meaning of life
atlas

Self & identity cwest · Cymraeg

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agorwyd gan The Curator ·

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cam 1 · crynodeb onest

Ar draws traddodiadau, anaml y gwelir yr 'hunan' fel endid statig, unigol, ond yn hytrach fel proses ddeinamig neu locws ymwybyddiaeth sy'n bodoli ar sbectrwm o naratif lleol i is-haen gyffredinol. Maent yn cydgyfeirio wrth wahaniaethu'r ego adeiladedig, bob dydd oddi wrth realiti mwy sylfaenol—boed hwnnw'n waelodlin niwrolegol, yn undod cosmig, neu'n gyfadran foesol. Fodd bynnag, maent yn ymrannu'n sydyn ar ontoleg y realiti dyfnach hwn: a yw'n rhediad ffisegol o gyflyrau'r ymennydd, yn rhith sy'n cuddio anymwybyddiaeth derfynol, neu'n wreichionen ddwyfol anfarwol, amlhaenog?

di-ddeuoldebhunaniaeth-naratifymwybyddiaeth-gosmigdiddymiad-egogwreichionen-ddwyfolrealiti-sylwedydd-ganolog

gwrando

darllen y cwest hwn yn uchel

Mae’n defnyddio llais eich porwr, felly mae’n dechrau ar unwaith ac nid yw’n costio dim.

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map traddodiad

  • Bwdhaeth Zen

    mystical

    Yn Zen, y gwir hunan yw'r 'wyneb gwreiddiol cyn i'ch rhieni gael eu geni', sy'n arwydd uniongyrchol o 'natur-Bwdha' diamod, ddi-ddeuol. Mae dioddefaint dynol yn deillio o lynu wrth rolau ego artiffisial a meddwl cysyniadol deuol. Mae sylweddoli'r 'Meddwl Bwdha Heb ei Eni' hwn yn gofyn am osgoi dadansoddiad rhesymegol er mwyn profi ymwybyddiaeth bur, ddi-ffurf sy'n trigo nunlle yn uniongyrchol.

    ffigurau: Huineng

    ffynonellau: Swtra'r Llwyfan, Mumonkan

  • Advaita Vedanta

    philosophy

    Mae Advaita yn haeru'r hunaniaeth lwyr, ddi-ddeuol rhwng yr hunan unigol (Atman: yr hunan unigol) a'r realiti cyffredinol eithaf (Brahman: y realiti cyffredinol eithaf). Nid yw'r cyflyrau dros dro o ddeffro, breuddwydio a chysgu dwfn ond yn ymddangosiadau cyfnewidiol sy'n cuddio Turiya (yr is-haen fyth-bresennol o ymwybyddiaeth bur), sef is-haen fyth-bresennol ymwybyddiaeth bur. Mae rhyddhad yn gorwedd yn y sylweddoliad trwy brofiad o'r Mahavakya (Datganiad Mawr): 'Mae'r Atman hwn yn Brahman'.

    ffigurau: Gaudapada, Adi Shankara

    ffynonellau: Mandukya Upanishad, Mandukya Karika

  • Niwrowyddoniaeth

    science

    Mae niwrowyddoniaeth gyfoes yn gwahaniaethu rhwng hunan ymgorfforedig 'lleiafol' a 'hunan naratif' sy'n ymestyn dros amser. Mae'r 'fi' naratif yn cael ei gynhyrchu'n gyfrifiadurol, neu ei hidlo, gan y Rhwydwaith Modd Diofyn (DMN), sy'n adeiladu ein llinell stori hunangofiannol a theithio meddwl drwy amser. Mae atal y DMN yn achosi diddymiad ego yn ddibynadwy, gan ddangos bod ein hunaniaeth gysyniadol yn adeiladwaith biolegol gweithredol yn hytrach nag endid seicolegol sefydlog.

