The Priority of Mind | with Bernardo Kastrup (More Christ)

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  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
  • This is a repost from my conversation with Bernardo Kastrup on the More Christ podcast and CZcams channel. We discuss dissociation and the problem of unity and multiplicity, how the Western mind approaches the world and what we have lost in modernity, banality, heavenly hierarchy and transcendence, crisis in the West and recovering the sacramental life without sentimentality.
    Bernardo Kastrup is the executive director of Essentia Foundation. His work has been leading the modern renaissance of metaphysical idealism, the notion that reality is essentially mental. He has a Ph.D. in philosophy (ontology, philosophy of mind) and another Ph.D. in computer engineering (reconfigurable computing, artificial intelligence). As a scientist, Bernardo has worked for the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) and the Philips Research Laboratories (where the 'Casimir Effect' of Quantum Field Theory was discovered). Formulated in detail in many academic papers and books, his ideas have been featured on 'Scientific American,' the 'Institute of Art and Ideas,' the 'Blog of the American Philosophical Association' and 'Big Think,' among others.
    Bernardo’s website: www.bernardokastrup.com/
    Original video:
    More Christ: Jonathan Pageau & Bernardo Kastrup: Orthodoxy and the Resurrection of the Western Mind, Body, & Soul: • Episode 75: Jonathan P...
    Mentioned:
    - The Book of Enoch: Fallen Angels and the Modern Crisis: • The Book of Enoch: Fal...
    - The Mythical Constantinople | with Dr. Mario Baghos: • The Mythical Constanti...
    =======================
    Timestamps:
    00:00:00 - Coming up next
    00:00:50 - Intro music
    00:01:15 - Introduction (More Christ channel)
    00:02:04 - Jonathan opening statements
    00:03:25 - Bernardo opening statements
    00:04:33 - Technical vs religious language
    00:08:49 - Dissociation (kenosis)
    00:10:44 - The Christian answer to multiplicity/dissociation
    00:14:22 - The false dichotomy of unity and multiplicity
    00:16:45 - Engaging the world
    00:19:42 - Life is service
    00:21:14 - Resolving dissociation in a symbolic life
    00:24:32 - An impoverished western christianity
    00:26:57 - Banality and a revival of ritual
    00:28:36 - The reign of banality
    00:31:17 - The new materialistic religions
    00:35:06 - Dante and the hierarchy of being
    00:41:07 - Man at the center
    00:43:40 - Fractals: the universe as a nervous system
    00:45:24 - The daemon/guardian angel
    00:55:54 - What the daemon wants
    00:57:33 - Are principalities pre-existing?
    01:04:49 - The boundaries of identity
    01:07:54 - Extensions of man
    01:10:45 - Do you have a daemon?
    01:17:20 - “What Progress Wants”
    01:19:48 - Philosophy and reasoning is not enough
    01:22:00 - Freedom in service
    01:26:45 - Like in the time of Noah
    01:29:42 - Nietzsche
    01:32:29 - The cosmic structure of a city
    01:39:34 - The hope in crisis
    01:41:55 - The fall and the spiral
    01:43:24 - Romanticizing "spirituality"
    01:51:54 - Recovering truth in ritual without sentimentality
    01:55:14 - “A Hidden Life”
    01:57:08 - Outro
    =======================
    - The Symbolic World website and blog: www.thesymbolicworld.com
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    My intro was arranged and recorded by Matthew Wilkinson.
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Komentáře • 241

  • @hobbsmatt
    @hobbsmatt Před rokem +6

    As a lifelong atheist/agnostic raised in the presbyterian church, it wasn’t until a very close family member who was Antiochian orthodox just recently passed away that I started to feel my inner architecture shift towards some longing curiosity towards orthodoxy. For whatever reason, talks like this one and others involving Jonathan Pageau have completely blown me wide-open, kicked down the doors and started remodeling my inner architecture. I’ve never been this kind of person at all, but I found myself weeping tears of joy/relief on my commute to work this morning as I listen to this. Thank you, gentlemen. Now starts the real work, as you all alluded to at the end of the conversation

  • @eugenegalvin9177
    @eugenegalvin9177 Před 2 lety +13

    Please Johnathan will you have RUPERT SHELDRAKE as a guest..it would be fascinating...

  • @logoimotions
    @logoimotions Před 2 lety +46

    Although Bernardo is not Christian when he said the purpose of prayer is to give thanks to God and not to ask God for blessings.
    It hit home. Sometimes takes a slight angle to shine the right light for a particular person.

    • @petesake1181
      @petesake1181 Před 2 lety +1

      Why is that the purpose of prayer?

    • @logoimotions
      @logoimotions Před 2 lety +1

      @@petesake1181 well it seems intuitively right to say it. If there is a God then is my inner life truly approaching the transcendent if my focus is on my material life.
      Prayer that is about gratitude seems stronger than that which is petitioning from my perspective.
      Neither he nor or I have the answers

    • @petesake1181
      @petesake1181 Před 2 lety +1

      @@logoimotions You are correct that for you it seems intuitively right to say it, but for another it may be just as intuitive to proffer the opposite.
      “If there is a God then is my inner life truly approaching the transcendent if my focus is on my material life.” Why wouldn’t it be. Look, it seems to be that your position just takes the back end, being grateful for whatever, while the other is taking the ex ante position, asking for whatever. Stuck in the middle is material life. Essentially they linked to the same thing. Is my understanding off? If it is, it may be because we are not thanking him for anything? Would that be correct?

    • @logoimotions
      @logoimotions Před 2 lety +1

      @@petesake1181 I think another could of course see that and indeed, that might be the right angle for them to see something new, to have that small little click moment.
      Could someone see the transcendent in the material - I think so, provided they have a sense of the relativity of it to the transcendent but from materialism alone it would be starting a few steps behind in my feel.

    • @petesake1181
      @petesake1181 Před 2 lety +1

      @@logoimotions But what do we thank God for if not for materiel life? If you could give me an example then I would accept that the purpose of prayer is giving thanks to God.

