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Les Sleeth
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“An old authority says that the soul is made between one and two. The ‘one’ is eternity, that remains always aloof and changeless. The ‘two’ is time, which changes and multiplies.” Meister Eckhart
“Twoness” in this thread refers to a underlying pattern of reality which a number of ancient philosophical traditions have postulated, and which can be interpreted as possibly arising out of oscillation. First I’ll present a sampling of the olden philosophies, then briefly compare it to modern observations, and finally (in a second post) return to one of the ancient intuitive models to help pose a question about the relationship between oscillation and order.
Ancient Wisdom
From very early times thinkers have suggested that there are two linked forces operating in the fabric of creation. In India writers of the ancient Brahmanas and Upanishads postulated that the polar forces of rik (expansion) and saman (contraction) governed the creation of the universe. Proponents of Kashmir Saivism centuries later in India presented a more sophisticated concept of the role of creation’s oscillatory effects in a work known as the Spandakarikas, where the basis of all creation is said to be a pulsation or “throb.”
In the Jewish Kaballah one finds a description of creation through the polarity of the supernal male and female attributes of Abba and Aima.
Hoary Hermetic philosophy, though of questionable origin and unfortunately adapted mostly to occult practices, nonetheless contains in its opening tenets astute observations on vibration, polarity and rhythm saying that, “Nothing rests, everything moves, everything vibrates. . . . Everything is dual; everything has poles . . . . The measure of the swing to the right is the measure of the swing to the left . . . rhythm compensates.”
The Chinese likely thought more extensively, determinedly and practically about twoness than anyone else. As any student of oriental thought knows, Chinese philosophers long ago postulated the existence of an underlying twoness principle represented by yin and yang. It’s probably the single Chinese concept with which the world at large is most familiar, and it also has been one of the most influential elements of Chinese culture. Originating in and persisting since prehistoric times, cutting across, penetrating and accepted by all schools of native Chinese thought, applied in numerous areas of Chinese civilization from government and medicine to art (even surviving communism) has been the notion of yin and yang.
Like the great logic and reason principles vigorously sought by the Greeks, and those principles for knowledge of innerness devotedly cultivated by the Indians, the successes of the Chinese with twoness principles came about because of the simultaneous convergence of several key elements.
First, the desire to move beyond speculation and folk beliefs motivated serious Chinese thinkers to search for twoness principles that were practical. Second, the acceptance of descried twoness principles by virtually every category of Chinese authority, from emperor to wise man, resulted in a collaborative exchange of ideas about them over an extended period of time. Third, the essential precepts were organized into a usable system by one school, and expressed by most revealing verses and a symbol by another (discussed below). All this made twoness understanding available to everyone, led to their widespread use and cultural inculcation, and gave rise to yet further insights and understandings about twoness.
The “system” mentioned that developed to apply yin-yang theory was embodied in the I Ching, a work which has attracted world-wide attention in recent decades. The I Ching is known to the layperson and the expert alike both as a collection of Chinese wisdom, and as a divination tool. Although the term “divination” has occult connotations, that is not necessarily the case with the I Ching since the pioneering and realization of the I Ching was not primarily an occultist enterprise.
To create what finally became the I Ching, a surprising diversity of human influences worked together for upwards of three thousand years (with Confucius himself a main figure), with each principal collaborator first accepting and then augmenting the best of previous contributions. In addition to the fact that the driving force behind the I Ching’s evolution appears to have been the practical search for what would make the I Ching “work” as a knowledge-producing system, also key was that many I Ching developments were supplied by the greatest of Chinese sages. The result of its pragmatic and sagacious progression was that the I Ching became a repository for what was most effective and true in Chinese philosophy.
Alleged here is that the impeccably logical and computational constitution of the I Ching’s binary interpretation system suggests its developers were onto something. This “something,” it’s being proposed, was discovered when in the course of the I Ching’s development Chinese sages, whether through pure intuitive insight, lucky guesses, or a combination of both, somehow made use of a basic pattern of the universe.
Modern Observations
Possibly a more modern way to express “twoness” is to say oscillatory dynamics. Oscillatory dynamics may be the most governing factors of physical creation because they seem behind so much of what determines form and change — from time, cycles, and rhythm to durability, tone, and colors. The breath, nerve energy and heart beat which serve so indispensably in life, also fall in the domain of twoness pulsation.