    ffigurau: Marcus Raichle, Shaun Gallagher, Josef Parvizi, Vinod Menon

  • Swffiaeth

    mystical

    Mae'r enaid dynol yn cynnwys ego is (nafs: yr hunan isel) a chalon ysbrydol (qalb: y galon ysbrydol) sy'n gweithredu fel drych perffaith o'r Dwyfol. Trwy ddisgyblaeth foesegol alcemi (kimiya: alcemi ysbrydol), mae unigolyn yn glanhau rhwd dyheadau daearol o'r drych hwn er mwyn cyflawni ma'rifa (gwybodaeth sythweledol o Dduw). Mae gwir hunan-wybodaeth yn sylfaenol yr un peth â gwybod un Arglwydd, gan ddatgelu tarddiad dwyfol dynoliaeth.

    ffigurau: Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī

    ffynonellau: Alcemi Hapusrwydd, Adfywiad y Gwyddorau Crefyddol

  • Athroniaeth Meddwl Ddadansoddol

    philosophy

    Yn ôl y Safbwynt Lleiafolol, nid sylwedd sy'n bodoli'n annibynnol na'r enaid Cartesaidd yw person, ac nid yw hunaniaeth dros amser yn ffaith bellach ddofn. Yn hytrach, gellir lleihau'r hunan yn gyfan gwbl i gyfres barhaus, sydd wedi'i chysylltu'n achosol, o gyflyrau corfforol yr ymennydd a digwyddiadau seicolegol, a elwir yn Perthynas R. Yn y pen draw, mae hunaniaeth rifyddol gaeth yn llai pwysig na pharhad a chysylltedd seicolegol.

    ffigurau: Derek Parfit

    ffynonellau: Reasons and Persons

  • Ffiseg Cwantwm

    science

    Mae realiti yn rhanogol yn sylfaenol; mae'r bydysawd yn strwythur gwybodaeth-theoretig (it from bit: popeth o ddidau) sy'n gofyn am sylwedydd i wireddu ei briodweddau. Nid tyst goddefol yw sylwedydd lleol ond asiant cydblethu y gall ei weithredoedd mesur cyfoes bennu hanes ffisegol y cosmos yn ôl-weithredol. Mae'r bod dynol felly yn gylched hunan-gyffrous lle mae'r bydysawd yn rhoi realiti diriaethol i'w darddiad ei hun.

    ffigurau: John Archibald Wheeler, Niels Bohr

  • Stoiciaeth

    philosophy

    Mae gwir hunaniaeth bod dynol yn preswylio'n gyfan gwbl mewn prohairesis (y gyfadran o ewyllys, dewis rhesymegol, a chymeriad moesol). Nid yr hunan yn bendant yw'r corff ffisegol, cyfoeth, ac amgylchiadau allanol, gan eu bod yn ddarostyngedig i ffortiwn a thu hwnt i'n rheolaeth. Trwy gyfyngu hunaniaeth unigolyn yn gyfan gwbl i'r gyfadran lywodraethol fewnol ddirwystr hon, mae person yn cyflawni rhyddid eithaf ac yn dod yn anorchfygol.

    ffigurau: Epictetus, Arrian

    ffynonellau: Ymddiddanion

  • Cabala

    mystical

    Mae'r enaid yn organeb ysbrydol amlsaff sy'n adlewyrchu delwedd y Dwyfol, ac mae'n cynnwys pum rheng hierarchaidd: Nefesh (enaid bywiol), Ruach (ysbryd), Neshamah (anadl), Chayah (bywyd), ac Yechidah (undod). Er bod y lefel isaf yn bywiogi'r corff ffisegol, mae'r rhengoedd uwch yn cael eu hysgogi'n raddol trwy fireinio moesol ac astudio'r Torah. Ar ei anterth, mae'r enaid yn wreichionen unigol, ddinistriadwy sy'n trigo mewn undod pur, anadranadwy gyda'r Creawdwr.

    ffigurau: Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, Shimon bar Yochai

    ffynonellau: Zohar

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lle maent yn cytuno

Patrymau sy’n codi dro ar ôl tro ar draws sawl traddodiad annibynnol.

  • Natur Adeiladedig yr Ego Naratif

    Mae Zen, Advaita, Niwrowyddoniaeth, ac Athroniaeth Ddadansoddol i gyd yn datgymalu greddf synnwyr cyffredin o ego sefydlog, annibynnol. Boed hynny trwy fyfyrdod sy'n osgoi cysyniadau, lleoli'r DMN fel cynhyrchydd straeon hunangofiannol, neu leihau hunaniaeth yn rhesymegol i gadwyni seicolegol achosol, mae'r traddodiadau hyn yn cytuno bod y 'fi' dyddiol yn broses dros dro, adeiladedig yn hytrach nag endid solet.

