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What is Practical Philosophy?

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Title: What is Practical Philosophy?


1
What is Practical Philosophy?
  • Dennis Blejer
  • School of Practical Philosophy, Boston
  • 5 April 2008

2
The School of Practical Philosophy
  • Non-profit, educational organization dedicated to
    the study and practice of philosophy as it
    applies to living a truly happy and harmonious
    life.
  • Affiliated with a world wide network of schools
    that began in London, circa, 1940s.

3
SPP Boston
  • Offer an introductory course in practical
    philosophy at the Boston Center for Adult
    Education, Boston, and the Theosophical Society,
    Arlington
  • www.PhilosophyWorks.org

4
Outline
  • The three aspects of man (male and female)
  • Body, mind, and consciousness (spirit)
  • Identification
  • A false belief in who or what one is
  • Liberation
  • Becoming free of identification and being oneself

5
The Body
  • Physical or gross
  • Includes the brain
  • Has size, weight, color, texture, odor, etc
  • Appears to be alive and animated
  • Speaks, moves, breathes, eats, excretes, and
    procreates

6
Body - continued
  • Requires earth (food), water, fire (heat), air,
    and space
  • Includes the organs of sense smell, taste,
    sight, touch, and hearing
  • Instrument by which we experience sensation and
    perception, which are interpreted as pleasurable
    and painful by the mind

7
Mind
  • Mental or subtle
  • Thinks, reasons, decides, wills, feels, dreams,
    and desires
  • Includes the emotions
  • Brain
  • Transducer between the mental and physical links
    the body and mind
  • Example a radio as a transducer

8
Mind - Thought
  • The most obvious feature of mind
  • Thought is not physical
  • Does not have size, shape, weight, or location
  • How does thought arise?
  • Strongly connected to language as we generally
    think in words

9
Thought - continued
  • Thoughts can be coherent or incoherent, relevant
    or irrelevant (distracting) to the needs of the
    present moment
  • Example If I am thinking about what I want for
    dinner instead of attending to what is going on
    in this meeting

10
Mind - Reason
  • Defined philosophically as discrimination
    between the true and the untrue
  • The aha experience
  • At some point in the thinking process the
    rightness of the solution is recognized
  • Proof in mathematics
  • Often the truth of the theorem is known before
    the proof is made
  • The proof serves to confirm what was known
  • The proof can lead one to truth if not known
    beforehand

11
Mind - Dreaming
  • Occurs during sleeping and waking states
  • During the waking state it is known as
    daydreaming
  • Daydreaming is considered a state of absent
    mindedness
  • Can be very dangerous, as for example, during
    driving

12
Consciousness
  • Attention is closely connected to consciousness
  • You must pay attention to be conscious of the
    present moment
  • One pays to get something in return
  • Knowledge of what is happening and what needs to
    be done
  • Peace of mind
  • Allows reason and memory to function

13
Consciousness - continued
  • How do we know what we think, feel, dream, etc?
  • Observation by consciousness
  • As God is my witness
  • We refer to ourselves as human beings
  • Being means conscious existence
  • The most basic aspect of ourselves is that we are
    conscious we are conscious all of the time

14
Consciousness - continued
  • Is the observer of mind, so lies beyond it
  • As mind is to body, consciousness is to mind
  • Consciousness does not move or change
  • When mind is still the unmoving, unchanging
    nature of consciousness is known
  • Be still and know that I am God
  • Meditation

15
Identification
  • The false belief in who or what one truly is
  • You cannot be that which you observe
  • Not anything smelled, tasted, seen, touched,
    heard, thought, felt, or known
  • The five sheaths of Vedanta that conceal the Self
  • (1) I am the physical body, (2) I am alive, (3) I
    think, (4) I know, and (5) I am happy

16
Liberation
  • Being free of identification
  • Self-realization
  • The thing that you seek is that which is
    looking, St Francis
  • What is looking is referred to as the witness

17
Liberation - Witness
  • Witness is from wit, which is from the Sanskrit
    root vid, meaning knowledge
  • A witness is full of wit, meaning funny and
    smart, or happy and intelligent
  • A witness in a court of law is someone who has
    observed something and can speak about it
    truthfully

18
Witness - continued
  • A witness has the following qualities
  • Observant
  • Knowledgeable
  • Happy
  • Truthful

19
All the Worlds a Stage
  • The world is a stage where we are actors
  • An actor knows
  • Who he is and is not deluded by his role
  • He knows that the play is just a play and isnt
    real
  • He knows what is real

20
How Do We Wake Up?
  • Let the mind acknowledge consciousness
  • Do not believe in any limited identity
  • Not this, not this
  • Stillness Be still and know that I am God
  • Meditation

21
To Be or Not to Be, That is the Question
  • Satchitaanada
  • Knowledge, consciousness, and happiness
  • There is only one Self
  • Practice, practice, practice
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