  • @Jacob011
    @Jacob011 Před 2 lety +56

    Remarkable interview. Bernardo is very straightforward and honest.

  • @aussietrini09
    @aussietrini09 Před 2 lety +22

    This is actually one of the best conversations I have seen with Pageau. It was the kind of conversation Weinstein and Pageau should have had and likely never will have. I hope we get to see these two together again soon. Even as often as the Universal History discussions. Chemistry and synergies were off the charts here. And great insights were produced as a result.

  • @protestanttoorthodox3625
    @protestanttoorthodox3625 Před 2 lety +16

    What a beautiful mind this Bernardo Kastrup has 💟

  • @jacobotajuelo9297
    @jacobotajuelo9297 Před 2 lety +35

    Great coversation! As for the decadence of Western Christianity, perhaps Bernardo should note that the orientation of the priest towards the congregation is a recent change in the Catholic Church, only since the II Vatican Council. Prior to that Mass was celebrated "ad orientem" (facing God), and this form of liturgy is still practised in some Catholic traditional parishes (Traditional Latin Mass). Thank you!

    • @morbier4863
      @morbier4863 Před rokem

      Saying that orientation of priest towards congregation is a recent change is not true. Since antiquity there was tradition that in specific moment in liturgy priest and congregation would face east (symbolising rising sun as christ, heavenly jerusalem and direction of second coming of christ) but it didnt mean necesarly that priest would be back-turned to congregation.
      Location of altar in earliest churches varied depending on geogrphical location and even depending on particular churches. Sometimes altars were in wetsern apses and priests would stand behind altar, turned back to wall of apse and facing east and congregation (congregation would face altar in the west, turning back to east in certain points in liturgy).
      Sometimes altars would be in the middle of nave and priest would move from one side of altar to another during liturgy. And sometimes (it become more and more frequent as time moved on, and a norm after trident council) altars would be in eastern apse and priest and congregation would be facing east all the time.
      I respect and feel sympathy for bernardo but hes projecting his ideas about alleged loss of sense of divinity in western world in facing congregation in ahistorical manner.
      For early and medieval church there wasnt that important if priest would be facing congregation or not, it was important that priest and congregation would face east during eucharistic prayer, as directions on axis weast-east in that particular culture would be made to have dichotomal symbolic meaning of sunset-sunrise,-ressurected christ,-redeemer, death-life, profanum-sacrum, fallen world-heavenly jerusalem.
      Altar itself doesnt symbolise or contain divinity but is a place where events of incarnation and redempting sacrifice are reanacted in both symbolic and real way.
      What bernardo and "traditionalists" are forgetting is that versus populum cant remove sense of divinity from mass (especially in culture that doesnt have in its symbolic language turning east as image of anticipation second coming of christ) because for catholic ultimately not direction per se is important, but what happens during mass to eucharistic substances.
      Divinity becomes immanent, incarnate during act of eucharistic prayer regardless of if it is ad orientem or versus populum. And congregation take part in that divinity during communion not only in symbolic but also in very litteral sense.
      Meaning that mass conveys is the same in ortodox and catholic churches but it can be very different in protestant churches. Versus populum or ad orientem is not important at all, almost superficial, in building sense if participation in divinity, if we compare that to impact of doctrine of real presence or its abandonemend can have in peoples mind.

  • @TheRationalCarpenter
    @TheRationalCarpenter Před 2 lety +30

    This convo was next level, loved it.

  • @johnnytass2111
    @johnnytass2111 Před 2 lety +24

    Thank you Bernardo and Jonathan for sharing such a wonderful exploration of our existence. God bless you both.

  • @rbaggio7777
    @rbaggio7777 Před 2 lety +20

    I'm so happy to see these two together. Two important minds like these in communication, like the merging of heaven and earth.

  • @KB-bo9xl
    @KB-bo9xl Před 2 lety +3

    Probably the best conversation on the internet in at least the past week.

  • @KevinMarsHallMarz
    @KevinMarsHallMarz Před rokem +1

    I love how when Bernardo talks with Jonathan that the analytical idealism is structurally in place so that they can explore more speculative intuition and Jungian ideas of spiritual creativity.

  • @non-inertialobserver946
    @non-inertialobserver946 Před 2 lety +6

    This is now one of my favourite conversations on this channel! I'm looking forward to seeing part 2!

  • @richardemerson8381
    @richardemerson8381 Před 2 lety +19

    Great conversation - and true humility and courage from Kastrup. And adding some important insights to one of the biggest themes in Dante's Comedy as well; understanding yourself in the bigger picture. This is very much in the idea of aligning your own Free Will (your choices) with the Divine Will. The metaphorical voluntarily giving back your Free Will, to the Divine. And thus discover a whole new wealth and abundance of meaning.

  • @Theotokosprayforus
    @Theotokosprayforus Před 2 lety +7

    Mind blowing and heartfelt conversation. Wow. What a pleasure to listen to. Jonathan, if there’s one thing to add, I wish you would bring up the revelation and grace of Christianity. The whole point to Christianity is that we cannot save ourselves without God reaching out to us, without God’s revelation as someone else in the comments noted about the New Jerusalem.
    As Simone Weil said: I need God to take me by force, because, if death, doing away with the shield of the flesh, were to put me face to face with him, I should run away.

  • @pandoraephraim3552
    @pandoraephraim3552 Před 2 lety +9

    Kastrup is the most important philosopher alive today, IMHO.

  • @MoreChrist
    @MoreChrist Před 2 lety +24

    Thank you Jonathan, Lisa, and co. Great job with the timestamps! That's how the pros do it. Haha

    • @ButterBobBriggs
      @ButterBobBriggs Před 2 lety +3

      it's so helpful with a deep conversion like this

    • @MoreChrist
      @MoreChrist Před 2 lety +4

      @@ButterBobBriggs I'm delighted you found it worthwhile. God bless!

    • @leondbleondb
      @leondbleondb Před 2 lety +1

      @@MoreChrist I see Bernado is unattainable via email :) Hoping you will see this. Can you provide the name and spelling of the bishop in the 1500s he was referring to with the treasure. I would like to read up on him. Thanks.

