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Carl Abbott

The Truth vs. The Middle

The Chinese language uses dual characters (1) as shown here (right). While searching for background on this, I stumbled onto this article… google [Culture, dialectics, and reasoning about contradiction (1999)]. This Abstract of the article succinctly portrays a noticeable difference in the way East and West view reality. Culture, dialectics, and reasoning about contradiction by […]

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Dec 22, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: consciousness, in the eye of the beholder, mind

Dumbfounding

The Science News Science Stats left me dumbfounded, so I read it again… I’m still dumbfounded. Does it really say, “… calorie intake may be the bigger contributor to Western obesity”? What are they thinking? What else causes obesity? I have noticed over the years, a growing effort to find genetic causes for why some […]

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Dec 12, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: fairness instinct, food, freewill, hunter gatherer

A Taoist Creed

If Taoism had a creed(1), what would the specific cornerstone of such a creed be? For example, the Christians have “to love” as a cornerstone of their creed: to love thy God, to love thy neighbor, to love thy enemy, and so on. Before you read on, come up with a few of your own […]

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Dec 2, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations

Of Free Will, I Am

Free will and I have had a life-long journey together. For the first forty years, I “knew” I had free will. I could do anything I set my mind to. Such certainty is particularly strong in youth, and naturally so! Around age forty, I began to look for biological evidence of free will. Any clear […]

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Nov 26, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: freewill, I am, Schrodinger's Cat

Discomfort and Pain

The Science News’ article Hurt Blocker got me thinking about pain and the ways we deal with it. While this research is really about physical pain, the principle applies to all pain. How we deal with discomfort and pain results in many unintended consequences. We could avoid these consequences if we knew at what point […]

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Nov 16, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, freewill, pleasure v pain, understanding

Undecided? You bet!

Up until today, I have remained undecided whom to vote for President. Searching for a photo to accompany this post, I came across this one. It highlights the chorus of ridicule I’ve heard aimed lately at the undecided ‘wishywashers’ among us. Slinging ridicule back is tempting; however examining this from a symptomatic point of view […]

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Nov 5, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: desire, freewill, government, lower position, politics, symptoms point of view, tribalism

Siren’s Song of Politics

The noblest purpose of politics is the pursuit of the “perfect” compromise which bitterly opposing factions can live with, if not heartily support. This is true for keeping the peace in any civilization. Put simply, the intimate social connection and mutual understanding common among our hunter-gather ancestors is not possible given civilizations’ hierarchical social system. […]

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Oct 29, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, consensus, democracy, desire, future, politics, thinking, tribalism

“It’s the Economy Stupid”

Do you remember that pithy campaign comment from James Carville, “It’s the economy stupid”? I wonder if he knew how deeply universal economics is. Indeed, why don’t educators put this at the top of their list of the necessary education every child should receive? Could it be they don’t know? Economics is survival for all […]

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Oct 20, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, economics, education, emergent property, learning, survival, thinking

Networks of Networks of….

The Science News report, When Networks Network, is striking in its implications so you may want to read it first. Go to, Networks-of-Network.pdf. This research hints at humanity’s gradual cognitive evolution toward what I would call a small ‘t’ Taoist (p.154) point of view. Research like this, along with quantum theory, nudges secular common sense […]

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Oct 11, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: consciousness, fear, judgment, knowing, mind, mysterious sameness, need, networks of networks, science, symptoms point of view, thinking, understanding

Can we pull the plug?

A short video essay on cell phones gave me food for thought. Of course, I need more of that like I need another hole in my head, but I can’t pull the plug on thinking. The essay is ostensibly about the wide use of cell phones. However, scratch the surface and it offers insight into […]

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Oct 4, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: happy, knowing, mind, need, thinking, understanding

Yamaguchi San

I was going to name this post The Real Lesson, but somehow that felt a little off base, so I named it after my shakuhachi flute teacher, Yamaguchi Goro. This photo is of him and Aoki Reibo playing a beautiful suizen piece, Shika No Tohne (The Distant Cry of Deer). To see this performance, google […]

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Sep 25, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical

“Fixation on same same”

Recently my friend Andy teased me about my “fixation on same same”, as he put it. My habit of noticing similarities between apparent opposites bugs him a little. “Fixation on same same” was his response to my comment, “Folks on the left use folks on the right as scapegoats and vice versa”. The underlying needs […]

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Sep 15, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, fairness instinct, fear, mysterious sameness, need, stress

Beware: the Blind Spot

I occasionally refer to the blind spot as our main impediment to understanding. What is the blind spot? Put simply, the blind spot = emotion + thought. The loudest emotions are need and fear (1). When those roar, they are all we can hear. In How the Hoodwink Hooks, (p.100) I first explain how desire […]

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Sep 7, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, desire, fear, need, thinking, understanding

And Then There Was Fire

I’ve always found pondering the how’s and why’s of life and the world to be irresistible. The mountain of historical and scientific information available certainly makes this challenging. Happily, a lifetime of inquiry may be paying off. I can see outlines of the big picture now. The constant difficulty lies in how mountains of detail […]

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Aug 27, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: agricultural age, Buddha, civilization, desire, electricity age, emergent property, future of humanity, hunter gatherer, iron age, language, religion, science

Tao and Democracy

Having a largely ignorant electorate is both an advantage and a disadvantage in a democracy. Being unaware of shortsighted political narratives makes it harder to dupe people. However, ignorance of historical and scientific fact can easily lead to disastrous political choices. The Science News’ report, Uncommitted newbies can foil forceful few, explains why both democracy […]

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Aug 23, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, democracy, future, impartiality, knowing, politics

What’s Not the Elephant?

My favorite Buddhist parable is the Blind Men And The Elephant. Several blind men each touch a different part of an elephant and proceed to describe and debate what they think an elephant is. The lesson here is how untrustworthy perception actually is. With only five main senses, we are all blind in the final […]

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Aug 13, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, knowing, Nothing, thinking

Upping the Ante

Have you noticed the ever-present urge to continue to up the ante? Not only that, but isn’t the sky often the limit? We can’t help but aim for the next step up, and when we reach it, that level becomes our new bottom line. Most of us are content for a while, but then we […]

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Jul 30, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: desire, emergent property, freewill, hunter gatherer, learning, yoga

A Word to the Wise?

“A word to the wise” is a good maxim, but flawed I’m afraid to say. I’ve always liked how D.C. Lau phrased the last characters of the first line of chapter 51: Circumstances bring them to maturity. It’s true, albeit not what the characters literally say. What is it about circumstances that bring us to […]

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Jul 23, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: knowing, learning, maturity, old age, pain, understanding, wisdom

A Bee with Personality

Science has driven another nail into the coffin of human uniqueness. (Google [Bee genes may drive them to adventure].) This is yet another example of chapter 56’s, This is called profound sameness. Soon—in a thousand years more or less—we’ll be forced to admit that, while we see ourselves as unique, we are actually profoundly similar […]

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Jul 14, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: honesty, humility, mysterious sameness, sanity

Necessity, the Mother

Free will is what presumably makes us different from other animals. We believe we have a unique ability to choose and act freely. (See Free Will: Fack or Wishful Thinking?, p.586) The well-known proverb, “Necessity is the mother of invention”, points to the actual truth. Simply put, necessity is the mother of all choice and […]

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Jul 6, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, fear, freewill, need, yoga

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