresy as endorsed by mara “the life of mortals rolls on and on, like the chariot wheels felly around the hub (atman). This is the same passage in the Br. Upanishad [2.5.15] “all spokes of the wheel are contained in the axle and in the felly of the wheel, all beings and selves (empirical self) are contained in that Self (atman)”. For such an evil one, [SN 1.111] “a net hovers in the heavens, which catches thoughts (desires, lusts); by means of this net I (Mara) will snare you” But for the sage, [SN 1.112] “the five khandhas cannot find him (the final liberation at death) …Mara (the empirical self) and his army”

The title and premise of this article should rightly prove heretical to the tastes and minds of your typical ‘buddhist’ but not so to those who know both the doctrine and metaphysics of Buddhism and Vedanta well, in so knowing the clear distinction made between self and Self, or persona and Person (spirit, atman, Buddha). However the ‘body of Mara’ which was Gotama and was “born in death….and returned to death” (‘ashes to ashes, dust to dust’) was not the Buddha, nor are the brass and gold images of Gotama recreated countless millions of times and found in temples across the globe, and even key chains, to be looked upon as representing the Buddha or his ministry, but rather a Mara-worshiping later-day persona-based cult which bemuses itself as Buddhism but which in fact is anything but. Gotama’s remains (part of them, as they were divided up and buried far and wide, and worshiped by the so-called ‘relic-cult’ sects) reside in a New Delhi museum inside the pottery jar that contained them inside the stupa these thousands of years and unearthed in the early 1900’s. That modern ‘buddhism’ would choose to make iconography of Gotama, that foul Mara-khandha “rancid heap” [Dhm] which died and was thrown upon the funeral fire is a fitting symbol for its Mara-materialism. Gotama ‘the tempter’, who was Mara, was not the Buddha who was spirit; that person Gotama was born, was sick, was composed of the elements, died, burned, and possessed no ability to cross the portal of death of which the Buddha did cross in knowing what was “beyond Mara’s realm”. Earliest depicters before all sects of Buddhism existed, with depth of wisdom knew this fact and appropriately represented Gotama in one way, and the Buddha in another, for one was Mara superceded by the Buddha who was a ‘non-person’ in the Nikayas, or the “lotus flower (spirit) which arose from the muck and mire (body), and waters (of becoming)”. For the fool however that I have rightly, with evidences from doctrine, logic, and intelligent deduction would deny Gotama as anything other than Mara, or evil, it need be said to those many foolish, that this is no more a denial of the Buddha and his gospel, than is Socrates’ “to…soma….ouk estin ho anthropos” (the body is not the Man [Aniochus 365]) is a denial of the Man, or spirit which is the heart (citta) of both the Buddha, liberation, and his taught endgoal and ministry to transcend, via wisdom, the mundane horrors of existence; and fling with that very wisdom gained, the spirit from this “near shore” of death, empirical identity (sakyanuditthi, as = anatta [DN1]), and becoming, to the “far shore”, that so deemed “unborne, unbecome, and immortal (amata)” (Ud 81), which is “paramo piya” (most exquisitely beloved).

Monday, February 16, 2009

Death to Islam, and its demonic followers



That this cartoon image depicting the "prophet" Mohammed has so enraged its demon-followers to the point of beating their chests like mindless apes and calling for the death of the Danish man who drew it, is proof enough of their insanity.
The webmaster of attan.com and this blog calls for the demise of every man, woman, and child who has cleaved themselves, in base ignorance, to this Demonology.
To quote the Koran regarding those who "LEAVE ISLAM": "they should be killed, those traitors.."- Mohammed
This evil dog-religion will, I assure you, be the basis and grounds for WWIII. Destroy them.