    • @MoreChrist
      @MoreChrist Před 2 lety +1

      @@leondbleondb sure! It's Nicholas of Cusa. He is mentioned in the book, God's Philosophers by James Hannam.

  • @conornagle9528
    @conornagle9528 Před 2 lety +3

    Being a recent Catholic convert and attending Mass on a daily basis in Ireland, the priests stand to the side of the alter and face the alter with their back to the laity at every service for at least a certain duration. Loving this dialogue, by the way. Had to edit. This is brilliant stuff. The crossover and integration happening with the "Diamond" (which etymologically bears the word God in it) and Guardian Angel analogies are wonderful.

    • @jamesbarlow6423
      @jamesbarlow6423 Před 2 lety +1

      They're still known to AngloCatholics as "northenders"

    • @conornagle9528
      @conornagle9528 Před 2 lety

      @@jamesbarlow6423 haha! That's quite clever 😁

    • @jamesbarlow6423
      @jamesbarlow6423 Před 2 lety

      @@conornagle9528 They've been called same for centuries.

  • @rafajanczukowicz5644
    @rafajanczukowicz5644 Před 2 lety +58

    What on earth is going on here? I saw those two talking to each other in my wildest dreams, and know they make it happened.

  • @dalibofurnell
    @dalibofurnell Před rokem

    24:22 around this point I realized how annointed you are, Jonathan ❤

  • @Art2GoCanada
    @Art2GoCanada Před 2 lety +3

    As above , so below, Emmet Fox calls this type of conversation 'scientific prayer ' Thank you for the insightful thoughts 💭

  • @mostlydead3261
    @mostlydead3261 Před 2 lety +6

    Jonathon should talk with Graham Harman, that would be another Meaningful discussion..

    • @viktorbraa
      @viktorbraa Před 2 lety

      Totally, the object-oriented ontology folks definitely have something interesting to say regarding the Verveake and Pageau discussions on Angels "as hyperobjects".

  • @jamieyoung9392
    @jamieyoung9392 Před 2 lety +15

    Big fan of both. This should be an interesting cross-over.

  • @annawray2220
    @annawray2220 Před 2 lety +2

    This is one of my favourite conversations of the year!

  • @emy_2510
    @emy_2510 Před rokem

    Just listened to this conversation and it was loads wonderful!

  • @laceygreenwood
    @laceygreenwood Před 2 lety +8

    I didn't have time to listen to this entire interview, but I think answers to these ideas/ thoughts/ questions can be found and are greatly and wonderfully supplied in Vladimir Lossky's book, THE MYSTICAL THEOLOGY OF THE EASTERN CHURCH. This entire book is excellent, insightful, thorough, and well explained. Chapter 5, "Created Being," is an amazing explanation of man, what he was created to be, what the fall brought upon him, and what he can still become, in measure. I highly recommend it. Human reason cannot find answers to these questions, but God has revealed them to those whom He has been please to enlighten (and for our help), and to those who acknowledge that we can never know these things entirely. . . . What really stands out to me in the chapter mentioned, very briefly, is that we must totally surrender our will to God's will. "The person who asserts himself as an individual, and shuts himself up to his particular nature, far from realizing himself fully, becomes impoverished (pp. 123-4)." He goes on to say, "The person called to union with God, called to realize by grace the perfect assimilation of our nature to the divine nature, is bound to a mutilated nature defaced by sin and torn apart from conflicting desires" (p. 125)--and much more. --Hope I'm not off with my comment here. I've been known to misunderstand things. If so, I ask your forgiveness.

    • @MoreChrist
      @MoreChrist Před 2 lety +3

      That book changed my life.

    • @laceygreenwood
      @laceygreenwood Před 2 lety +1

      @@MoreChrist Everyone should read & deeply consider/contemplate it's rich depths of meaning! It's truly amazing and wonderful! God is most wonderful and amazing, and I don't say that lightly!

    • @diaphanouswaters
      @diaphanouswaters Před 2 lety +1

      @@MoreChrist me too.

  • @alancummins9312
    @alancummins9312 Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for this. A truly amazing conversation and it gives me hope in these dark times.

  • @zacharyjones7616
    @zacharyjones7616 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for this.

  • @davidtrujillo993
    @davidtrujillo993 Před 2 lety +1

    The best thing I have listened to in years.

  • @kevinzalac8945
    @kevinzalac8945 Před 2 lety +1

    Best conversation of the year.

  • @billz3217
    @billz3217 Před 2 lety +6

    Bernardo makes the point that we have romanticized and cartoonified the spiritual and transcendence/enlightenment and this makes it banal and unreal. The example was given of someone whose home life is a mess, but they are practicing yoga religiously. Perhaps this "wrong way" of trying to achieve transcendence is pointing to another and more profound way of approaching it. This would be through facing the suffering that is inherent in human life. Through a deep, honest acceptance of suffering, without resistance, we may diminish the ego and experience an awakening to the transcendent, connecting upward to the Divine. We may move from darkness, chaos, and disorder at the bottom, upward to the light, order, and unity with something greater at the top.

  • @yetinssonl1885
    @yetinssonl1885 Před 2 lety

    This is just amazing. So genuinley thankful to the core for you two coming togethter. Thank you. Love you both.

  • @Charlies_Little_Corner
    @Charlies_Little_Corner Před 2 lety +7

    Do what is meaningful, not expedient... Stand Up with your shoulders straight...Treat yourself like someone you are responsible for.... Suffering is inevitable...to me, this wonderful conversation actually corroborates Jordan Peterson's 12 rules for life. But then again, maybe it's because this is a special corner of the internet and the algorithm just works.

  • @mcnallyaar
    @mcnallyaar Před 2 lety

    I am really thrilled to hear how much Dr. Kastrup knows about Orthodox Christianity!

  • @ShowMeMoviesInc.
    @ShowMeMoviesInc. Před 2 lety +2

    This is amazing one of my fav talks with Pagaue and I’m not even half way through 😄😄

  • @TheDonovanMcCormick
    @TheDonovanMcCormick Před rokem

    This was outstanding, knew nothing of Bernardo. Great honest conversation with no malice whatsoever. Excellent.