Though it’s not something one normally thinks about, the universe is a rhythmically vibrating wonder. Atoms are the building blocks of the universe, and an individual atom may oscillate a trillion times per second. In addition, light oscillates as it fills space with various vibrating frequencies of radiation. Closer to home, the body of a human being may contain a million trillion frenetically vibrating atoms, while the senses and brain are stimulated by, respond to, and function using oscillatory information; so we too are deeply entrenched in the vibrational milieu.
For us, consciousness really is the big deal when it comes to oscillation because the perceptions, sensations and conceptions of the world we have are due to oscillatory potentials (and the ability of consciousness to experience that). The reason the world is not a single monotonous experience for us is because the universe vibrates in a wide assortment of vibrational frequencies and intensities.
Polarity is another feature associated with oscillation, and it is an enormously important principle to creation. The term “polarity” is used here in the broadest sense to represent that tendency in creation for things to assume the form of complementary opposites (polarity’s relationship to oscillation can be explained as phases of oscillation which become relatively constant). At the most basic level matter exhibits the polarities of electron and proton complementarity, positive and negative charges, and the north and south poles of magnetism; and in the evolution of life possibly the same principle works to create everything from left-right brain and male-female polarities to assertive-receptive and conservative-liberal personality types.
Another powerful twoness influence in creation is convergence and divergence. Physicists theorize time began with the momentous divergence we call the Big Bang, but before that our universe was somehow concentrated into a miniscule speck smaller than an atom. The universe remains in the grip of that two-phased dynamic, and overall it appears to be one of the most predominating and necessary dynamics of physical existence. Still converged from this proposed dynamic is the matter of our universe whose absence would obviously leave a flimsy creation. Yet if light and energy were not able to diverge from matter, the universe would be dark, cold, and incapable of supporting life.
Symmetry is twoness, and can be observed manifesting in characteristics ranging from the balance of forces concentrated in an atom to the relationship between gravity and the expansion of the universe. Another type of symmetry permeating the universe is rhythm. In addition to the rhythmic oscillation of atoms and light, in nature the rhythms of celestial cycles, tides, seasons, etc. seem to govern the overall changes of creation, while life processes such as reproduction, waking/sleeping, feeding and so on also yield to rhythm. And interestingly, higher consciousness is very much attuned to rhythm in music, movement, speech and even visual appreciation (as in symmetrical form).
(continued in next post)
“Twoness” in this thread refers to a underlying pattern of reality which a number of ancient philosophical traditions have postulated, and which can be interpreted as possibly arising out of oscillation. First I’ll present a sampling of the olden philosophies, then briefly compare it to modern observations, and finally (in a second post) return to one of the ancient intuitive models to help pose a question about the relationship between oscillation and order.
Ancient Wisdom
From very early times thinkers have suggested that there are two linked forces operating in the fabric of creation. In India writers of the ancient Brahmanas and Upanishads postulated that the polar forces of rik (expansion) and saman (contraction) governed the creation of the universe. Proponents of Kashmir Saivism centuries later in India presented a more sophisticated concept of the role of creation’s oscillatory effects in a work known as the Spandakarikas, where the basis of all creation is said to be a pulsation or “throb.”
In the Jewish Kaballah one finds a description of creation through the polarity of the supernal male and female attributes of Abba and Aima.
Hoary Hermetic philosophy, though of questionable origin and unfortunately adapted mostly to occult practices, nonetheless contains in its opening tenets astute observations on vibration, polarity and rhythm saying that, “Nothing rests, everything moves, everything vibrates. . . . Everything is dual; everything has poles . . . . The measure of the swing to the right is the measure of the swing to the left . . . rhythm compensates.”
The Chinese likely thought more extensively, determinedly and practically about twoness than anyone else. As any student of oriental thought knows, Chinese philosophers long ago postulated the existence of an underlying twoness principle represented by yin and yang. It’s probably the single Chinese concept with which the world at large is most familiar, and it also has been one of the most influential elements of Chinese culture. Originating in and persisting since prehistoric times, cutting across, penetrating and accepted by all schools of native Chinese thought, applied in numerous areas of Chinese civilization from government and medicine to art (even surviving communism) has been the notion of yin and yang.
Like the great logic and reason principles vigorously sought by the Greeks, and those principles for knowledge of innerness devotedly cultivated by the Indians, the successes of the Chinese with twoness principles came about because of the simultaneous convergence of several key elements.
