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Ancient Signs Of Modern Behavior

The gravest existential issue that ancient man’s thoughts confronted was death. Humanity lost “Eden” when symbolic thought supplanted the spontaneous conscious experience that other animals benefit from. Once we acquired an objective sense of past and future, we could worry about death and other possible misfortunes awaiting us in the near and distant future. Simply […]

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Oct 6, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, civilization, death, existential problem, hunter gatherer, instinct, knowing, science, stone age, symptoms point of view, thinking

The Good Old Days

Some profoundly pivotal points in human existence go back at least 3+ million years. First, let’s review the major ones in the order they occurred to provide context for the genetic research covered later in this post. 1) The beginning of the Stone Age (3,400,000+ years ago). Technological innovation began here with the development of […]

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Sep 29, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, future, hunter gatherer, the electric age, the iron age

Modus Operandi

Life following the agricultural revolution has been a period of exponential growth in technological change affecting every aspect of human existence. Youth compared to the elderly are much more inclined to be comfortable with such change, even embrace it. Rash actions excite younger folks. Considering this through the lens of chapter 16, “Not knowing the […]

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Sep 6, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations, Tao Tips

Alone with Thought

Two Science News reports touch on what is probably humanity’s most serious problem. As chapter 71 puts it, “Realizing I don’t’ know is better; not knowing this knowing is disease.” Google [Hallinan Kidding Ourselves] for a rational anthropological view of self-deception. Also, google [People will take pain over being left alone with their thoughts] for […]

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Aug 31, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, ego, ignorance, knowing, learning, self-honesty, symptoms point of view, thinking

A proper sense of awe

Tao Tips is a new category of post I thought I’d try out. For quite a while, I’ve sought to say what I had to say with fewer words, but my posts just don’t cooperate. Perhaps the name “Tao Tips” will help remind me to limit myself. After all… Those most adept have results, yet […]

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Aug 16, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations, Tao Tips

CenterTao Group Anyone?

I just stumbled onto the ‘group’ function of Facebook which looks like it is worth a try. Join if you like and we’ll see how it goes. Perhaps I’ll discontinue the ‘community’ page (https://www.facebook.com/centertao) which seems pointless anyway. The ‘group’ page (https://www.facebook.com/groups/centertao/) could be more interesting. At least members can post stuff and interact. It […]

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Aug 10, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations

Loving Your Eco-System

I assume most of us in moments of contemplation wonder who we are. Sure, we have our given name, gender, personal history, ideals, likes and dislikes to cleave onto, which create and maintain our “illusion of self”, as Buddha pointed out in his 2nd Noble Truth. How tenacious our innate insecurity impels us to hold […]

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Jul 30, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: avijja, Buddha, eco-system, ego, emptiness, illusion of self, science, self-suicide, tanha

Where does the fault lie?

“The fault lies not in the stars but in ourselves”. That bit of Shakespeare speaks to our modern paradigm. By modern, I mean the epoch beginning with the Renaissance (14th century) that followed the fall of Rome, i.e., the so-called Dark Ages. Notice how these labels bias the view of cultural progress right away in […]

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Jun 16, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, Dark Ages, freewill, instinct, knowing, Renaissance, responsibility, science, tao, thinking, understanding

Taoist secrets

Over the years, I’ve come across references to life secrets in general and occasionally Taoist secrets in particular. A few decades ago a woman inquired about our Sunday Taoist meetings, held weekly back then. I told her we mainly shared our reflections on the Tao Te Ching. She said she already had the Tao Te […]

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May 29, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: judge not, mysterious sameness, symptoms point of view, Taoist secrets, the sectret, thinking

Laws as Symptoms, not Solutions

Google [TED Is The Law Making Us Less Free] for how law affects society. Briefly, the speaker, Philip Howard, says, “There’s this fetish with rules that has kind of replaced morality. And it works both in a gotcha sort of way, and it works in an avoidance of responsibility sort of way.” In reality, I […]

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May 18, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, bio-hoodwink, civilization, hunter gatherer, science, symptoms point of view

