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comment by GB_Cobber
GB_Cobber  ·  2805 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: A fun challenge. How to answer the "Why" kid.

Be cause true is very close. there is nothing truer ie: straighter than the pure principle Yes.

The answer is Yes. AKA Allowance. The most fundamental causal factor, without which nothing is possible.

While all specific causes are negations, ie No or dis-allowing(resisting rejecting, excluding) choices, they still require allowance in order to be able to negate, thus the blanket default cause of everything is the principle allowance or simply, Yes. Be cause Yes. Read my other comments for more explanation. Thanks for responding.





jadedog  ·  2805 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Oooooh, it was leafy. Haha. I got the Chandler answer, close to the topic but not the exact word.

What are the other 2 English words that would have sufficed that mean the same thing?

Is this concept from "A Course in Miracles" or its progeny, or is this self-discovered wisdom?

GB_Cobber  ·  2804 days ago  ·  link  ·  

The definition of Yes is synonymous with that of allowance and unconditional love, since in order to be unconditional it must be by definition absolutely allowing. We can also see that allowing is primarily what the act of loving does. So love is the common factor in all that exists, love is the key and the whole truth, because essentially it just means Yes.

Self discovered. Since I realized over 30 years ago that the limited and limiting nature of rote learning and its application only caused me to make assumptions and mistakes, I've been actively dis investing from beliefs and formal knowledge, and I only realized the significance of the principle Allowance (Yes) about 11 years ago.

That's when all the dots started connecting at hyper-speed and all the puzzle pieces began rapidly falling into place. It's not just logic and self evidence that tells me I'm on the right track but pursuit of this principle has also lead me to experience some incredible hyper-dimensional phenomena that afforded me some normally unavailable points of view and helped expand my perspective even further. After all, that's precisely what allowance, acceptance, inclusion, aka Love, does. Is it not?

jadedog  ·  2804 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    That's when all the dots started connecting at hyper-speed and all the puzzle pieces began rapidly falling into place. It's not just logic and self evidence that tells me I'm on the right track but pursuit of this principle has also lead me to experience some incredible hyper-dimensional phenomena that afforded me some normally unavailable points of view and helped expand my perspective even further. After all, that's precisely what allowance, acceptance, inclusion, aka Love, does. Is it not?

I wouldn't know. I haven't experienced hyper-dimensional phenomena, unless you're defining it differently than the usual way. I've heard that you can get that from some good drugs, but I wouldn't know about that either.

The thing about not investing in formal knowledge is that it's possible to delude oneself into thinking one's theory hasn't been thought about and tested a million times before. It can lead people to reinvent the wheel when it's already been done.

Thanks for the response though.

GB_Cobber  ·  2804 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Dis-investing is not necessarily discounting. It's simply like not putting money on a horse, to not gamble. It doesn't mean I think the horse is going to lose.

By dis-investing in beliefs I'm simply eliminating inherent biases so I can approach situations neutrally. That neutrality is what allows novelty, including novel experiences.

It is not my contention that formal knowledge is wrong, only that there is always going to be more to it than any conclusion can convey and those limitations cause assumptions and errors.

No conclusion is absolute. A conclusion is an ending. All endings are relative. Thus all conclusions are merely rational, not logical.

jadedog  ·  2804 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    No conclusion is absolute. A conclusion is an ending. All endings are relative. Thus all conclusions are merely rational, not logical.

Including yours.

Why?

Because yes.

GB_Cobber  ·  2804 days ago  ·  link  ·  

The thing about Yes is that it's not a conclusion, it's not an ending. It's the beginning.