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Emptiness

Emptiness as a human condition is a sense of generalized boredom, social alienation, nihilism and apathy. Feelings of emptiness often accompany dysthymia,[1] depression, loneliness, anhedonia, despair, or other mental/emotional disorders, including schizoid personality disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, schizotypal personality disorder and borderline personality disorder. A sense of emptiness is also part of a natural process of grief, as resulting death of a loved one, or other significant changes. The particular meanings of "emptiness" vary with the particular context and the religious or cultural tradition in which it is used.[2]

While Christianity and Western sociologists and psychologists view a state of emptiness as a negative, unwanted condition, in some Eastern philosophies such as Buddhist philosophy and Taoism, emptiness (Śūnyatā) represents seeing through the illusion of independent self-nature.[citation needed]

In Western culture edit

Sociology, philosophy, and psychology edit

In the West, feeling "empty" is often viewed as a negative condition. Psychologist Clive Hazell, for example, attributes feelings of emptiness to problematic family backgrounds with abusive relationships and mistreatment.[3] He claims that some people who are facing a sense of emptiness try to resolve their painful feelings by becoming addicted to a drug or obsessive activity (be it compulsive sex, gambling or work) or engaging in "frenzied action" or violence. In sociology, a sense of emptiness is associated with social alienation of the individual. This sense of alienation may be suppressed while working, due to the routine nature of work tasks, but during leisure hours or during the weekend, people may feel a sense of "existential vacuum" and emptiness.[4]

In political philosophy, emptiness is associated with nihilism. Literary critic Georg Lukács (born in 1885) argued against the "spiritual emptiness and moral inadequacy of capitalism", and argued in favour of communism as an "entirely new type of civilization, one that promised a fresh start and an opportunity to lead a meaningful and purposeful life."[5]

The concept of "emptiness" was important to a "certain type of existentialist philosophy and some forms of the Death of God movement".[2] Existentialism, the "philosophic movement that gives voice to the sense of alienation and despair", comes from "man's recognition of his fundamental aloneness in an indifferent universe". People whose response to the sense of emptiness and aloneness is to give excuses live in bad faith; "people who face the emptiness and accept responsibility aim to live 'authentic' lives".[6] Existentialists argue that "man lives in alienation from God, from nature, from other men, from his own true self." Crowded into cities, working in mindless jobs, and entertained by light mass media, we "live on the surface of life", so that even "people who seemingly have 'everything' feel empty, uneasy, discontented."[7]

In cultures where a sense of emptiness is seen as a negative psychological condition, it is often associated with depression. As such, many of the same treatments are proposed: psychotherapy, group therapy, or other types of counselling. As well, people who feel empty may be advised to keep busy and maintain a regular schedule of work and social activities.[citation needed] Other solutions which have been proposed to reduce a sense of emptiness are getting a pet[8][9] or trying Animal-Assisted Therapy; getting involved in spirituality such as meditation or religious rituals and service; volunteering to fill time and bring social contact; doing social interactions, such as community activities, clubs, or outings; or finding a hobby or recreational activity to regain their interest in life.

Christianity edit

In Austrian philosopher/educator Rudolf Steiner's (1861–1925) thinking, spiritual emptiness was a major problem in the educated European middle class. In his 1919 lectures he argued that European culture became "empty of spirit" and "ignorant of the needs, the conditions, that are essential for the life of the spirit". People experienced a "spiritual emptiness" and their thinking became marked by a "lazy passivity" due to the "absence of will from the life of thought". In modern Europe, Steiner claimed that people would "allow their thoughts to take possession of them", and these thoughts were increasingly filled with abstraction and "pure, natural scientific thinking". The educated middle classes began to think in a way that was "devoid of spirit", with their minds becoming "dimmer and darker", and increasing empty of spirit.[10]

Louis Dupré, a professor of philosophy at Yale University, argues that the "spiritual emptiness of our time is a symptom of its religious poverty". He claims that "many people never experience any emptiness: they are too busy to feel much absence of any kind"; they only realize their spiritual emptiness if "painful personal experiences -- the death of a loved one, the collapse of a marriage, the alienation of a child, the failure of a business" shock them into reassessing their sense of meaning.[11]