    Bwdhaeth Zen · Advaita Vedanta · Niwrowyddoniaeth · Athroniaeth Meddwl Ddadansoddol

  • Hunaniaeth fel Uniad â'r Eithaf

    Mae sawl traddodiad cyfriniol ac athronyddol yn awgrymu bod treiddio i graidd dyfnaf yr hunan yn arwain yn anochel at ymdoddi â realiti goruchaf, cyffredinol. Yn y Cabala, mae lefel uchaf yr enaid wedi'i huniadu'n anadranadwy â Duw; yn Swffiaeth, mae gloywi'r galon yn adlewyrchu'r Dwyfol; ac yn Advaita, mae Atman yn fathemategol union yr un fath â Brahman.

    Advaita Vedanta · Swffiaeth · Cabala

  • Mireinio Moesol fel Hunan-wireddu

    Mae Stoiciaeth, Swffiaeth, a'r Cabala yn mynnu bod sylweddoli gwir hunaniaeth unigolyn yn gofyn am ymarfer moesol llym. Boed hynny trwy reoli argraffiadau allanol i amddiffyn prohairesis, gwneud gwaith alcemaidd i loywi'r galon, neu ddringo hierarchaeth yr enaid trwy astudiaeth sanctaidd, mae'r 'hunan uchaf' yn cael ei gyflawni trwy weithredu rhinweddol, disgybledig yn hytrach na myfyrio deallusol yn unig.

    Stoiciaeth · Swffiaeth · Cabala

  • Y Sylwedydd yn Ganolog i Realiti

    Mae Ffiseg Cwantwm ac Advaita Vedanta yn dod i'r casgliad yn annibynnol nad tyst ymylol i fyd oer, gwrthrychol yw'r 'tyst' neu'r 'sylwedydd'. Mae Advaita yn gweld ymwybyddiaeth bur (Turiya) fel is-haen sylfaenol bodolaeth, tra bod mecaneg cwantwm rhanogol yn awgrymu bod arsylwi ymwybodol yn sylfaenol yn gwireddu priodweddau ffisegol y bydysawd.

    Advaita Vedanta · Ffiseg Cwantwm

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lle maent yn anghytuno’n gryf

Anghytundebau onest nad ydynt yn cwympo i mewn i "mae pob llwybr yn un".

  • Materialaeth Lleiafolol yn erbyn Idealiaeth Ontolegol

    Mae Athroniaeth Ddadansoddol a Niwrowyddoniaeth yn lleihau hunaniaeth bersonol i gyflyrau corfforol a digwyddiadau meddyliol sydd wedi'u cysylltu'n achosol, gan ddadlau nad oes enaid annibynnol. I'r gwrthwyneb, mae Advaita Vedanta, Zen, a'r Cabala yn honni mai'r corff ffisegol a'r naratif seicolegol yw'r union rith, a mai'r unig wir realiti yw ymwybyddiaeth ddiamod neu wreichionen ddwyfol. Mae'r polion yn enfawr: mae hyn yn penderfynu a yw marwolaeth yn ddiddymiad eithaf yr hunan neu ddim ond bwrw rhith biolegol ymaith.

    Athroniaeth Meddwl Ddadansoddol · Niwrowyddoniaeth · Advaita Vedanta · Bwdhaeth Zen · Cabala

  • Ontoleg Asiantaeth ac Ewyllys

    Mae Stoiciaeth yn nodi craidd yr hunan yn gyfan gwbl gyda prohairesis, gan osod asiantaeth foesol unigol wrth ganol absoliwt bodolaeth ddynol. Mewn cyferbyniad amlwg, mae Bwdhaeth Zen ac Advaita Vedanta yn gweld y cysyniad o asiant unigol sy'n gwneud dewisiadau ynysig fel crair o anwybodaeth ddeuol. Mae'r polion yn cynnwys mecaneg rhyddhad: a yw unigolyn yn cyflawni rhyddid trwy berffeithio'r 'dewisydd', neu drwy sylweddoli nad yw'r dewisydd yn bodoli?