  • @ionatana59
    @ionatana59 Před 2 lety

    on my second viewing now, and i'm comprehending the points far greater and enjoying the conversation even more. still learning more and more, thank you for this discussion it has really opened my mind in new ways

  • @mcnallyaar
    @mcnallyaar Před 2 lety

    This might be my favorite dialogue with Dr. Kastrup ever!!!

  • @kaila9952
    @kaila9952 Před 7 měsíci

    As a cultural Christian having grown up in northeast US I was/am a rather ardent secularist, even have had periods of militant atheism. But after five and half decades of experience I have been lately opened to broadening a search ‘for meaning’, which has landed me in place where I am now being exposed to thought akin to those in this conversation. I have been paying a lot of attention to Bernardo and Jonathan and adjacent others ‘the algorithms’ have packaged and delivered to my attention lol.
    Being a newbie to this ‘realm’ I’ve been exposed to what feels likes epiphanies or synchronicities that ‘smack’ against my consciousness in a good way,lol.
    As an example or consequence of the present moment of exposure to technology and image processing , I got a big smack. There was a point in the video where an image of Moloch was superimposed on/over the moderator’s room and when it ‘dissolved’ the relevant space showed a vase of flowers and Boom.
    I saw the flowers as a symbol of beauty or the good , as an actualization of the potential for beauty to ‘become’ or the good to be realized or instanuated (I may mention I’ve been exploring the Whiteheadian realm too ). The epiphany, for me, was that as opposed to the idea of Moloch ‘receiving’ a sacrifice for the promised immediate satisfaction of receiving a ‘good’ , the promise of the good being instantiated in the flowers also carries the possibility of renewal of the good, whereas the surrendering of the sacrifice to Moloch is the destruction of the possibility for renewal of the good.
    The beauty,good from the flower becomes or is instantiated by the process of living and dying in the temporal sense. Life and regeneration are the ‘mechanisms’ by which beauty and the good are actualized. A sacrifice to Moloch for immediate satisfaction is the destruction of the possibility for continued generation of the good. This is somewhat against Johnathan’s notion of ritual sacrifice as a recognition of receiving a higher good, but perhaps points to the responsibility of ‘picking’ the right or correct ‘form’ of giving ‘up’.
    The other synchronicity was while scribbling notes during the episode they later referenced Noah, which folded this loose idea back to the idea of regeneration of life. The gathering of the animals can be seen as the preservation of the constituent needs of the process of good/beauty that are generated through the process of becoming ,living. Without the ‘pairs’ the actualization of the process of the good ‘unfolding’ is cut off.
    The ‘wrong kind’ of sacrifice is pure destruction absent the possibility of a renewed or continuing ability for the generation of ‘goodness’ ‘becoming’. Burning it ‘all up’ in cosmic conflagration releases an all consuming flame , but the flame is temporary and leaves nought for becoming.
    Moloch isn’t just a symbol of an immediate destruction , it’s more a piecemeal view of total destruction.

  • @gertiestacygleiss4045

    This is fascinating!

  • @heyokaoverdashelly2kangel945

    I'm so proud of you Joanathan. Thank god for putting me in the right line.

  • @landerwyoming9720
    @landerwyoming9720 Před rokem

    Wow, an excellent excellent conversation

  • @robertgray9599
    @robertgray9599 Před 2 lety

    I like how Bernardo expressed his perspective on kenosis by answering with many perspectives to the one question, then Jonathan identifies more consciously as a Christian non-dualist who sees that many perspectives are integrating and differentiating within him to better live in the world. Convergence and exemplification in actions and words. :)

  • @mcnallyaar
    @mcnallyaar Před 2 lety

    Now this is an interesting conversational pairing!

  • @rythmicwarrior
    @rythmicwarrior Před 2 lety +6

    Please get Bernardo back on! Allocate 3 hours next time...it still won't be enough time xD

  • @yadurajdas532
    @yadurajdas532 Před rokem

    We will like to request the host, if he could invite Bernardo again and hold a discussion with an other philosopher theologian, and touch in this specific point. I feel this is the most important point of contemplation in the idealist- religious discussion. 🙏

  • @fineasfrog
    @fineasfrog Před 2 lety +1

    Bernardo, the most complete understanding of will has been suggested by John G Bennett. Here is a sample quote from his book Deeper Man. "We tend to talk about will almost entirely in human terms, but it is as important cosmologically as it is psychologically. Will enters into everything that exists, even the most inert and passive states of matter. This does not mean of course that there a tiny beings inside rocks or very large super beings inside planets and stars. Will is the dynamic of change everywhere and at all levels. When it is associated with a self-renewing body there is a living being. Even here we have fallen into the trap of talking about an 'it' as if it were an entity or object."

  • @MatthewJohnCrittenden
    @MatthewJohnCrittenden Před 2 lety +1

    Preliked. Big fan of Bernardo here.

  • @alfredosaint-jean9660
    @alfredosaint-jean9660 Před 2 lety +5

    I do want to clarify one thing: Nietzsche was sick since childhood, with constant headaches and vomits, even the eye that got blind in his late years was diagnosed with a malfunction when he was young.
    That was not surprising since there were several antecedents of mental illness in his family, his own father died with a mental illness.
    There is a bigger chance of his sickness to be a cause of his disposition towards life than the other way around.

    • @TheGerogero
      @TheGerogero Před 2 lety +1

      Sounds like materialist hand-waving.

    • @alfredosaint-jean9660
      @alfredosaint-jean9660 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheGerogero Is there a counterargument?

    • @TheGerogero
      @TheGerogero Před 2 lety

      @@alfredosaint-jean9660 Yes, but I don't care.

    • @joshf2218
      @joshf2218 Před 2 lety +1

      Or maybe his family had mental illness because they also fostered a poor disposition towards life that culminated in him

  • @Sethan777
    @Sethan777 Před rokem

    Church is *not* a building. Peace 🕊

  • @DamburaDioa
    @DamburaDioa Před 2 lety +3

    No way! I'm such a fan of both!