Spiritual emptiness has been associated with juvenile violence. In John C. Thomas' 1999 book How Juvenile Violence Begins: Spiritual Emptiness, he argues that youth in impoverished indigenous communities who feel empty may turn to fighting and aggressive crime to fill their sense of meaninglessness. In Cornell University professor James Garbarino's 1999 book Lost Boys: Why Our Sons Turn Violent and How We Can Save Them, he argues that "neglect, shame, spiritual emptiness, alienation, anger and access to guns are a few of the elements common to violent boys". A professor of human development, Garbarino claims that violent boys have an "alienation from positive role models" and "a spiritual emptiness that spawns despair". These youth are seduced by the violent fantasy of the US gun culture, which provides negative role models of tough, aggressive men who use power to get what they want. He claims that boys can be helped by giving them "a sense of purpose" and "spiritual anchors" that can "anchor boys in empathy and socially engaged moral thinking".[12]

Spiritual emptiness is often connected with addiction, especially by Christian-influenced addiction organizations and counsellors. Bill Wilson, the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, argued that one of the impacts of alcoholism was causing a spiritual emptiness in heavy drinkers. In Abraham J. Twerski's 1997 book Addictive Thinking: Understanding Self-Deception, he argues that when people feel spiritually empty, they often turn to addictive behaviors to fill the inner void. In contrast to having an empty stomach, which is a clear feeling, having spiritual emptiness is hard to identify, so it fills humans with a "vague unrest". While people may try to resolve this emptiness by obsessively having sex, overeating, or taking drugs or alcohol, these addictions only give temporary satisfaction. When a person facing a crisis due to feeling spiritually empty is able to stop one addiction, such as compulsive sex, they often just trade it in for another addictive behaviour, such as gambling or overeating.[13]

Fiction, film, design and visual arts edit

A number of novelists and filmmakers have depicted emptiness. The concept of "emptiness" was important to a "good deal of 19th–20th century Western imaginative literature".[2] Novelist Franz Kafka depicted a meaningless bizarre world in The Trial and the existentialist French authors sketched a world cut off from purpose or reason in Jean-Paul Sartre's La Nausée and Albert Camus' L'étranger. Existentialism influenced 20th century poet T.S. Eliot, whose poem "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" describes an "anti-hero or alienated soul, running away from or confronting the emptiness of his or her existence". Professor Gordon Bigelow argues that the existentialist theme of "spiritual barrenness is commonplace in literature of the 20th century", which in addition to Eliot includes Ernest Hemingway, Faulkner, Steinbeck and Anderson.[7]

Film adaptations of a number of existentialist novels capture the bleak sense of emptiness espoused by Sartre and Camus. This theme of emptiness has also been used in modern screenplays. Mark Romanek's 1985 film Static tells the surreal story of a struggling inventor and crucifix factory worker named Ernie who feels spiritually empty because he is saddened by his parents' death in an accident. Screenwriter Michael Tolkin's 1994 film The New Age examines "cultural hipness and spiritual emptiness", creating a "dark, ambitious, unsettling" film that depicts a fashionable LA couple who "are miserable in the midst of their sterile plenty", and whose souls are stunted by their lives of empty sex, consumption, and distractions.[14] The 1999 film American Beauty examines the spiritual emptiness of life in the US suburbs. In Wes Anderson's 2007 film The Darjeeling Limited, three brothers who "suffer from spiritual emptiness" and then "self-medicate themselves through sex, social withdrawal, and drugs."[15] The 2008 film The Informers is a Hollywood drama film written by Bret Easton Ellis and Nicholas Jarecki and directed by Gregor Jordan. The film is based on Ellis' 1994 collection of short stories of the same name. The film, which is set amidst the decadence of the early 1980s, depicts an assortment of socially alienated, mainly well-off characters who numb their sense of emptiness with casual sex, alcohol, and drugs.

Contemporary architecture critic Herbert Muschamp argues that "horror vacui" (which is Latin for "fear of emptiness") is a key principle of design. He claims that it has become an obsessive quality that is the "driving force in contemporary American taste". Muschamp states that "along with the commercial interests that exploit this interest, it is the major factor now shaping attitudes toward public spaces, urban spaces, and even suburban sprawl."[16]

Films that depict nothingness, shadows and vagueness, either in a visual sense or a moral sense are appreciated in genres such as film noir. As well, travellers and artists are often intrigued by and attracted to vast empty spaces, such as open deserts, barren wastelands or salt flats, and the open sea.