    Stoiciaeth · Bwdhaeth Zen · Advaita Vedanta

cwestiynau agored

  • Os yw'r 'hunan naratif' a gynhyrchir gan Rhwydwaith Modd Diofyn yr ymennydd yn addasiad esblygiadol, pa fanteision goroesi penodol a roddodd, a pham mae ei atal yn fiolegol yn achosi cyflyrau o les dwys?
  • A ellir mapio'r 'ymwybyddiaeth bur' neu Turiya a ddisgrifir gan Advaita Vedanta a Zen i gydberthynasau niwral y tu allan i'r DMN yn ddibynadwy, ynteu a yw ymwybyddiaeth ffenomenolegol yn gwrthsefyll categoreiddio niwrobiolegol yn sylfaenol?
  • Sut mae 'Safbwynt Lleiafolol' Derek Parfit o hunaniaeth bersonol yn newid y ffordd y mae cymdeithas yn strwythuro cyfrifoldeb cyfreithiol, contractau, a chyfiawnder cosbol dros gyfnodau hir o amser?
  • Os yw fframwaith bydysawd rhanogol mecaneg cwantwm yn wir, a yw'r bydysawd yn 'bodoli' mewn ffordd ystyrlon, ddiriaethol cyn esblygiad sylwedyddion biolegol ymwybodol?

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ffynonellau

dosier ymchwil (8)
  • Zen koan original face before your parents were born interpretation and meaning

    In Zen Buddhism, the famous koan "What is your original face before your parents were born?" serves as a direct pointer to an individual's "Buddha-nature" or true, unconditioned essence. The Zen tradition posits that human suffering and confusion arise from attachments to conceptual roles, ego, and dualistic thinking. By meditating on this "original face," practitioners are challenged to look beyond intellectual reasoning to realize the "Unborn Buddha Mind," a primordial reality that precedes physical birth and artificial values. The concept dates back to Huineng, the Sixth Patriarch of Zen, and is famously detailed in the *Platform Sutra*. According to the sutra's biographical account, Huineng was being pursued by a monk and former soldier named Daoming (or Emyo) who sought the patriarch's robe of transmission. When the monk abandoned his pursuit of the robe and instead begged for teaching, Huineng instructed him: "Not thinking of good, not thinking of evil, tell me: What was your original face before your mother and father were born". Stripped of the dualistic concepts of good and evil, the monk experienced sudden enlightenment on the spot. This encounter was later canonized as Case 23 in the classic koan collection, the *Mumonkan*. Distinctive Zen terminology surrounding this koan includes "non-dual reality," the "Unborn," and "suchness". Interpreting the koan requires abandoning logical analysis in favor of a sudden leap of intuition. A traditional Zen commentary describes the process of realizing this unconditioned nature: "'Sweep away thoughts!' means one must do zazen. Once thoughts are quieted, the Original Face appears... The moon of suchness is the Original Face". Ultimately, the koan is not a literal riddle about biological ancestry, but a profound self-inquiry designed to awaken the mind to a pure, formless awareness that abides nowhere.