First, the desire to move beyond speculation and folk beliefs motivated serious Chinese thinkers to search for twoness principles that were practical. Second, the acceptance of descried twoness principles by virtually every category of Chinese authority, from emperor to wise man, resulted in a collaborative exchange of ideas about them over an extended period of time. Third, the essential precepts were organized into a usable system by one school, and expressed by most revealing verses and a symbol by another (discussed below). All this made twoness understanding available to everyone, led to their widespread use and cultural inculcation, and gave rise to yet further insights and understandings about twoness.
The “system” mentioned that developed to apply yin-yang theory was embodied in the I Ching, a work which has attracted world-wide attention in recent decades. The I Ching is known to the layperson and the expert alike both as a collection of Chinese wisdom, and as a divination tool. Although the term “divination” has occult connotations, that is not necessarily the case with the I Ching since the pioneering and realization of the I Ching was not primarily an occultist enterprise.
To create what finally became the I Ching, a surprising diversity of human influences worked together for upwards of three thousand years (with Confucius himself a main figure), with each principal collaborator first accepting and then augmenting the best of previous contributions. In addition to the fact that the driving force behind the I Ching’s evolution appears to have been the practical search for what would make the I Ching “work” as a knowledge-producing system, also key was that many I Ching developments were supplied by the greatest of Chinese sages. The result of its pragmatic and sagacious progression was that the I Ching became a repository for what was most effective and true in Chinese philosophy.
Alleged here is that the impeccably logical and computational constitution of the I Ching’s binary interpretation system suggests its developers were onto something. This “something,” it’s being proposed, was discovered when in the course of the I Ching’s development Chinese sages, whether through pure intuitive insight, lucky guesses, or a combination of both, somehow made use of a basic pattern of the universe.
Modern Observations
Possibly a more modern way to express “twoness” is to say oscillatory dynamics. Oscillatory dynamics may be the most governing factors of physical creation because they seem behind so much of what determines form and change — from time, cycles, and rhythm to durability, tone, and colors. The breath, nerve energy and heart beat which serve so indispensably in life, also fall in the domain of twoness pulsation.
Though it’s not something one normally thinks about, the universe is a rhythmically vibrating wonder. Atoms are the building blocks of the universe, and an individual atom may oscillate a trillion times per second. In addition, light oscillates as it fills space with various vibrating frequencies of radiation. Closer to home, the body of a human being may contain a million trillion frenetically vibrating atoms, while the senses and brain are stimulated by, respond to, and function using oscillatory information; so we too are deeply entrenched in the vibrational milieu.
For us, consciousness really is the big deal when it comes to oscillation because the perceptions, sensations and conceptions of the world we have are due to oscillatory potentials (and the ability of consciousness to experience that). The reason the world is not a single monotonous experience for us is because the universe vibrates in a wide assortment of vibrational frequencies and intensities.
Polarity is another feature associated with oscillation, and it is an enormously important principle to creation. The term “polarity” is used here in the broadest sense to represent that tendency in creation for things to assume the form of complementary opposites (polarity’s relationship to oscillation can be explained as phases of oscillation which become relatively constant). At the most basic level matter exhibits the polarities of electron and proton complementarity, positive and negative charges, and the north and south poles of magnetism; and in the evolution of life possibly the same principle works to create everything from left-right brain and male-female polarities to assertive-receptive and conservative-liberal personality types.
Another powerful twoness influence in creation is convergence and divergence. Physicists theorize time began with the momentous divergence we call the Big Bang, but before that our universe was somehow concentrated into a miniscule speck smaller than an atom. The universe remains in the grip of that two-phased dynamic, and overall it appears to be one of the most predominating and necessary dynamics of physical existence. Still converged from this proposed dynamic is the matter of our universe whose absence would obviously leave a flimsy creation. Yet if light and energy were not able to diverge from matter, the universe would be dark, cold, and incapable of supporting life.
Symmetry is twoness, and can be observed manifesting in characteristics ranging from the balance of forces concentrated in an atom to the relationship between gravity and the expansion of the universe. Another type of symmetry permeating the universe is rhythm. In addition to the rhythmic oscillation of atoms and light, in nature the rhythms of celestial cycles, tides, seasons, etc. seem to govern the overall changes of creation, while life processes such as reproduction, waking/sleeping, feeding and so on also yield to rhythm. And interestingly, higher consciousness is very much attuned to rhythm in music, movement, speech and even visual appreciation (as in symmetrical form).
(continued in next post)
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