  • @Heraclit33
    @Heraclit33 Před 2 lety +3

    This is one of the best conversations I heard from you both!

  • @das3841
    @das3841 Před 2 lety +4

    Wow, this is so very good, glad you reposted it Jonathan, thank you!

  • @ramyafennell4615
    @ramyafennell4615 Před rokem

    The sewage flows along with the pure water. This is the nature of the mind in its state of seperation from its true nature...so be it...but as non dualists we can try...again and again...to foreground that Isness... the Awareness...in which everything flows.
    Living in community with others is the way we mature...we have then to find compsssion and empathy no matter the circumstance.
    Loved Jonathan's response at the end...about messiness and smelliness of community. Bernado you hit the nail on the head to raise the tendency to romanticise spirituality...but surely once people are hooked there is only one way forward...ie. serving others seeing Spirit in all...and grounded in love and knowledge of our true nature in Consciousness. Remembering here Rupert Spira's...the screen ...on which falls the movie of life... the screen embraces all dualities. Bernardo was so right to remind us in giving we diminish the separated self that clouds the screen.
    Wonderful to see you two. Thank you.

  • @mvondoom
    @mvondoom Před 2 lety +10

    Pageau - what a great conversation! Great to see this connection. ... This is unrelated, I wanted to suggest a topic, have you considered the symbolism of Mexico? There's a lot there - the Virgin of Guadalupe, the symbols of the Aztecs, the Eagle on the Cactus devouring the Serpent. Anyway, just a thought. thank you for your work!

    • @RodrigoMera
      @RodrigoMera Před 2 lety

      I've been working on it! are you Mexican?

    • @mvondoom
      @mvondoom Před 2 lety +1

      @@RodrigoMera oh good, hope it's going well. I'm a nomad, lived in Mexico as a child and left when I was ten :)

    • @RodrigoMera
      @RodrigoMera Před 2 lety

      @@mvondoom I was asking you because maybe you have some interesting insights to share.

    • @mvondoom
      @mvondoom Před 2 lety +1

      @@RodrigoMera pues... no se! me gustaria ver como interpreta Pageau el encuentro entre los Aztecas y los Espagnoles. Tambien como Mexico incorpora los simbolos Christianos y los hace mas ricos y varios. Tal vez el cuento de la Virgen de Guadalupe seria un buen lugar para empezar. I really haven't thought about it too much tho! good luck!

    • @RodrigoMera
      @RodrigoMera Před 2 lety

      @@mvondoom czcams.com/video/eyz7hMTRHKA/video.html
      czcams.com/video/S4witzGuUXo/video.html

  • @Charles3x7
    @Charles3x7 Před 2 lety +4

    Glad to see Jonathan finally speaking with an idealist as opposed to a panpsychist - a much more coherent approach in my opinion.

  • @ibelieve3111
    @ibelieve3111 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks

  • @Subeffulgent
    @Subeffulgent Před 2 lety +5

    This is a very subtle form of spiritual warfare be on guard Jonathan and keep up the good work was very interesting how your guest was repelled by the notion of a guardian angel and yet drawn to the notion of a Daemon it was very interesting how you are being pulled up to a higher ness by your guardian angel and yet he was being pushed to a lower nest by his Daemon like he wants to dig around in the earth and under the Earth and uncover an ancient Bishop's lost teachings (0ccult). ✝✝✝🔥

    • @thegoldenvoid
      @thegoldenvoid Před 2 lety +1

      Yes I immediately thought that this guy seems more to be suggesting from entity possession and in need of help removing it rather than extrapolating/projecting it to a theory of existence per se. He has clearly suffered a lot in his life which is about red flag re getting checked for entities.

    • @Subeffulgent
      @Subeffulgent Před 2 lety +1

      @@thegoldenvoid ✝️✝️✝️

    • @ionatana59
      @ionatana59 Před 2 lety +1

      the daimon is a well documented part to existence found by many philosophers. it in that sense would be a philosophical take on a force beyond our normal scope of experience

  • @mariog1490
    @mariog1490 Před 2 lety +7

    What an excellent conversation. I thought this conversation went much better than Bernardo and Vervaeke’s conversation. It would be great if you guys could talk more about idealism next time. I’m not an idealist but I’m wondering if Jonathan is.

    • @veilofreality
      @veilofreality Před 2 lety

      has any conversation with Vervaeke ever been good?

    • @mariog1490
      @mariog1490 Před 2 lety

      @@veilofreality I’ve never seen any other bad conversations with Vervaeke…

    • @veilofreality
      @veilofreality Před 2 lety +3

      ​@@mariog1490 I'm not saying he isn't a smart and insightful thinker, but a good, clear orator/speaker he surely isn't. Following him through his neurotically cerebral tirades, is, at least for me, almost painful.

    • @kevinfaltin4856
      @kevinfaltin4856 Před 2 lety +1

      @@veilofreality Verveake has a lot to offer, maybe you drank from the wrong well (discussions). He was given a prize; naming him the best, or one of the best professors at the university of Toronto some years back. Ironically, for being a very clear and articulate lecturer that has the ability to make salient whats most important through the use of the socratic method. Maybe you're a bit sensitive, or simply lacking in obversational abilities... Although, I can agree that he has some annoying tendencies that surfaces every now and then, I cant say I've found any interesting intellectual ever that doesn't have any. Your comment is a great example of why you don't throw pearls to swine.

    • @veilofreality
      @veilofreality Před 2 lety

      @@kevinfaltin4856 your comment on the other hand is pretty clear evidence of pride, vainglory and prelest.

  • @heyokaoverdashelly2kangel945

    Je suis tellement fière d'avoir le nom de famille Pageau maintenant. J'adore ton charisme Jonathan tu m'as redonné l'espoir que j'avais perdu.