  • relationship between Atman and Brahman in the Mandukya Upanishad commentaries

    In the Advaita Vedanta tradition, the commentaries on the *Mandukya Upanishad* establish the absolute, non-dual identity between the individual self (*Atman*) and the ultimate universal reality (*Brahman*). Rather than viewing the soul as a mere fragment of a greater divine whole, Advaita asserts that Atman and Brahman are fundamentally identical. Despite being the shortest of the principal Upanishads with only twelve verses, the *Mandukya* serves as a foundational text for Advaita. This prominence is largely due to two seminal works: the *Mandukya Karika*, an early systematic exposition by Gaudapada, and the subsequent *Bhashya* (commentary) by his spiritual grandson, Adi Shankara. Both figures systematically use the text to dismantle the illusion of a separate self. A cornerstone of this philosophical framework is the Upanishad’s renowned *Mahavakya* (Great Saying) found in verse 2: *"Ayam Atma Brahma"* ("This Atman is Brahman"). The text expands on this identity by declaring, *"Sarvam hi etat brahma, ayam atma brahma"* ("All this is Brahman, this Self is Brahman"). To prove this experiential reality rather than relying on abstract dogma, Gaudapada and Shankara map the sacred syllable *AUM* to human experience across different states of consciousness: the waking state, the dream state, and deep sleep. The commentaries argue that these first three states are impermanent, fluctuating appearances. The true nature of the Self is *Turiya* (the "Fourth"), the ever-present substratum of pure, non-dual awareness underlying all transient experiences. *Turiya* is not a state to be traveled to, but the realization of Atman as Brahman itself. Highlighting this uncompromising non-dualism, Gaudapada’s *Karika* (3:13) states: *"Jivatmanor ananyatvam abhedena prashastyate"* (the absolute non-difference between the individual self and the ultimate self is praised). Ultimately, the tradition concludes that recognizing this intrinsic, unbroken unity is the definitive key to spiritual liberation.

  • role of the default mode network in the construction of the narrative self

    In contemporary neuroscience and consciousness studies, the Default Mode Network (DMN) is widely understood as the neural substrate of the "narrative self." Discovered by Marcus Raichle in the early 2000s, the DMN is a large-scale network—anchored by the medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex—that activates when attention shifts away from external tasks and turns inward toward mind-wandering, autobiographical memory, and "mental time travel". The discipline relies on a critical distinction, championed by philosophers like Shaun Gallagher, between the "minimal" or "experiential" self (the immediate, embodied "I" grounded in present-moment awareness) and the "narrative self" (the time-extended, conceptual "me" built from personal history and future projections). Stanford neurologist Josef Parvizi maps this dichotomy neuroanatomically, observing that the narrative self "dwells in a well-studied network called the default mode network". Intriguingly, Parvizi's research demonstrates that "electrically stimulating the default mode network doesn't do anything at all to one's sense of [bodily] self or consciousness," confirming that the DMN governs our ongoing autobiographical storyline rather than basic, first-person subjective awareness. As cognitive scientist Vinod Menon notes, the network "generates your internal mental life... and the ongoing inner narrative that reflects our own individual experiences". While standard neuroscience frames the DMN as actively *producing* this self-referential identity, alternative frameworks interpret it as a specialized "filter". Aligning with Aldous Huxley's "reducing valve" metaphor, some models propose that the DMN narrows a broader phenomenal consciousness down into a localized, biologically useful personal story. This is supported by functional imaging of psychedelic states: when substances like psilocybin or LSD suppress DMN activity, individuals reliably report profound "ego dissolution" and a loss of self-world boundaries. Ultimately, whether acting as a computational generator or a conscious filter, the DMN is increasingly conceptualized as the brain's "center of gravity" for self-processing.

  • Al-Ghazali The Alchemy of Happiness knowledge of the self and divine realization

    Within the Islamic mystic tradition of Sufism, the pursuit of divine realization is inextricably linked to the inward journey of self-discovery. This paradigm is masterfully articulated by the 11th-century Persian theologian and philosopher Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī in his seminal treatise, *The Alchemy of Happiness* (*Kīmīyā-yi Saʿādat*). Written following his profound spiritual crisis and subsequent shift toward asceticism, the text serves as an accessible Persian summary of his Arabic magnum opus, *The Revival of the Religious Sciences* (*Iḥyāʾ ʿulūm al-dīn*). Central to Al-Ghazali’s framework is the concept of *sa'ada* (ultimate, enduring happiness), which is achieved primarily through *ma'rifa* (intuitive knowledge of God) and the renunciation of fleeting worldly attachments (*dunya*). However, Al-Ghazali asserts that the journey to *ma'rifa* must begin with self-knowledge (*ma'rifat al-nafs*). He frames the opening chapters of his treatise around a famous Prophetic Hadith: "He who knows himself knows his Lord". Because human beings possess a divine origin, rigorous introspection and understanding of one's own nature illuminate God's attributes. As Al-Ghazali writes, "Nothing is closer to you than yourself, so if you do not know yourself, how do you know your Lord?". The text employs the metaphor of *kimiya* (alchemy) to describe the spiritual transmutation of the individual. Just as base metals are turned into gold, the human soul—plagued by animalistic instincts and the lower ego (*nafs*)—can be elevated to a state of eternal felicity. Al-Ghazali posits that the human heart (*qalb*) or spirit is like a "perfect mirror". When this mirror is clouded by the "rust of passion" and earthly desires, the individual is blinded to ultimate truths; but through ethical discipline, the heart is polished until "it reflects the light of God". Ultimately, this Sufi tradition teaches that true felicity cannot be found in material gratification, which ends at death, but in recognizing one's spiritual essence. As Al-Ghazali concludes, "The pleasure of the heart is specific to knowing God Almighty, because it was created for it".