Loss Aversion Management

Recent research reveals how we can’t help but shoot ourselves in the foot. When I look around, I see our aversion to loss influencing just about everything we do, albeit often in very subtle ways. The innate emotional aversion to loss, when reinforced by thought, traps us even more. I’m going to explore this issue […]

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Apr 29, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, belief, civilization, emotion, fairness instinct, fear, freewill, loss aversion, need, sentience, stress, thinking, wilderness

Mind Over Milkshake

I quit smoking a few decades ago and quickly gained 40 pounds. Not wishing to lug all that extra baggage around, I decided to eat less. Actually, I would have quit eating altogether if I could get away with it. The more I lost, the less I needed to eat to maintain whatever weight I […]

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Apr 25, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: beliefs, bio-hoodwink, calories, food, placebo effect, science, thought

Flow Triggers

The Flow Genome Project researches Flow, which Steven Kotler describes as when performance sharply increases. Google [How to open up the next level of human performance], [How To Get Into The Flow State], and [The Science of Maximizing Human Potential]. Anyone familiar with the Zen(1) point of view will recognize Flow right off. Steven rephrases […]

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Apr 5, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, consciousness, fear, instinct, knowing, learning, mind, need, responsibility, Right Attentiveness, Right Concentration, Right Mindedness, symptoms point of view, yoga

Naturally Racist

The online matchmaking site Okcupid surveyed its members. Google [Okcupid Race and Attraction]. They looked at first-contact attempts and who was writing who back. They say it was immediately obvious that the sender’s race was a huge factor. That offers some proof to what has long been obvious to me: Homo sapiens are naturally racist. […]

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Mar 28, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: bigotry, impartial, instinct, mysterious sameness, racist, thinking

BRAIN

President Obama’s BRAIN Initiative (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) seeks to decipher how the brain’s circuitry produces thought and behavior. The Science News Brain Shot reports on this initiative. This is an excerpt. Ambitious goals: While the BRAIN Initiative’s objectives are hard to express in concrete terms, the project is full of visionary promise. […]

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Mar 5, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: brain, Buddha, enlighten, fear, freewill, knowing, need, science, understanding

Managing Our Disorders

The DSM 5 — Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders — now recognizes hoarding as a disorder. Google [CBS News Seeking help for hoarding] for a short report on this. Frankly, I‘d say we have more of a diagnostic disorder. In our quest to identify human problems as disorders, we are blind to the […]

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Mar 1, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Cinderella, civilization, DSM 5, hoarding, hunter gatherer, imagination, instinct, language, Nature and Nurture, psychological disorders

Bono & Musk on Creativity

­Fareed Zakaria GPS is an in-depth podcast with guests who know something of what they speak, often with opposing points of view, which helps pull the discussion deeper. Google [Fareed Zakaria Interviews with Bono and Musk] for his interviews with Bono (lead singer of U2) and Elon Musk (developing SpaceX) on what fuels their creativity. […]

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Feb 14, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: creativity, emptiness, GPS, nothingness, the God shaped hole, the void, zakaria

The Harmless People

In the early 20th century, a few pioneers combed the back woods of rural Appalachia to document and record the last remnants of American roots music still unchanged by the cultural upheavals of the 20th century. This music later evolved into the folk, honki tonk, and country music of the 20th century. Similarly, Laurence Marshall […]

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Jan 16, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, bushmen, civilization, emergent property, fairness instinct, hunter gatherer

Born Again Taoist

How many of us realize the role that instinct plays in our lives? Long ago, our ancestors dreamed up elitist myths that elevated our species from other living things. We are told, “Don’t be an animal” and that Mankind was created in God’s image. One way or another, every culture has a spiritual superiority story. […]

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Jan 11, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: animal, born again taoist, freewill, instinct, Mother Earth, symptoms point of view

Instinctive Free Will

We easily acknowledge that animals and young children don’t choose their nature; they are born with it. Consequently, society doesn’t regard them as being responsible. With the onset of adulthood, that suddenly changes, and society then holds us responsible for our actions. As adults, we somehow miraculously acquire the power to choose “right” from “wrong” […]

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Dec 15, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: emotion, fear, free will instinct, freewill, instinct, limbic system, Mr. or Ms. ego, need, reptilian brain, thinking, Triune brain

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