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The Proof is in the Pudding

Buddha felt that we needed to rely on our personal experience to verify his Four Noble Truths, and presumably any other alleged truth. There’s no ‘take my word for it’ hoodwinking here. Nowadays, modern science is steadily helping us discern fact from myth. Still, personal experience must always be the final arbiter. Keep this in […]

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Nov 17, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, belief, consciousness, freewill, happy, sad, symptoms point of view, thinking

Natural Happiness

‘To like what I do rather than do what I like’ is a straightforward path to happiness. This motto helps prevent my expectations from dictating my life’s direction. No doubt, scripture (Buddhist, Hindu, Taoist, Biblical, etc.) first got me considering life this way, and life experience has since verified its truth (1). The previous post, […]

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Oct 30, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, Buddha, civilization, emergent property, freewill, happy, knowing, science, thinking

Is Gen Y Unhappy?

I read an interesting article that pointed out much of the same causes for unhappiness that I see, so I accepted it without question at first. Yet soon it began to nag me. Something didn’t exactly mesh… there was more too it. If interested, google [Why Generation Y Yuppies Are Unhappy] and see how it […]

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Sep 23, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: astrology, belief, expectations, gen Y, happy, palmistry, thinking

Remember the Disease

Occasionally I feel a little forlorn since I’m making the same essential points repeatedly. Then I remember the necessity of constant vigilant review. This is akin to attempting to maintain balance under wobbly physical circumstances. Surely, psycho-emotional circumstances are no less demanding, balance-wise. Whew! Hope rebounds as I remember the secret of living balance… The […]

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Sep 14, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, cognitive behavior therapy, desire, feeling, hunter gatherer, remember, review, thinking

You are Immortal!

Preface: Our mind irresistibly seeks out stories to fill its cognitive space. Taken to heart, this story may help nurture what chapter 16 alludes to as The way therefore long enduring, nearly rising beyond oneself. The idea of immortality arises from our self’s keen sense of mortality, so I’ll begin by addressing this side of […]

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Aug 29, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: Buddha, desire, ego, illusion of self, immortality, knowing, mind, mysterious sameness, thinking, understanding

Just like Us, Just like Them

Have you noticed how much we compare ourselves to other animals to see what extent they are like us? That’s all quite normal, of course. All animals judge other animals to some extent, although I should say size up, gauge, or perceive, rather than judge. Passing judgment is closely tied to thinking and we’re the […]

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Jul 13, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: bio-hoodwink, consciousness, fear, illusion vs. reality, judging, mysterious sameness, need, science, thinking, understanding

Hold the Knowable

In my previous, Good Enough Is (p.356), I suggested that we have an innate need to pursue an important goal… something to hold in mind, to hunger after, and fill our mind space. I also put forward the view that this was an emergent property (p.121) of the basic hunter-gather instinct that drives life to […]

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Mar 18, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, emergent property, health, hunter gatherer, patience, science, self-honesty, thinking

Good Enough Is!

Good enough is good enough, and naturally so. As chapter 46 notes, Therefore, in being contented with one’s lot, enough is usually enough indeed. Besides, isn’t this how nature plays out… step by step? Surely, this is the sentiment expressed in chapter 64, A thousand mile journey begins below the feet. This is how reality […]

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Mar 9, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, emergent property, imagination, language, mind, religion, step-by-step, thinking

Soaking in Inspiration

I began taking a morning hot bath every morning to get my arthritic joints in the mood for morning yoga(1). It works, but I found an unexpected bonus. The bath brings about nearly unavoidable insights. Indeed, sometimes I deliberately Squeeze exchange, shut the gates, as chapter 52 puts it, in the hope of cognitive stillness. […]

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Feb 24, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: Buddha, fear, inspiration, need, obsession, thinking

Buddha’s Work

I review Buddha’s Four Noble Truths (p.604) during my yoga headstand every morning. Today, the fourth truth stood out, although not in a profound way, more in a “Well, duh” kind of way. First, though, here is the fourth truth: The Fourth Noble Truth is the Middle Path that leads to the cessation of suffering. […]

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Feb 9, 2013 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: Buddha, knowing, thinking, understanding, work

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

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

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

Guilt, Shame and the Name Game

I touched on guilt and shame in the post, I am foolish of human mind also? (p.276). Nevertheless, I feel our practice of naming such emotional experiences deserves its own post, so here goes, beginning with a personal example… Up until thirty years ago, I had never experienced depression… or so I didn’t think. Following […]

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Jun 27, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: bio-hoodwink, Buddha, fairness instinct, guilt, human zoology, knowing, labels, science, shame, symptoms point of view, thinking, understanding

I am foolish of human mind also?

I am foolish of human mind also? is one of my favorite lines in chapter 20. The more literal the translation, the more peculiar it can read. If it helps, D.C. Lau interprets this line more poetically as, My mind is that of a fool – how blank. I do feel the literal phrasing of […]

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May 30, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: fairness instinct, guilt & shame, human zoology, independance, interdependence, knowing, social animals, thinking, understanding

Use Non-Responsibility

A key character in chapter 57 (事 shì) can translate as responsibility. As such, lines 3 and 12 in Chapter 57 read as Use non-responsibility when seeking all under heaven and I am without responsibility and the people thrive themselves. Suggesting a virtue of non-responsibility defies common sense and seems to threaten the very fabric […]

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Apr 3, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, Buddha, Compatibilism, consciousness, control, freewill, need, non-responsibility, responsibility, thinking

We only understand what we know

Chapter 56’s, One who speaks does not know has intrigued me for a long time. I came across this D.C. Lao translation in Vietnam in the early 60’s. I’ve referred to it often over the decades in various ways, and it launches the overview of CenterTao.org. (See What are the roots of thought?, p.602.) My […]

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Mar 20, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: knowing, speaking, thinking, understanding

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