• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

CenterTao.org

taoism, taoist thought, buddha, yoga, tai chi, shakuhachi

  • Tao Te Ching
  • Ways
  • Posts

civilization

Monthly Chapter: 81

Continue reading…

Jul 11, 2016 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Monthly Tao Te Ching Tagged With: civilization, hunter gatherer, knowing, tao, what is tao

Buddha’s Truths Pertain To All Life

Buddha’s Truths apply to all Earth’s creatures, although only humans need to have truth verbalized. Our need to have truth put into words is symptomatic of something we feel missing. Considering which of these deep truths pertain to all life forms helps them feel more real and inclusive. The First Noble Truth is the existence […]

Continue reading…

May 30, 2016 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, Buddha, civilization, fear, future, hunter gatherer, need, pleasure v pain, religion, thinking

Trump and the Mandate of Heaven

To better comprehend the Trump phenomenon, I need to examine it from a symptoms point of view (1). Simply judging circumstances at face value leaves out all the underlying causative forces at play, and this just perpetuates my ignorance. First, Trump is symptomatic of the deterioration of the cooperative politics essential for maintaining a stable […]

Continue reading…

Mar 4, 2016 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, civilization, competition, donanld trump, economics, hunter gatherer, mandate of heaven, politics, sub-tribes, survival, symptoms point of view

Refreshing Redundancy

Research reported in Science News, That familiar feeling comes from deep in the brain, sheds light on a problem affecting those who want to remember their life-priorities. This quote sums it up, “The research suggests that novelty and familiarity are two sides of the same brain cells. Turn them down, and even the new is […]

Continue reading…

Jan 14, 2016 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: civilization, hunter gatherer, mysterious sameness, old news, Profound Redundancy, Taoist Thought Volume 1 & 2

The Year Is 1915

This brief retrospective came across my screen recently. It can be profoundly sobering to see how much life has changed over the past 100 years. Such rapid change is unprecedented in human history, or almost any history that comes to mind.

Continue reading…

Dec 20, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations, Tao Tips Tagged With: change, civilization, electic revolution, history, science

We All Know We Don’t Know

I enjoy doing yoga on the beach because I can easily pause to look seaward and skyward to soak in eternity, or glance closer in to bond with my friends, all the sand flies and seagulls around me. Today I got to thinking how small and insignificant we are—they and me. Then I thought, they […]

Continue reading…

Nov 20, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Who Are You Series Tagged With: balance, civilization, ego, Electric Revolution, emotion, enlightenment, evolution, hunter gatherer, instinct, knowing, mysterious sameness, placebo, religion, symptoms point of view, thinking

Who are you? (Part V)

It’s about time I wrap up this “Who are you?” series. This time I’ll pass on a few observations from Lorna Marshall’s research of hunter-gatherers that may help demonstrate what I’m driving at. In my last post, Who are you? (Part IV), I pointed out how our ancestral old way just happens to mirror the […]

Continue reading…

Oct 5, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Who Are You Series Tagged With: civilization, emergent property, hunter gatherer, Kung of Nyae Nyae, Lorna Marshall

Who are you? (Part IV)

The social qualities present during our ancestral hunter-gatherer era (1) just happen to parallel the core spiritual qualities that the world’s religions promote. That’s no coincidence. Indeed, those innate qualities of harmony we now seek are the very ones we lost when we left the old way for the alluring material benefits and security civilization […]

Continue reading…

Sep 14, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Who Are You Series Tagged With: belief, Buddha, civilization, desire, fear, hunter gatherer, knowing, need, religion, worry

Who are you? (Part III)

Recent posts, Who are you? and Who are you? (Part II), examine the losses of emotional security and comfort caused when our civilized way of life replaced our primal ancestral way. Common sense, personal experience, and timely mid 20th century ethnographic research verifies this. (See The Harmless People p.426) This post and the next cover […]

Continue reading…

Aug 1, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Who Are You Series Tagged With: Agricultural Revolution, civilization, comfort and security, Electric Revolution, evolution, family, history, meta-story, religion, symptoms point of view, the old way, thinking

Who are you? (Part II)

I tried pointing out in Who are you? (p.504) how civilization plays a major role in educating its citizens as to who they are and who they should be. This contrasts sharply with the natural intuitive way that our ancestors acquired a secure sense of self. Religious stories, central to every civilization, are humanity’s attempt […]

Continue reading…

Jul 3, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Who Are You Series Tagged With: Buddha, civilization, comfort and security, family, hunter gatherer, parents, religion, science, self-honesty, tao, the harmless people, the old way, thinking

Who are you?