In visual arts emptiness and absence were recognized as phenomena that characterize not only particular works of art (e.g. Yves Klein) but also as a more general tendency within the history of modern art and aesthetics. Following Davor Džalto's argument on the modern concept of art, the gradual elimination of particular elements that traditionally characterized visual arts, which results in emptiness, is the most important phenomenon within the history and theory of art over the past two hundred years.[17]

In Eastern cultures edit

Buddhism edit

The Buddhist term emptiness (Skt. śūnyatā) refers specifically to the idea that everything is dependently originated, including the causes and conditions themselves, and even the principle of causality itself. It is not nihilism, nor is it meditating on nothingness.[18] Instead, it refers to the absence (emptiness) of inherent existence. Buddhapalita says:

What is the reality of things just as it is? It is the absence of essence. Unskilled persons whose eye of intelligence is obscured by the darkness of delusion conceive of an essence of things and then generate attachment and hostility with regard to them.

— Buddhapālita-mula-madhyamaka-vrtti P5242,73.5.6-74.1.2[19]

In an interview, the Dalai Lama stated that tantric meditation can be used for "heightening your own realization of emptiness or mind of enlightenment".[20] In Buddhist philosophy, attaining a realization of emptiness of inherent existence is key to the permanent cessation of suffering, i.e. liberation.

Even while an ordinary being, if upon hearing of emptiness great joy arises within again and again, the eyes moisten with tears of great joy, and the hairs of the body stand on end, such a person has the seed of the mind of a complete Buddha; He is a vessel for teachings on thatness, and ultimate truth should be taught to him. After that, good qualities will grow in him.

— Chandrakirti, Guide to the Middle Way, vv. 6:4-5[21]

The Dalai Lama argues that tantric yoga trainees need to realize the emptiness of inherent existence before they can go on to the "highest yoga tantra initiation"; realizing the emptiness of inherent existence of the mind is the "fundamental innate mind of clear light, which is the subtlest level of the mind", where all "energy and mental processes are withdrawn or dissolved", so that all that appears to the mind is "pure emptiness". As well, emptiness is "linked to the creative Void, meaning that it is a state of complete receptivity and perfect enlightenment", the merging of the "ego with its own essence", which Buddhists call the "clear light".[22]

In Ven. Thubten Chodron's 2005 interview with Lama Zopa Rinpoche, the lama noted that "ordinary beings who haven't realized emptiness don't see things as similar to illusions", and one does not "realize that things are merely labeled by mind and exist by mere name".[18] He argues that "when we meditate on emptiness, we drop an atom bomb on this [sense of a] truly existent I" and to realize that "what appears true...isn't true". By this, the lama is claiming that what is thought to be real—our thoughts and feelings about people and things—"exists by being merely labeled". He argues that meditators who attain knowledge of a state of emptiness are able to realize that their thoughts are merely illusions from labelling by the mind.[18]

