The light of thinking casts the world in a different light when I turn the activity of thinking back on itself. I have been looking inside for an image that captures the spiritual essence of thinking.
1st picture: Normally we experience thinking as immediately connected with the things that enter our field of experience. We use thinking to make sense of things we see, hear, feel and want (not an exclusive list). Using the trivial example of thunder and lightning, it is thinking that reveals to us the connected nature of these 2 experiences separated in time. Thinking is that activity that knits together disparate percepts (light, sound, sentiment or volition). Prior to thinking thunder and lightning were separate experiences, in thinking we find how they form a unity. This is the essential nature of thinking. It is a universal activity that seeks to overcome separateness. The process that performs this unifying requires our input, but the actual spark that unifies always appears to us as an intuition, a type of revelation. We can battle with trying to understand something for a long time and then suddenly something clicks and we understand it. Equally strange is then trying to imagine a state prior to not knowing it. We know that the state exists, but in our example 2 minutes prior we didn’t understand that particular relationship. The inner experience, beyond any talk of brain physiology, is that suddenly we were given an insight. Imagining this artistically we might view the activity of thinking as something that lives beyond us, outside us. This activity is omniscient. It understands the interconnectedness of everything in the universe and when we let this activity unfurl in us we temporarily enter into communion with it. Continuing artistically we might choose to go beyond the word “activity” and called it an omniscient being that knows everything. This being presents on the mirror of our consciousness the relationship between thunder and lightning. We did not create this relationship, it was revealed to us. A picture for this relationship might be:
The magical nature of thinking usually escapes us because we focus on the union of Percepts and not the activity that unites. This draws all the activity of thinking towards to the world of percepts, predominantly sensory in nature.
However, it is also possible to use the activity of thinking to understand itself. If we contemplate this situation long enough we come to experience how “something thinks in us” instead of the normal “I think about something”.
In meditation, contemplation or prayer it is possible to intensify this experience so that thinking reveals to us ever deeper aspects of its essential nature. Previously my consciousness was only aware of how thinking connects diverse percepts. Consciousness was like a conduit, a pass-through-zone where 2 worlds met. However, now I begin to experience how thinking is its own activity and if I avert my gaze from sensory experience, I am now longer a pass-through-zone instead I become a mirror in which the universal activity grows and expands my own sense of what I am. The activity of thinking creates its own new revelatory content, which can then in turn be used to further deepen the relationship to this universal thinking activity. What am I? I am a receptacle capable of entering into contact with the all-knowing being of thinking. Religious people will feel comfortable using the word God here. People who have followed my train of thought will understand why people make this connection, yet they will also understand the advantages and disadvantages of using the word God. Understanding, experiencing and deepening this direct relationship to the universal activity of thinking is of key importance here.
Three magpies paid me a visit this morning.


Recent Comments