  • @mcnallyaar
    @mcnallyaar Před 2 lety

    15:15
    "I have had the experience of resolving certain dissociative states that I have had for years, and in retrospect (and this will sound funny, maybe even sound contradictory) I know that I was both sides of that dissociation. For the longest time -- if you would have asked me in the past, 'are you feeling this and that?' I would have said 'No, I don't feel that at all. That's not how I feel at all. That's not me, it's not part of my world.' Today, I look back and I realize -- 'No, I *was* feeling that way. I was always feeling that way. I just didn't recognize it to myself.'"

  • @sjorsvanhens
    @sjorsvanhens Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks you for this interview

  • @petri5404
    @petri5404 Před 2 lety +5

    This was really good !

  • @maggen_me7790
    @maggen_me7790 Před 2 lety +2

    The zooming in and out (micro/macro)on was excellent in this conversation :)

  • @spiveeforever7093
    @spiveeforever7093 Před 2 lety +1

    Grateful to have my family's pretty sounding images of guardian angels grounded in something I actually experience and revere in my life already. A wealth of symbolism and tradition opened up to me once more.

  • @pikamez
    @pikamez Před 2 lety +1

    Jonathan, you should talk with Rupert Sheldrake. He has a biological/chemical theory that seems to address the problem of higher beings or structures. It's called Morphic Resonance Fields.
    Keep up the good work, bye-bye.

  • @canadianamateurfilmdude
    @canadianamateurfilmdude Před 2 lety +1

    Been waiting a long time for this

  • @TheGuiltsOfUs
    @TheGuiltsOfUs Před rokem

    Thankfully we have moved past the absurd idea of "mentalism" centuries ago, best left in the dustbin!

  • @stojanjankovic5669
    @stojanjankovic5669 Před rokem

    It is not a cartoonification if you see it as the relationship with the Father who is nurturing you, disciplining you, and forgiving you... you are a child that often fails, but you still have a loving relationship... you are forgiven, sanctified, and promised to partake in inheritance.

  • @mcnallyaar
    @mcnallyaar Před 2 lety +1

    I was happy that Pageau mentioned Dante. I feel that it's far too infrequent that these folks who talk about these subjects mention poets. Poets deal with these ideas. Read them!!! Coleridge deals with this stuff.

  • @Jacob011
    @Jacob011 Před 2 lety

    I feel like consciousness is better though of as a mode that manifests on all scales of reality in different ways. A mode on certain scale is able to perceive other modes as conscious only if they are the same (or, perhaps more generally, gelling with each other).
    Which would mean that, entities such as nation states, have a consciousness which is imperceptible to our consciousness, because in a way unlike our own.

  • @leondbleondb
    @leondbleondb Před 2 lety +2

    This is a very deep conversation.

  • @mcnallyaar
    @mcnallyaar Před 2 lety

    I have never loved Pageau as much as I love him now.

  • @Tara-zq3il
    @Tara-zq3il Před 2 lety +1

    I just saw this. Proverb 16: 9 'Humans plan their course,but the Lord establishes thair steps'

  • @jambo52
    @jambo52 Před 2 lety

    nice !

  • @dianagoddard6456
    @dianagoddard6456 Před rokem

    A Hiidden Life is amazing

  • @alexguardado6942
    @alexguardado6942 Před 2 lety

    have you ever read Hegel? because there were so many things on this conversation that just remain me to Hegel's ideas.

  • @jordanedgeley6601
    @jordanedgeley6601 Před 2 lety +1

    Not many conversations, including the little ive heard so far individually from you both, have expanded and developed my metaphysical models like this one has, for example the fractal analogy regarding the mind of china and how you can apply that to the individual and reality

    • @ionatana59
      @ionatana59 Před 2 lety

      yeah that was an amazing tangent they went on

  • @neilchatfield4928
    @neilchatfield4928 Před 2 lety

    Incarnational reality - Corpus Christi! The faith is rooted in the messy present reality. It has to be lived out so that it isn’t reserved to just a spiritual philosophical realm.

  • @arono9304
    @arono9304 Před 2 lety +3

    Big thanks to everyone involved, this was a fantastic meeting of the minds (or... was it?)
    Jokes aside, I would also like to hear you two discuss Jung a bit more in-depth. Perhaps have Bernardo respond to Bruno Bracco's "Thoughts On The Jungian Perspective On Symbolism," or Jonathan's accusation that Jung reduces everything to the psyche? The latter indictment, after all, takes on a wholly different meaning within the framework of Kastrup's analytical idealism. Keep it up both of you, and thank you for putting yourselves out there!

    • @abbasalchemist
      @abbasalchemist Před 2 lety +1

      Psyche is problematized only if you strip it of its ancient understanding and equate it with so-called academic experimental notions of "psychology"

    • @ark-L
      @ark-L Před 2 lety +4

      Seconding this suggestion!
      And adding-in whatever way one might find it useful-that Bernardo's recent book "Decoding Jung's Metaphysics" addresses this question quite directly...
      *Spoilers*
      Bernardo characterizes Jung explicitly as an idealist/non-dualist. Thus, (as you suggest) Jung's "psyche" is not merely the personal mind, but in fact something much more similar to mind at large/universal consciousness/Brahman/God.

    • @abbasalchemist
      @abbasalchemist Před 2 lety +1

      @@ark-L I liked your comment. I only today discovered Bernardo and have just ordered his works. You are absolutely right about the individual psyche and its cosmic analog in God or Brahman. In the Chaldean Oracles it is equated with the World Soul/Cosmic Soul. As for Jung's non-dualism, I believe he was very careful to insist upon accepting duality as a precondition of our existence prior to any wholeness or Oneness one may attain from the painful ripping apart by the opposites and the slow gathering together of individuation.

    • @abbasalchemist
      @abbasalchemist Před 2 lety +1

      @@ark-L What I find frustrating about Pageau's misunderstanding of Jung is precisely the manifest incomprehension of the Traditionalist School as well as religious thinkers like Martin Buber and their misguided pious fears of associating anything "psychological" (pertaining to the psyche) with God in order to preserve His absolute transcendence. It is still a common misunderstanding of Jung's thought.

