| 10.5 |
Change and the questions we need to ask
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So it is, in spite of everything we have
been shown by UCA it unsettles us to consider that life is ever changing and
that the source in a large part of misery and unhappiness is due to our desires
being dashed when change continues to happen. |
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| 10.5.1 |
Looking at the problem from a different perspective |
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Many of the problems we face seem impossible to answer based on our questions. Up until now, we have been looking for the right solution, when in many cases we should have been investigating the question. |
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Every question by its very nature carries with it inbuilt assumptions which if wrong and/or misguided in the first place mean that no answer can be adequately given.
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For example, when people ask where does the soul go when it leaves the body? they have asked a quesion with a whole host of in-built assumptions that (a) the soul at one point is part of the body, therefore something real and that at death it leaves the body. |
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In contrast, a question that asks what happens to our mind/soul when we die? is a much stronger question because it does not contain such assumptions and can then be answered by the duality of awareness and life that is possible by the dream of Unique Collective Awareness. |
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| 10.5.2 |
Looking at the problem from a different perspective |
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Science and the world of dicsovery is unfortunately littered with hundreds of examples such as the soul/death problem which contain in-built assumptions themselves questionable. |
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As a result, many great minds end up chasing their tale, not because a valid model, a valid answer exists, but because of the fault of the questions. |
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Therefore, when we seek new beginnings, we must also consider some of the inherent "big questions" we ask and whether these questions themselves need to be revised. |
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