Taoism edit

In Taoism, attaining a state of emptiness is viewed as a state of stillness and placidity which is the "mirror of the universe" and the "pure mind".[23] The Tao Te Ching claims that emptiness is related to the "Tao, the Great Principle, the Creator and Sustainer of everything in the universe". It is argued that it is the "state of mind of the Taoist disciple who follows the Tao", who has successfully emptied the mind "of all wishes and ideas not fitted with the Tao's Movement". For a person who attains a state of emptiness, the "still mind of the sage is the mirror of heaven and earth, the glass of all things", a state of "vacancy, stillness, placidity, tastelessness, quietude, silence, and non-action" which is the "perfection of the Tao and its characteristics, the "mirror of the universe" and the "pure mind".[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Downs, A. The Half-Empty Heart: A supportive guide to breaking free from chronic discontent. (2004)
  2. ^ a b c "emptiness (mysticism) - Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Britannica.com. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  3. ^ Paul L. Adams, Ivan Fras, "Beginning Child Psychiatry", page 208. Brunner Routledge (UK), 1988.
  4. ^ (PDF). Mind NC. 2012-02-16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-05.
  5. ^ We Didn't Start the Fire: Capitalism and Its Critics, Then and Now. By Sheri Berman, in Foreign Affairs. http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20030701fareviewessay15413/sheri-berman/we-didn-t-start-the-fire-capitalism-and-its-critics-then-and-now.html 2008-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ . Personal.georgiasouthern.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-02-16. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  7. ^ a b "A Primer of Existentialism". iClass Zone.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-10-30. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  10. ^ "Lecture: Spiritual Emptiness and Social Life". Fremont, Michigan. 1919-04-13. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  11. ^ "SPIRITUAL LIFE AND THE SURVIVAL OF CHRISTIANITY: REFLECTIONS AT THE END OF THE MILLENNIUM by Louis Dupré".
  12. ^ . News.cornell.edu. 1999-04-23. Archived from the original on 2012-06-17. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  13. ^ Addictive Thinking: Understanding Self-Deception By Abraham J. Twerski Published by Hazelden, 1997 ISBN 1-56838-138-7, ISBN 978-1-56838-138-1. Page 113 and 114
  14. ^ Lisa Schwarzbaum (1994-09-30). "The New Age Review". EW.com. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  15. ^ Dibben, Chance (2007-11-01). "Movie review". Kansan.com. Archived from the original on 2007-04-22. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  16. ^ . Artlex.com. Archived from the original on 2012-04-29. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  17. ^ "Art: A Brief History of Absence (From the Conception and Birth, Life and Death, to the Living Deadness of Art)" (PDF). Davor Džalto. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  18. ^ a b c Interview on Emptiness by Lama Zopa Rinpoche. Available at: http://www.lamayeshe.com/lamazopa/interview.shtml
  19. ^ Tsong Khapa (2002), The great treatise on the stages of the path to enlightenment: Volume 3, Snow Lion Publications, pp. 209–210, ISBN 1-55939-166-9
  20. ^ A Survey of the Paths of Tibetan Buddhism with His Holiness the Dalai Lama. Available at: http://www.lamayeshe.com/otherteachers/hhdl/survey.shtml
  21. ^ translation in Ocean of Nectar, pp. 151, 153
  22. ^ "About Spiritual Emptiness or the Void". Plotinus.com. Retrieved 2012-06-23.
  23. ^ a b "Taoism - Wu - Emptiness". Taopage.org. Retrieved 2012-06-23.

Further reading edit

  • Moss, Robert. Understanding Emptiness: The Think/Feel Conflict. R. A. Moss, 1993. ISBN 0-9638848-0-8
  • Sanders, Catherine. How to Survive the Loss of a Child: Filling the Emptiness and Rebuilding Your Life. Three Rivers Press, 1998. ISBN 0-7615-1289-6
  • Nothingness and Being "Potentialities of Ontological Evolution" by Dr. Hilmar Alquiros