    • @ark-L
      @ark-L Před 2 lety

      ​@@abbasalchemist Excited for you to take in his "material"! haha
      Ahh, interesting point. I may have Jung wrong on this, but could you say that he sees this duality as occurring *within* one's personal psyche/Self experience and that, though it may precede our existence as an ego, it does not precede the psyche-proper from which it (and indeed everything else) emerges? In other words, might the individuation process in its entirety be seen as a movement from Oneness, to duality, back to Oneness, which, taken together, is nonetheless an expression of non-dual reality? (apologies if my terminology is wack and/or if this just comes across as gibberish... I find comprehending, let alone trying to re-present Jung with any sort of consistency to be a challenging affair lol)
      I'm afraid I'm not very familiar with Buber, but I 100% share your frustration with Pageau on the traditionalist front!! I do recall him in the past at least giving some reasons for his downplaying of perennialism/traditionalism; mostly, he thinks it assumes a view from nowhere-which he'd say is impossible to attain-and that one needs to inhabit a "story" (culture/religious tradition) to be able to properly find connection with the underlying "pattern" of reality. He's also expressed an aversion to the new-age perennialist-adjacent types who cherry-pick different religious ideas to fuse together their own hyper-palatized mystical Frankensteinian version-without all the crusts and prickly parts. I can sympathize with the latter point, but I think perennialism might be better seen as coming about not via a view-from nowhere, but rather a view from EVERYWHERE-i.e. by a kind of embodied superimposing of the various traditions to find the core of what is shared between all of them.

  • @das3841
    @das3841 Před 2 lety +2

    The daimon seems to me to be somewhat approaching the trans/impersonal mystery of the Divine.

  • @Kunjesvari
    @Kunjesvari Před 2 lety

    19:44 profound... In the Bhakti tradition it is preferable that prayer is listening (as we chant the Holy Names) and that the devotee provides the most desirable home for God in the heart because he has no demands of Him.

    • @Kunjesvari
      @Kunjesvari Před 2 lety

      1:43:25 enlightenment is a shit show 💯 I feel this in my bones! Reality is not divorced from spirituality except by our own thinking; it's language which creates the impossible chasm.... Empathy is certainly a form of enlightenment and I haven't figured my way out of it yet. 🤣

  • @johnnytass2111
    @johnnytass2111 Před 2 lety +5

    1:31:36 Talk about symbolism: The story goes Nietzsche's fall into "madness" was the moment he saw a beast of burden, a horse, being struck by its Master, that he fell crying on the horse's face in compassion to its suffering. In that moment Nietzsche's defenses in his world philosophy came crumbling down, no longer could his Faith in an Uberman's Will to Power nor an Eternal Return sustain his mind around the real suffering of a living animal. The moment he shared in its suffering, his mind went silent from trying to solve our world's existence. Perhaps, one can say, he sat still in the presence of the All-Holy Spirit.

    • @johnnytass2111
      @johnnytass2111 Před 2 lety +1

      There's a great podcast from Martyrmade that reveals a connection from Dostoevsky writing about a horse being beaten to Nietzsche's fall the moment he witnessed what Dostoevsky had written about (which Nietzsche had read).

    • @alfredosaint-jean9660
      @alfredosaint-jean9660 Před 2 lety +1

      I like that tale.
      It may not had happened, but nevertheless, it totally completes Nietzsche.

    • @johnnytass2111
      @johnnytass2111 Před 2 lety

      @@alfredosaint-jean9660 Indeed.

  • @veilofreality
    @veilofreality Před 2 lety +1

    The idea of the diamond might also be the result of the imperfect perception of the action of separate entities, the mid point between that of the guardian angel and, on the other side, of the demonic. Which might very well be plural, though, some early fathers talk about the existence of personal demons.

  • @andrew_blank
    @andrew_blank Před 2 lety +1

    1:26:00 self-sacrifice or losing yourself through serving… sounds noble and makes sense although a bit of an interesting paradox. How do you know your motives aren’t self-serving tho? Is it enough to serve in order to get / be fulfilled? Or is it service above all else? Can you even continue to serve without any return / fulfillment? I’m not sure how to think about that…

    • @ionatana59
      @ionatana59 Před 2 lety

      isn't it a natural emotional response to feel good after helping someone, it's almost unavoidable

    • @andrew_blank
      @andrew_blank Před 2 lety

      @@ionatana59 yes I suppose it’s inevitable whether we’re doing it out of “pure” motives or whether we’re being selfish. Does it matter if that’s what motivates us - serving primarily for me to be fulfilled? How can we know if we’re being motivated by selfish motives or not?

  • @Jacob011
    @Jacob011 Před 2 lety

    01:40:30 that right there is Owen Barfields final participation.

  • @lynnharalam1795
    @lynnharalam1795 Před 2 lety

    Dear Jonathan,
    Please do a video on building our ark here in Canada. Does this involve retreating to the mountains, becoming self-sufficient or building a Christian community outside of the city?
    "Acquire the spirit of peace" and the light of Christ in us will help others discover their inner peace here on earth.
    Praying for inner peace for all of humanity🙏

    • @leondbleondb
      @leondbleondb Před 2 lety +1

      Building an ark in one of the most comfortable, liberal, Western countries in the world?

    • @notaboutit3565
      @notaboutit3565 Před 2 lety +3

      Just my thoughts, I think the ark is the Church. I don’t think we’re supposed to flee trouble and persecution by heading to the hills, I think we’re supposed to endure it in communion with the Church, the Body of Christ. Forsaking life for Life.

    • @mostlydead3261
      @mostlydead3261 Před 2 lety +1

      my are u delusional..

  • @MarcusWHunt
    @MarcusWHunt Před 2 lety +1

    DOES ANYBODY HAVE THE CITATIONS FOR ST MAXIMUS THE CONFESSOR + GREGORY OF NYSSA? THANKS I’LL STOP SHOUTING

  • @Zevelyon
    @Zevelyon Před 2 lety +6

    As a Christian, how could Pageau NOT challenge Kastrup on his position on the afterlife?