  • Derek Parfit Reasons and Persons reductionist view of personal identity over time

    Within the analytic philosophy of mind, Derek Parfit’s 1984 landmark text, *Reasons and Persons*, revolutionized the modern debate regarding personal identity over time. Operating squarely within the analytic tradition—characterized by rigorous conceptual analysis and the use of imaginative thought experiments—Parfit defends what he calls the "Reductionist View" of the self. According to Parfit’s reductionism, persons are not independently existing substances, such as souls or Cartesian egos. He argues that a person's continuous identity over time is not a "deep further fact, distinct from physical and psychological continuity". Instead, a person’s existence is entirely reducible to the existence of a brain and body, alongside a causally connected series of physical and mental events (thoughts, actions, and experiences). To dismantle common-sense intuitions about the self, Parfit famously employs science-fiction thought experiments, such as teletransportation (where a person is scanned on Earth, destroyed, and seamlessly replicated on Mars) and brain fission. Through these scenarios, Parfit demonstrates that in certain non-standard cases, the question "Will that future person be me?" has no simple 'yes' or 'no' answer; rather, it becomes an "empty question". Once we know all the physical and psychological facts of the scenario, there is no deeper, hidden ontological truth left to discover about our identity. At the core of Parfit's theory is a concept he terms "Relation R," which he defines as psychological continuity and/or connectedness with the right kind of cause. The most radical conclusion of *Reasons and Persons* is that strict numerical identity is not "what matters" in survival. Instead, what truly matters is Relation R. Because our psychological connectedness to our future selves gradually diminishes over time, Parfit's reductionism blurs the strict boundaries between distinct periods of a single life—and even between distinct persons—leading to profound real-world implications for rationality, utilitarian ethics, and how we view death.

  • John Wheeler participatory universe and the role of the observer in quantum mechanics

    In modern physics, the classical view of a detached scientist observing an objective, independent reality is profoundly challenged by quantum mechanics. Building upon Niels Bohr's insights into the measurement problem, theoretical physicist John Archibald Wheeler introduced the framework of the "participatory universe," positing that the observer is not a passive witness but an active agent in actualizing reality. In this paradigm, the "observer-participator" crashes the classical "looking glass" to become inextricably linked to the physical world. A cornerstone of Wheeler's perspective is the "delayed-choice experiment". Expanding upon the classic double-slit setup, Wheeler demonstrated theoretically that a measurement choice made *after* a photon has crossed space determines whether it traveled as a wave (through both slits) or a particle (through one). This staggering implication suggests that contemporary acts of observation can effectively dictate the history of the cosmos. Encapsulating this idea, Wheeler famously declared: "No phenomenon is a real phenomenon until it is an observed phenomenon". Wheeler grounded this participatory role in several distinctive concepts, most notably "it from bit" and the "self-excited circuit". The "it from bit" doctrine argues that the universe is fundamentally information-theoretic rather than purely material. Wheeler explained, "It from bit symbolizes the idea that every item of the physical world has at the bottom… an immaterial source and explanation". Every physical "it" derives its existence from binary "bits" of information extracted through observation. Furthermore, Wheeler modeled the cosmos as a "self-excited circuit." He proposed that the universe expands and evolves until it gives rise to observers; their subsequent, retrospective acts of "observer-participation" grant tangible reality to the universe's very origins. Ultimately, Wheeler's physics elevates the observer from the periphery of a cold, mechanical cosmos to the absolute center of reality, framing existence as an entangled, participatory dialogue.