emptiness, this, article, about, emptiness, general, sense, details, concept, buddhist, philosophy, Śūnyatā, concept, empty, physical, space, vacuum, other, uses, disambiguation, human, condition, sense, generalized, boredom, social, alienation, nihilism, apat. This article is about emptiness in a general sense For details on the concept in Buddhist philosophy see Sunyata For the concept of empty physical space see vacuum For other uses see Emptiness disambiguation Emptiness as a human condition is a sense of generalized boredom social alienation nihilism and apathy Feelings of emptiness often accompany dysthymia 1 depression loneliness anhedonia despair or other mental emotional disorders including schizoid personality disorder post traumatic stress disorder attention deficit hyperactivity disorder schizotypal personality disorder and borderline personality disorder A sense of emptiness is also part of a natural process of grief as resulting death of a loved one or other significant changes The particular meanings of emptiness vary with the particular context and the religious or cultural tradition in which it is used 2 While Christianity and Western sociologists and psychologists view a state of emptiness as a negative unwanted condition in some Eastern philosophies such as Buddhist philosophy and Taoism emptiness Sunyata represents seeing through the illusion of independent self nature citation needed Contents 1 In Western culture 1 1 Sociology philosophy and psychology 1 2 Christianity 1 3 Fiction film design and visual arts 2 In Eastern cultures 2 1 Buddhism 2 2 Taoism 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingIn Western culture editSociology philosophy and psychology edit In the West feeling empty is often viewed as a negative condition Psychologist Clive Hazell for example attributes feelings of emptiness to problematic family backgrounds with abusive relationships and mistreatment 3 He claims that some people who are facing a sense of emptiness try to resolve their painful feelings by becoming addicted to a drug or obsessive activity be it compulsive sex gambling or work or engaging in frenzied action or violence In sociology a sense of emptiness is associated with social alienation of the individual This sense of alienation may be suppressed while working due to the routine nature of work tasks but during leisure hours or during the weekend people may feel a sense of existential vacuum and emptiness 4 In political philosophy emptiness is associated with nihilism Literary critic Georg Lukacs born in 1885 argued against the spiritual emptiness and moral inadequacy of capitalism and argued in favour of communism as an entirely new type of civilization one that promised a fresh start and an opportunity to lead a meaningful and purposeful life 5 The concept of emptiness was important to a certain type of existentialist philosophy and some forms of the Death of God movement 2 Existentialism the philosophic movement that gives voice to the sense of alienation and despair comes from man s recognition of his fundamental aloneness in an indifferent universe People whose response to the sense of emptiness and aloneness is to give excuses live in bad faith people who face the emptiness and accept responsibility aim to live authentic lives 6 Existentialists argue that man lives in alienation from God from nature from other men from his own true self Crowded into cities working in mindless jobs and entertained by light mass media we live on the surface of life so that even people who seemingly have everything feel empty uneasy discontented 7 In cultures where a sense of emptiness is seen as a negative psychological condition it is often associated with depression As such many of the same treatments are proposed psychotherapy group therapy or other types of counselling As well people who feel empty may be advised to keep busy and maintain a regular schedule of work and social activities citation needed Other solutions which have been proposed to reduce a sense of emptiness are getting a pet 8 9 or trying Animal Assisted Therapy getting involved in spirituality such as meditation or religious rituals and service volunteering to fill time and bring social contact doing social interactions such as community activities clubs or outings or finding a hobby or recreational activity to regain their interest in life Christianity edit In Austrian philosopher educator Rudolf Steiner s 1861 1925 thinking spiritual emptiness was a major problem in the educated European middle class In his 1919 lectures he argued that European culture became empty of spirit and ignorant of the needs the conditions that are essential for the life of the spirit People experienced a spiritual emptiness and their thinking became marked by a lazy passivity due to the absence of will from the life of thought In modern Europe Steiner claimed that people would allow their thoughts to take possession of them and these thoughts were increasingly filled with abstraction and pure natural scientific thinking The educated middle classes began to think in a way that was devoid of spirit with their minds becoming dimmer and darker and increasing empty of spirit 10 Louis Dupre a professor of philosophy at Yale University argues that the spiritual emptiness of our time is a symptom of its religious poverty He claims that many people never experience any emptiness they are too busy to feel much absence of any kind they only realize their spiritual emptiness if painful personal experiences the death of a loved one the collapse of a marriage the alienation of a child the failure of a business shock them into reassessing their sense of meaning 11 Spiritual emptiness has been associated with juvenile violence In John C Thomas 1999 book How Juvenile Violence Begins Spiritual Emptiness he argues that youth in impoverished indigenous communities who feel empty may turn to fighting and aggressive crime to fill their sense of meaninglessness In Cornell