Civilization simultaneously asks and answers this question, “Who are you?” The cultural story we hear from infancy drums into us both who we are and who we should be. Essentially, this is a form of natural brainwashing — natural in that the brainwashers are themselves brainwashed. Because this cultural story is essentially arbitrary, we can […]

Continue reading…

May 23, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Who Are You Series Tagged With: brainwashing, Buddha, civilization, family, hunter gatherer, instinct, learning, securty & comfort

The Word Trap

We are innately attracted to any promised solution to our problem rather than examining our problem’s underlying causes. That is the optimal approach in the wild because problems there share wilderness simplicity, which makes solutions straightforward. Thus, it was natural for us to evolve the inclination to opt for the simplest view of a problem, […]

Continue reading…

May 3, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Believers vs. Atheists, Buddha, civilization, instinct, religion, symptoms point of view

Stressors of Comfort and Security

Google [Chronic stress can wreak havoc on the body] for research that ties right into my last post, Right state of peaceful mind, p.494. Note how the lightening bolt (graphic right) hits the brain before traveling through the rest of the body. The article puts it this way: “The effect of stress starts in the […]

Continue reading…

Apr 1, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, belief, Buddha, civilization, climate change, comfort and security, expectations, instinct, stories, stress, suicide, tai chi, thinking

Straight Poop on the Paleo Diet

Google [Neanderthals reveal their diet with oldest excrement] for dietary research that’s bound to catch your eye. The shifting and mixed opinions on diet in the late 70’s compelled me to dig into the fundamentals. I thought that nature must offer a more reliable clue as to the optimum diet for our species. I spent […]

Continue reading…

Feb 28, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, desire, food, human diet, modern circumstances, Neanderthal, paleodiet

Science Proves Buddha Right!

Google [CBS News When low expectations achieve big results] for research that reveals how one’s expectations get in the way of happiness. This is not to say expectations aren’t useful or natural. Indeed, a kind of natural expectation, or sense of anticipation plays an integral role in survival. This impulse drives all living things to […]

Continue reading…

Jan 27, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, belief, Buddha, civilization, desire, expectations, happiness, imagination, mind, science, symptoms point of view

Alleviating the Hoarding Disorder

Google [Seeking Help For Hoarding] for a brief yet telling report on hoarding. Here is a brief excerpt: At some point I got a lot of stuff,” said Joanne Garland. “I kept too much paper. I kept too many books. I kept too many clothes.” Too much of everything! Garland’s Greenfield, Mass., home is packed […]

Continue reading…

Jan 18, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, Buddha, civilization, ego, freewill, hoarding, instinct, knowing, mental disorder, symptoms point of view, Truth

Amazon mother

Google [CBS News From Amazon to Garden State] for a story that perfectly exemplifies observations I’ve made on civilization over the last few decades. To be clear, I’m not pro or anti civilization; I simply wish to comprehend its full impact on humanity. Despite the obvious downsides of civilization, we’re never going to turn back […]

Continue reading…

Jan 11, 2015 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, civilization, Eden, evolution, family, happy, hunter gatherer, mother, thinking, understanding

Cultivating Ego

Google [Rats Experience Feelings of Regret] for research discovering that when a rat realizes it made a mistake, its body and brain show signs of regret (1). Research like this challenges the beliefs of human exceptionalism that we’ve been cultivating to support humanity’s “illusion of self” collective ego. Sure, we are different from rats, but […]

Continue reading…

Dec 1, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: agricultural age, Bhagavad Gita, Buddha's Noble Truth, civilization, consciousness, desire, ego, existential problem, hunter gatherer, imagination, immortality, instinct, progress, religion, spirit, Tao Te Ching, thinking, worry

Necessity is the Mother

If you’re unfamiliar with the neuroscience behind the illusion of free will, YouTube [Sam Harris on “Free Will”]. He does a good job of addressing the idea of free will, and points out enough compelling evidence to prove that free will is an illusion. Next, please YouTube [Sam Harris on His Debate with Daniel Dennett […]

Continue reading…

Nov 15, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, civilization, emergent property, fairness instinct, freewill, hypocrisy, instinct, knowing, neuroscience, nothingness and existence, social instinct, symptoms point of view, thinking

Of Mountains, Molehills and the Supernatural

I’ve noticed how we humans appear to have a nearly universal sense of the supernatural. Now, I know devotees of science and atheists might dispute that, at least as far as universal applies to them. They’ll claim they don’t believe in the supernatural. Fair enough, so let me rephrase this… The supernatural sense is essentially […]

Continue reading…

Oct 31, 2014 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, desire, fear, need, supernatural, symptoms point of view, the unknown, thinking, worry

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Overview

  • Is Taoism a Religion?
  • What is Taoist thought?
  • What is the root of thought?

Chronological Index

View all posts from 2008 to 2025

Categories

  • Autobiographical (73)
  • Monthly Tao Te Ching (135)
  • Observations (234)
    • Tao Tips (17)
  • Occam's razor (2)
  • Who Are You Series (6)
  • Wrapping up (18)

Who is CenterTao?

CenterTao is a non-profit corporation founded in 1982. Read more…

Links

  • CenterTao Facebook Group
  • Blowing Zen - Shakuhachi
  • 2004-2015 Forum Archive (read-only)

10053