  • Epictetus Discourses on prohairesis as the true nature of human identity

    Within the tradition of Stoicism, the true nature of human identity is fundamentally located not in the body or external circumstances, but in the mind—specifically in the faculty of *prohairesis*. This concept finds its most profound expression in the teachings of the first-century Roman Stoic philosopher Epictetus, whose lectures were preserved by his pupil Arrian in the *Discourses*. For Epictetus, *prohairesis* is the absolute core of the human being. Translated variously as volition, moral purpose, choice, or moral character, it represents our capacity for rational judgment and autonomous decision-making. While earlier Stoics frequently spoke of the "ruling faculty" (*hēgemonikon*), Epictetus uniquely elevated *prohairesis* as the ultimate locus of human freedom, agency, and personal identity. Epictetus draws a sharp boundary between the external world—which includes physical health, wealth, and reputation—and the internal realm of the mind. The foundational Stoic "dichotomy of control" maps directly onto these boundaries: everything within the domain of *prohairesis* is entirely up to us, while everything outside of it is beyond our control. Because *prohairesis* is the only thing we inherently possess, Epictetus argues that it is the literal "self." He explicitly warns his students against identifying with their physical forms, declaring: "You are not flesh or hair, but you are will (*prohairesis*)" (*Discourses* 3.1.40). Since our true identity is pure volition, Epictetus posits that "volition is by nature unimpeded" (*Discourses* 1.17.21). According to his framework, not even the gods can coerce or conquer a human being's *prohairesis*. Consequently, human flourishing and the fundamental concepts of good and evil do not reside in external events, but entirely within the state of our moral character. As Epictetus insists, "Outside of *prohairesis*, there is nothing either good or bad". By properly managing our impressions and aligning our volition with reason and nature, we fulfill our true identity and achieve unshakeable equanimity.

  • five levels of the soul in Kabbalah from Nefesh to Yechidah explained

    In Jewish mysticism (Kabbalah), the soul is not a singular, uniform entity but rather a "multilayered spiritual organism" reflecting the image of the Divine. According to this tradition, the soul consists of a hierarchy of five ascending levels of consciousness that correspond to the progressive concealment or revelation of God’s Infinite Light across various spiritual worlds. As elucidated by foundational texts like the *Zohar* and later codified by key figures such as the 18th-century Kabbalist Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, these five nested levels are: 1. **Nefesh (נֶפֶשׁ)**: The "vital soul" animating the physical body. Anchored in the lowest spiritual realm of *Assiyah* (Action), it governs instinct, basic survival, and physical vitality, and is present in every living being from birth. 2. **Ruach (רוּחַ)**: The "spirit" or emotional soul. Linked to the realm of *Yetzirah* (Formation), it serves as the human moral compass, governing emotions, speech, and ethical sensitivity. 3. **Neshamah (נְשָׁמָה)**: The divine intellect. Dwelling in the world of *Beriah* (Creation), it provides higher divine awareness, wisdom, and the cognitive capacity to comprehend the Torah. 4. **Chayah (חַיָּה)**: The "living essence." A superconscious vitality that humans rarely experience directly, representing the root of the soul in the sublime world of *Atzilut* (Emanation). 5. **Yechidah (יְחִידָה)**: The "singular spark." This highest echelon is the soul's indestructible essence, representing pure, indivisible unity with the Creator. Kabbalistic tradition maintains that while everyone is born with a *Nefesh*, the higher echelons of the soul are not automatically active. The *Zohar* states that individuals earn access to *Ruach*, *Neshamah*, and beyond only through progressive ethical refinement, Torah study, and dedicated divine service. Ultimately, these five levels underscore the profound bond between human awareness and the Divine. The higher the level, the less it interacts with physical form and the more it reveals the soul's heavenly source. As the foundational mystic Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai described this ultimate integration, "My soul is one with Him, as one flame, cleaving to Him".

cwest wedi'i gwblhau

Cadwch yr hyn a newidiodd eich meddwl, neu heriwch un rhan o’r map isod.

adlewyrchiadau cymunedol

Eich persbectif, eich traddodiad, eich profiad. Rydych chi Dreamer Stone.

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