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Introduction to Eastern Philosophy
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Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Introduction to Eastern Philosophy

Page 2: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so

interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about the right questions.

Page 3: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Love of Wisdom Philosophy literally

means “the love of wisdom.” I define wisdom as knowledge that is transformational, the original meaning of the Greek word gnosis.

Page 4: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Great Questions You study philosophy

so that you can explore some of the great questions of life. Perhaps the first philosophical question is to ask yourself why there is anything at all? Instead of nothing, why is there something called a universe, a cosmos?

Page 5: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

More Questions Next, you might

ask: What does it mean to be a human being, to have life? Do we serve any purpose in this great scheme of things? Is there any meaning to life?

Page 6: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Socrates Socrates said that

“the unexamined life is not worth living.” What does it mean to live an examined life?

Page 7: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Twoness in Nature When we can see

and accept the twoness in nature, then rather than duality, we can have polarity.

Page 8: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Indestructible Question When philosophy

becomes the search for meaning, it is facilitating the indestructible question.

Page 9: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

A Worldview Wise people from

around the world state that it is necessary to have a philosophy of life, a worldview. In fact, we already have one and it dictates how we live and the choices we make. The study of philosophy is to help encourage us to make this philosophy conscious.

Page 10: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

A World in Crisis Any college educated person needs to

be aware of the issues facing our world and our country. And to face this crisis students need an integral wisdom, a wisdom that is universal and inclusive. Hopefully this class will be one step in the right direction.

Page 11: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Pure Awareness Just pure

awareness is pure openness.

Page 12: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

What the Oracle Said The oracle in

ancient Greece at Delphi said: “Know thyself!”

Page 13: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Movement Outward and Movement Inward

Amazingly enough, there can be a movement outward and a movement inward, both at the same time.

Page 14: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

“The Path of Philosophy”Kyoto, Japan The sacred is that

which allows us to bear these two movements within us.

Page 15: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Soren Kierkegaard1813-1855

The Danish philosopher Kierkegaard wrote: “life was not a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be lived.”

Page 16: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Seek Wisdom Philosophy asks us

to seek wisdom right there in the midst of the contradiction of all our fears and yearnings.

Page 17: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Religion or Philosophy? Religion and philosophy have been

separated in the Western world, but they are more united in the Eastern world.

Page 18: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Both the Yin and the Yang A great symbol of

this reconciling force is the Tao, which contains both the yin and the yang together at once. Could this be sacred?

Page 19: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Integral Philosophy An integral approach

understands the necessity of combining East and West in one’s view of the world. We live in what is called the global economy, a global village. We have access for the first time to the wisdom of the whole world.

Page 20: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Need for Critical Thinking Openness is necessary, but so is a

critical mind. “You want to open your mind, but not so far that your brains fall out”! A critical mind is not a mind that needs to judge and ridicule, but it is a mind that ask questions and looks for fallacies.

Page 21: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Axial Age What is this “Axial

Age?” It is a virtual explosion of mental and cultural consciousness, infinitely richer and more sophisticated than any of its predecessors.

Page 22: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Sacred All people who are originally interested

in religious and philosophical thought are concerned with the nature of ultimate reality. But they call it by different names such as Brahman, Tao, Ground of Being, the Ultimate, the Holy. In the Western world we most often use the word God.

Page 23: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

“God” When the word “God” is used to define

ultimate reality it often has a personal taste to it. That is God is seen as a Cosmic Person-a divine being with will and intelligence who is just and compassionate and infinite in virtues. Some eastern philosophy considers God personal and some impersonal.

Page 24: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

The Impersonal God The impersonal

God is the recognition that God is beyond all ordinary definition. The infinite cannot be understood by the finite mind. God is said to be pure spirit, not definable in words.

Page 25: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

An Integral Approach An integral

approach will embrace it all and seek to understand it as a vast and amazing drama, a mystery drama, the mystery of mysteries.

Page 26: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Something Else is Going On “The other broad

answer…is that something else is going on: behind the happenstance drama is a deeper or higher or wider pattern, or order, or intelligence.”

Page 27: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

A Different Question “Who created the

world” is a different question than “How did the world begin?”

Page 28: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Lack of Understanding If you don’t

understand the immune system, then how do you explain why some people get sick and some do not during an epidemic?

Page 29: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

No Turning Back Once people started

to look for laws that even the gods had to obey, there was no turning back, try as so many would.

Page 30: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

A Belief Philosophy begins

with a belief that the world is intelligible.

Page 31: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Origins of Philosophy “The story of philosophy is the story of

human reflection on life. The two principal sources of philosophy are curiosity about self and the world and a desire to overcome all kinds of suffering” (John Koller).

Page 32: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Ultimate Questions “Ultimate, universal

questions were being asked, and answers were being sought from a new quarter - the human mind’s critical analysis of material phenomena.”

Page 33: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

Natural Elements The significant thing

was that it was no longer the gods that were being spoken of but natural elements.

Page 34: Introduction to Eastern Philosophy. Asking the Right Questions Philosophy is so interesting precisely because it is not about the right answers, but about.

An Intelligible Whole The early philosophers “held that the

universe is an intelligible whole. In other words, they presumed that a single order underlies the chaos of our perceptions and, furthermore, that we are able to comprehend that order.”