    • @forthegloryofthelord
      @forthegloryofthelord Před 2 lety

      Do a research on Orthodox position on afterlife

    • @Zevelyon
      @Zevelyon Před 2 lety +1

      @@forthegloryofthelord "do a research" lol. What about my comment makes you think I don't already understand the Orthodox Church's position on the afterlife?

    • @forthegloryofthelord
      @forthegloryofthelord Před 2 lety

      @@Zevelyon are you asking what in particular made me think so? In 12 word sentence? I guess it was "NOT"

    • @Zevelyon
      @Zevelyon Před 2 lety +1

      @@forthegloryofthelord I was clearly saying he should have challenged Kastrup.

  • @iliya3110
    @iliya3110 Před 2 lety

    Interesting discussion. I have some concerns with his thought though from an Orthodox perspective. Effectively, his idea of theosis sounded like something of a natural evolution of the human mind. For example, it is framed like this: "Maybe one day we will evolve to grasp the mystery of unity in multiplicity." However, there's an inherent contradiction in his system of thought then. At the outset he indicated, "All things decay into dissociation and multiplicity because it's inherent in their nature given enough time." At the same time it is claimed that "nature can resolve that problem through evolution given enough time." I do not believe one can have it both ways - nature cannot decay and simultaneously transcend itself (an appeal to natural selection doesn't solve it - it just goes around the cycle of death and decay forever); however, I do think this contradiction in secular thought does reveal something of the hope and thirst that mankind has in their hearts for all things to be reconciled into unity in God. That can be a moment of conversion for many of us former secular materialists and agnostics. I was one of them and eventually I took the leap and have never looked back. Glory to Jesus Christ.

    • @ionatana59
      @ionatana59 Před 2 lety

      what about unity of self and a higher form of existence , maybe this can only occur once we live this world. this world really feels like the preschool to the grander scope of existence post-death

  • @Jacob011
    @Jacob011 Před 2 lety

    35:00 this is why Jonathan should talk to Mark Vernon.

  • @Zevelyon
    @Zevelyon Před 2 lety +6

    Kenosis is about finding yourself, not extinguishing yourself. Pageau was truly unprepared to counter Kastrup's Pantheism. He often seems to want to conform to Pantheistic ideas.

  • @peripheralarbor
    @peripheralarbor Před 2 lety +9

    I feel like Bernard's objection to the imagery of The New Jerusalem is partially due to its unobtainability. It may be helpful to point out that this unreachable nature of the Divine City is explicit in scripture. We are not expected to be able to work our way to it, or build it with our effort. The New Jerusalem is "The city built without hands, whos founder and builder is God." Incorporating this is a fatal blow to our mortal pride, to which I have no doubt some aspect of Bernard's daemon will strenuously object. @More Christ

    • @ionatana59
      @ionatana59 Před 2 lety +1

      is the New Jerusalem supposed to be on Earth or in a more heavenly realm, because i doubt a god or God would come and build here during these times. What would its purpose be? Can you refresh my memory of what the New Jerusalem stands for?

    • @peripheralarbor
      @peripheralarbor Před 2 lety

      @@ionatana59 Think of it as the perfected combination of the mountain of God, the temple, the pyramids, the garden of Eden, the university, and the home you never had.

  • @jocelynbolduc2769
    @jocelynbolduc2769 Před 2 lety +1

    religare. ❤

  • @erics4802
    @erics4802 Před 2 lety +3

    Talking about the boundaries of individual identities; they aren't arbitrary as such, just so completely framed and grouped in ways that *we as humans* cannot grasp at God-like levels of certain knowing. at 1:04ish mark

  • @gusssimogu
    @gusssimogu Před 2 lety +1

    Luther didn't take away symbolism, what are you talking about? He wasn't Calvin...

  • @1214gooner
    @1214gooner Před 2 lety +2

    In the Christian relation between multiplicity and unity, particularity dissolves into the singular absolute, only to be reconstituted with a fuller and more concrete identity than it had before.

  • @playswithbricks
    @playswithbricks Před 2 lety

    I’m reading Kastrup’s book right now and it’s about realism vs idealism-both new terms for me. Kastrup is an idealist, but we would say Pageau is too, correct?

    • @ionatana59
      @ionatana59 Před 2 lety

      i guess we'll find out in conversation part 2

  • @therealbs2000
    @therealbs2000 Před 2 lety

    1:24:22 old bernardo reinvents the wheel...christians love saying "when people are big god is small"

  • @Jacob011
    @Jacob011 Před 2 lety +1

    Right around here 01:06:00, I'd say you don't need to get bogged down with boundaries as I see it, because I think boundary is a too strict a concept to use in the analytical mode leading to their indefinite proliferation. That's because that concept is too sharp, it's like trying to understand the night sky while having only a pinprick of light available at a time. You might be much better off using fields as a basic concept and probabilistic language. In connection with this, Sheldrake's The Presence of the Past and his concept of morphogenetic fields and habits of nature comes to mind.
    What about thinking about those wholes (higher-order entities) as having membranes of sorts, or soft fuzzy boundaries? Or perhaps, let's ask this: why think in terms of spatiotemporal localization?
    Overall though I think we just need better, more flexible, ontology that is not particularly concerned with space or time (that is to say, it includes them and transcends them). The process-relational ontology and biological metaphors I think are the way forward here, as expounded in Dupré, Nicholson, Everyhing Flows (available online for free).
    I'm clueless about this just as anybody. It's a mind-bending topic, if there ever was one. We must loosen our habitual grasp on things we think we know for sure.

    • @MoreChrist
      @MoreChrist Před 2 lety +1

      Dr Iain McGilchrist's work is very helpful in this area, as well, I think. He points to relations as primary to relata in the structures of reality- macro and micro. Right down to our neurobiology. I agree: adopting more organic metaphors is necessary. This is probably something worth exploring with Jonathan and Bernardo next time. Thanks.

    • @Jacob011
      @Jacob011 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MoreChrist yep definitely. I'm a big fan of Iain McGilchrist, just working through The Matter with Things.