I've enjoyed comparing Prisig's veiw of truth to Plato's. Any one
interested in my Platonic 'two levels of truth' thesis (that there is
jamesian truth as a variety of the good, and then some higher kind of truth
which goes beyond), should also compare the Buddhist perspective on Lila's
predicament at the end of 'Lila':
http://www.buddsoc.org.uk/world_s.htm
Perhaps a short 'taster' to get you clicking:
>
> In the Buddhist scriptures we are often told that our everyday world is like a
> dream, that neither we nor the world around us is 'ultimately' real. This is
> of course different from saying that our life is a dream or that nothing we
> experience is real. Nevertheless some sort of distinction is being made
> between the kind of reality we ordinarily ascribe to our lives and the kind of
> reality they 'ultimately' have.
>
> In Mahayana Buddhism the distinction is drawn between two 'levels' of truth or
> reality. There is first the level, of Samsara, of ordinary reality within
> which we make all the distinctions we do make, including those between what,
> in an ordinary way, is real and what is not (for example, the distinction
> between mirages and real pools of water). And then there is the level of
> 'ultimate reality', about which little can be said except that the view from
> 'ultimate reality' is an 'enlightened' view, a way of seeing and being in
> which there is freedom from Dukkha.
> The notion of this 'ultimate reality' can seem very elusive, abstract,
> philosophical; and its philosophical elucidation has indeed taxed the brains
> of the greatest Buddhist thinkers from Nagarjuna onwards. But it is not just a
> philosopher's notion; it is central to the experience of the Buddhist path.
The author then goes on to explain something about that path in the clearest
way. Prisig was all for treating buddhism seriously as philosophy, as was
Iris Murdoch, so I assume that there are some here for whom this is a
relevant link and and an informative comparison. Once again, a real jewel
this when you read it:
http://www.buddsoc.org.uk/world_s.htm
Afterwards, for a briefish exploration of Murdoch's early thoughts on some
of this, try my own article on her metaphysics, the last of those listed at:
http://www.ul.ie/~philos/vol4/index.html
all the best,
- Elephant
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