There is no one fixed universal truth or in other words no fixed and stable nature of the structures and systems that shape human behavior and communication rather it is constantly shifting. Power relations play a crucial role in shaping social and linguistic systems and there is a huge influence of discourse in shaping reality (both perception of reality & tangible reality that is perceived).
Even consciousness is not one single unit it is fragmented and contingent. It evolves from localized personal consciousness → mankind → amphibious → spherical → crystal (Shiva) → light → sound (Shakti) → divine unconditioned consciousness i.e. metaphysical framework of panentheistic cosmopsychism.
Background – King Trishanku was a saintly man but had one great desire; NOT TO DIE but to ascend bodily into heaven. He had once done a good turn to sage Vishwamitra and the sage decided to help him fulfill his desire. Accordingly, he performed a yagna and Trishanku began to rise heavenwards. When Indra, King of the gods, saw Trishanku at the gates of Heaven, he was furious and catching hold of him, threw him down.
Vishwamitra saw Trishanku hurtling downwards and shouted:”Let Trishanku stay where he is now!” Trishanku’s fall was arrested as Vishwamitra would not allow him to come down, Trishanku became suspended between heaven and earth. But Vishwamitra knew that Trishanku would eventually fall to earth unless held up by physical means, so he propped him up with a long pole. The pole eventually turned into a Kalpavraksha and Trishanku’s held it onto a twig with his teeth.
SO QUESTION IS WHAT CAN TRISHANKU SAY AT THIS STAGE WHICH CAN PREVENT HIM FROM FALLING AND DYING?
That evening he ascended his asan and told the pupils the whole story. One of his pupils, O thereupon asked him, “The old man gave the wrong answer and was doomed to be a fox for five hundred rebirths. Now, suppose he had given the right answer, what would have happened then?”
POINTS TO PONDER
The student sees the truth (that there is neither a “correct” nor an “incorrect” answer, rather the question itself is incorrect) and therefore asks the question that penetrates right to the heart of the matter.
“If he had given the correct answer, what then?”
He is testing his teacher. He understands that the question is a trap, and that that choosing “correct” or “incorrect” is stepping firmly into that trap and both are really INCORRECT. He is asking his teacher a question, but the details of the question don’t matter. The real challenge is: “if you answer this question, you’re agreeing to the terms of question.”
“Come on, girl,” said Tanzan at once. Lifting her in his arms, he carried her over the mud. Ekido did not speak again until that night when they reached a lodging temple. Then he no longer could restrain himself.
“We monks don’t go near females,” he told Tanzan, “especially not young and lovely ones. It is dangerous. Why did you do that?”
I am an enigmatic strategic planner with experience in educational and medical field, spanning 33 years. I have special ability to turn around organizations & institutions after occupying leadership positions.
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