University professor James Garbarino s 1999 book Lost Boys Why Our Sons Turn Violent and How We Can Save Them he argues that neglect shame spiritual emptiness alienation anger and access to guns are a few of the elements common to violent boys A professor of human development Garbarino claims that violent boys have an alienation from positive role models and a spiritual emptiness that spawns despair These youth are seduced by the violent fantasy of the US gun culture which provides negative role models of tough aggressive men who use power to get what they want He claims that boys can be helped by giving them a sense of purpose and spiritual anchors that can anchor boys in empathy and socially engaged moral thinking 12 Spiritual emptiness is often connected with addiction especially by Christian influenced addiction organizations and counsellors Bill Wilson the founder of Alcoholics Anonymous argued that one of the impacts of alcoholism was causing a spiritual emptiness in heavy drinkers In Abraham J Twerski s 1997 book Addictive Thinking Understanding Self Deception he argues that when people feel spiritually empty they often turn to addictive behaviors to fill the inner void In contrast to having an empty stomach which is a clear feeling having spiritual emptiness is hard to identify so it fills humans with a vague unrest While people may try to resolve this emptiness by obsessively having sex overeating or taking drugs or alcohol these addictions only give temporary satisfaction When a person facing a crisis due to feeling spiritually empty is able to stop one addiction such as compulsive sex they often just trade it in for another addictive behaviour such as gambling or overeating 13 Fiction film design and visual arts edit A number of novelists and filmmakers have depicted emptiness The concept of emptiness was important to a good deal of 19th 20th century Western imaginative literature 2 Novelist Franz Kafka depicted a meaningless bizarre world in The Trial and the existentialist French authors sketched a world cut off from purpose or reason in Jean Paul Sartre s La Nausee and Albert Camus L etranger Existentialism influenced 20th century poet T S Eliot whose poem The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock describes an anti hero or alienated soul running away from or confronting the emptiness of his or her existence Professor Gordon Bigelow argues that the existentialist theme of spiritual barrenness is commonplace in literature of the 20th century which in addition to Eliot includes Ernest Hemingway Faulkner Steinbeck and Anderson 7 Film adaptations of a number of existentialist novels capture the bleak sense of emptiness espoused by Sartre and Camus This theme of emptiness has also been used in modern screenplays Mark Romanek s 1985 film Static tells the surreal story of a struggling inventor and crucifix factory worker named Ernie who feels spiritually empty because he is saddened by his parents death in an accident Screenwriter Michael Tolkin s 1994 film The New Age examines cultural hipness and spiritual emptiness creating a dark ambitious unsettling film that depicts a fashionable LA couple who are miserable in the midst of their sterile plenty and whose souls are stunted by their lives of empty sex consumption and distractions 14 The 1999 film American Beauty examines the spiritual emptiness of life in the US suburbs In Wes Anderson s 2007 film The Darjeeling Limited three brothers who suffer from spiritual emptiness and then self medicate themselves through sex social withdrawal and drugs 15 The 2008 film The Informers is a Hollywood drama film written by Bret Easton Ellis and Nicholas Jarecki and directed by Gregor Jordan The film is based on Ellis 1994 collection of short stories of the same name The film which is set amidst the decadence of the early 1980s depicts an assortment of socially alienated mainly well off characters who numb their sense of emptiness with casual sex alcohol and drugs Contemporary architecture critic Herbert Muschamp argues that horror vacui which is Latin for fear of emptiness is a key principle of design He claims that it has become an obsessive quality that is the driving force in contemporary American taste Muschamp states that along with the commercial interests that exploit this interest it is the major factor now shaping attitudes toward public spaces urban spaces and even suburban sprawl 16 Films that depict nothingness shadows and vagueness either in a visual sense or a moral sense are appreciated in genres such as film noir As well travellers and artists are often intrigued by and attracted to vast empty spaces such as open deserts barren wastelands or salt flats and the open sea In visual arts emptiness and absence were recognized as phenomena that characterize not only particular works of art e g Yves Klein but also as a more general tendency within the history of modern art and aesthetics Following Davor Dzalto s argument on the modern concept of art the gradual elimination of particular elements that traditionally characterized visual arts which results in emptiness is the most important phenomenon within the history and theory of art over the past two hundred years 17 In Eastern cultures editBuddhism edit Main article Sunyata The Buddhist term emptiness Skt sunyata refers specifically to the idea that everything is dependently originated including the causes and conditions themselves and even the principle of causality itself It is not nihilism nor is it meditating on nothingness 18 Instead it refers to the absence emptiness of inherent existence Buddhapalita says What is the reality of things just as it is It is the absence of essence Unskilled persons whose eye of intelligence is obscured by the darkness of delusion conceive of an essence of things and then generate attachment and hostility with regard to them Buddhapalita mula madhyamaka vrtti P5242 73 5 6 74 1 2 19 In an interview the Dalai Lama stated that tantric meditation