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Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 9:58 pm
by deepbluehum
mzaur wrote:
Dechen Norbu wrote: What isn't "damned starkly simple" is why you then become conscious if you happen to die. Or if you have an NDE, for instance, with your brain functions completely impaired. Namdrol provided an interesting hypothesis from the tantras. .
Have you ever died?
Your picture of Samantabhadra has the legs cut off. I would change it.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 10:10 pm
by Malcolm
deepbluehum wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
deepbluehum wrote:
The relative truth, if you know it's just relative, and knows it's an illusion, then is not avidya anymore isn't it? [Unity of two truths to the rescue!]
This is the flaw of tregchö.
Thregcho and togal are inseparable. I feel this notion of a flaw, no two truths and such comes from thinking thregcho is its own path and togal is something different.

Yes, of course, in a real sense there is no tregchö without thogal and vice verse; but nevertheless, Longchenpa devotes many pages to criticizing tregchơ in comparison with thögal.

The "no two truths" thing comes form my master, ChNN. But also in it is stated the same in the Dzogchen tantras.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 10:47 pm
by deepbluehum
Namdrol wrote:
deepbluehum wrote:
Namdrol wrote:This is the flaw of tregchö.
Thregcho and togal are inseparable. I feel this notion of a flaw, no two truths and such comes from thinking thregcho is its own path and togal is something different.

Yes, of course, in a real sense there is no tregchö without thogal and vice verse; but nevertheless, Longchenpa devotes many pages to criticizing tregchơ in comparison with thögal.

The "no two truths" thing comes form my master, ChNN. But also in it is stated the same in the Dzogchen tantras.
Yes. I think the flaw comes from treating thregcho as a path. It's not so much a flaw if one wants to practice like that, of course it's beneficial. But one will not realize the true meaning of exhaustion of phenomena without togal or some other practice with special treatment of the subtle aspects of the channels and bindu.

BTW, as fascinating and l33t as togal is, it's pretty difficult, as in super difficult. The postures are awkward. I think very few people will make to the final phase. Pranayama methods are a lot easier, and can be a lot more comfortable and easier on the eyes.

No two truths is part of the Dzogchen direct approach, bypassing intellectual arbitration and go straight into the experience. From the standpoint of direct perception, there is only one truth. But consider the consequence...

What it implies is that even avidya is vidya, and the Kagyu masters are vindicated once again. I see all this as a loop.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 10:50 pm
by Malcolm
deepbluehum wrote:
BTW, as fascinating and l33t as togal is, it's pretty difficult, as in super difficult. The postures are awkward. I think very few people will make to the final phase. Pranayama methods are a lot easier, and can be a lot more comfortable and easier on the eyes.
Any effort in togal at all will gaurantee that one will attain buddhahood in the bardo.

Can't say that about pranayāma.

N

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 10:52 pm
by deepbluehum
Namdrol wrote:
deepbluehum wrote:
BTW, as fascinating and l33t as togal is, it's pretty difficult, as in super difficult. The postures are awkward. I think very few people will make to the final phase. Pranayama methods are a lot easier, and can be a lot more comfortable and easier on the eyes.
Any effort in togal at all will gaurantee that one will attain buddhahood in the bardo.

Can't say that about pranayāma.

N
A good argument to do both.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 11:23 pm
by Malcolm
deepbluehum wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
deepbluehum wrote:
BTW, as fascinating and l33t as togal is, it's pretty difficult, as in super difficult. The postures are awkward. I think very few people will make to the final phase. Pranayama methods are a lot easier, and can be a lot more comfortable and easier on the eyes.
Any effort in togal at all will gaurantee that one will attain buddhahood in the bardo.

Can't say that about pranayāma.

N
A good argument to do both.
Pranayāma is important.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 11:27 pm
by Wesley1982
Its plausible that certain areas of the brain are "activated" or "energized" when engaged in Buddhist meditation and other practices of conscious-awareness.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Tue May 01, 2012 11:57 pm
by krodha
Wesley1982 wrote:Its plausible that certain areas of the brain are "activated" or "energized" when engaged in Buddhist meditation and other practices of conscious-awareness.
phpBB [video]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-wuOYlxMSY

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 1:07 am
by Dechen Norbu
Let's keep on topic fellows. :focus:
NDE's, meditation/ science and all that stuff can be discussed in the Lounge, if you want.
I for one would like to keep this discussion focused.

Thanks.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 7:50 am
by Sönam
Dechen Norbu wrote: I for one would like to keep this discussion focused.

Thanks.
:good:

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 8:27 am
by Andrew108
Namdrol wrote:
In a real sense, however there is neither mind no matter. Mind and matter are equally produced through non-recognition of the basis i.e. essence, nature and energy.

N
Is this saying that our 'reality' is the non-recognition of the basis? And if the basis is recognized then is this a recognition of another alternative 'reality'? When it comes to recognition of the base does it make sense to talk about it as being a 'reality' that can be known?

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 8:33 am
by mzaur
Namdrol wrote:
deepbluehum wrote:
BTW, as fascinating and l33t as togal is, it's pretty difficult, as in super difficult. The postures are awkward. I think very few people will make to the final phase. Pranayama methods are a lot easier, and can be a lot more comfortable and easier on the eyes.
Any effort in togal at all will gaurantee that one will attain buddhahood in the bardo.
Why is this so?

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 9:32 am
by florin
deepbluehum wrote:
BTW, as fascinating and l33t as togal is, it's pretty difficult, as in super difficult. The postures are awkward.
the "duck" is easy.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 9:39 am
by florin
Namdrol wrote:
Any effort in togal at all will gaurantee that one will attain buddhahood in the bardo.

N

isn't it more like if one dies while at the level of first vision one will be reborn in a pure realm where one will live for 500 years practising dzogchen ?

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 1:24 pm
by Malcolm
Andrew108 wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
In a real sense, however there is neither mind no matter. Mind and matter are equally produced through non-recognition of the basis i.e. essence, nature and energy.

N
Is this saying that our 'reality' is the non-recognition of the basis? And if the basis is recognized then is this a recognition of another alternative 'reality'? When it comes to recognition of the base does it make sense to talk about it as being a 'reality' that can be known?
What our impure vision is a result of not recognizing the basis. When we fully recognize and then integrate with the basis, then our impure vision vanishes.

If the basis could not be recognize, liberation would not be possible.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 1:26 pm
by Malcolm
alpha wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
Any effort in togal at all will gaurantee that one will attain buddhahood in the bardo.

N

isn't it more like if one dies while at the level of first vision one will be reborn in a pure realm where one will live for 500 years practising dzogchen ?
That will happen only if, for some reason, you were not able to recognise the appearances of the bardo of dharmatā as being your own state.

You ought to read Birth, Life and Death by ChNN.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 2:56 pm
by Andrew108
If the basis could not be recognize, liberation would not be possible.
Or is it that liberation is possible because the base cannot be recognized? :smile:

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 3:34 pm
by Malcolm
Andrew108 wrote:
If the basis could not be recognize, liberation would not be possible.
Or is it that liberation is possible because the base cannot be recognized? :smile:
No, that is not how it is taught in Dzogchen.

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 6:09 pm
by Andrew108
So the recognition is not discriminating? More like knowing the flavor of the base?

Re: The brain and Dzogchen...

Posted: Wed May 02, 2012 6:21 pm
by Malcolm
Andrew108 wrote:So the recognition is not discriminating? More like knowing the flavor of the base?
Recognition is prajñā.