can be used for heightening your own realization of emptiness or mind of enlightenment 20 In Buddhist philosophy attaining a realization of emptiness of inherent existence is key to the permanent cessation of suffering i e liberation Even while an ordinary being if upon hearing of emptiness great joy arises within again and again the eyes moisten with tears of great joy and the hairs of the body stand on end such a person has the seed of the mind of a complete Buddha He is a vessel for teachings on thatness and ultimate truth should be taught to him After that good qualities will grow in him Chandrakirti Guide to the Middle Way vv 6 4 5 21 The Dalai Lama argues that tantric yoga trainees need to realize the emptiness of inherent existence before they can go on to the highest yoga tantra initiation realizing the emptiness of inherent existence of the mind is the fundamental innate mind of clear light which is the subtlest level of the mind where all energy and mental processes are withdrawn or dissolved so that all that appears to the mind is pure emptiness As well emptiness is linked to the creative Void meaning that it is a state of complete receptivity and perfect enlightenment the merging of the ego with its own essence which Buddhists call the clear light 22 In Ven Thubten Chodron s 2005 interview with Lama Zopa Rinpoche the lama noted that ordinary beings who haven t realized emptiness don t see things as similar to illusions and one does not realize that things are merely labeled by mind and exist by mere name 18 He argues that when we meditate on emptiness we drop an atom bomb on this sense of a truly existent I and to realize that what appears true isn t true By this the lama is claiming that what is thought to be real our thoughts and feelings about people and things exists by being merely labeled He argues that meditators who attain knowledge of a state of emptiness are able to realize that their thoughts are merely illusions from labelling by the mind 18 Taoism edit In Taoism attaining a state of emptiness is viewed as a state of stillness and placidity which is the mirror of the universe and the pure mind 23 The Tao Te Ching claims that emptiness is related to the Tao the Great Principle the Creator and Sustainer of everything in the universe It is argued that it is the state of mind of the Taoist disciple who follows the Tao who has successfully emptied the mind of all wishes and ideas not fitted with the Tao s Movement For a person who attains a state of emptiness the still mind of the sage is the mirror of heaven and earth the glass of all things a state of vacancy stillness placidity tastelessness quietude silence and non action which is the perfection of the Tao and its characteristics the mirror of the universe and the pure mind 23 See also editBoredom Empty nest syndrome Nihilism Physiology SoulReferences edit Downs A The Half Empty Heart A supportive guide to breaking free from chronic discontent 2004 a b c emptiness mysticism Britannica Online Encyclopedia Britannica com Retrieved 2012 06 23 Paul L Adams Ivan Fras Beginning Child Psychiatry page 208 Brunner Routledge UK 1988 Existentialism A Brief Overview PDF Mind NC 2012 02 16 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 05 We Didn t Start the Fire Capitalism and Its Critics Then and Now By Sheri Berman in Foreign Affairs http www foreignaffairs org 20030701fareviewessay15413 sheri berman we didn t start the fire capitalism and its critics then and now html Archived 2008 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Existentialism Personal georgiasouthern edu Archived from the original on 2012 02 16 Retrieved 2012 06 23 a b A Primer of Existentialism iClass Zone Petnet Responsible Ownership in Australia And then there were two Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2007 01 18 Mar 27 1997 Vol28n25 Research provides further evidence that pets music effective at reducing stress Archived from the original on 2007 10 30 Retrieved 2007 01 18 Lecture Spiritual Emptiness and Social Life Fremont Michigan 1919 04 13 Retrieved 2012 06 23 SPIRITUAL LIFE AND THE SURVIVAL OF CHRISTIANITY REFLECTIONS AT THE END OF THE MILLENNIUM by Louis Dupre Cornell News Lost Boys about teen violence News cornell edu 1999 04 23 Archived from the original on 2012 06 17 Retrieved 2012 06 23 Addictive Thinking Understanding Self Deception By Abraham J Twerski Published by Hazelden 1997 ISBN 1 56838 138 7 ISBN 978 1 56838 138 1 Page 113 and 114 Lisa Schwarzbaum 1994 09 30 The New Age Review EW com Retrieved 2012 06 23 Dibben Chance 2007 11 01 Movie review Kansan com Archived from the original on 2007 04 22 Retrieved 2012 06 23 ArtLex s Ho Hz page Artlex com Archived from the original on 2012 04 29 Retrieved 2012 06 23 Art A Brief History of Absence From the Conception and Birth Life and Death to the Living Deadness of Art PDF Davor Dzalto Retrieved 2015 11 03 a b c Interview on Emptiness by Lama Zopa Rinpoche Available at http www lamayeshe com lamazopa interview shtml Tsong Khapa 2002 The great treatise on the stages of the path to enlightenment Volume 3 Snow Lion Publications pp 209 210 ISBN 1 55939 166 9 A Survey of the Paths of Tibetan Buddhism with His Holiness the Dalai Lama Available at http www lamayeshe com otherteachers hhdl survey shtml translation in Ocean of Nectar pp 151 153 About Spiritual Emptiness or the Void Plotinus com Retrieved 2012 06 23 a b Taoism Wu Emptiness Taopage org Retrieved 2012 06 23 Further reading editMoss Robert Understanding Emptiness The Think Feel Conflict R A Moss 1993 ISBN 0 9638848 0 8 Sanders Catherine How to Survive the Loss of a Child Filling the Emptiness and Rebuilding Your Life Three Rivers Press 1998 ISBN 0 7615 1289 6 Nothingness and Being Potentialities of Ontological Evolution by Dr Hilmar Alquiros Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emptiness amp oldid 1166754542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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