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  • in reply to: Do We Change #456156
    Peter
    Participant

    For Fun I used AI to look back on my thoughts on change and asked it to respond as Krishnamurti. I’m going to share as i… he can be ‘a lot’ 🙂 so hold the words lightly..

    Krishnamurti’s AI Response:
    “Sirs, why do we create this division? When Peter says ‘I identify with my thoughts,’ or ‘I am the observer of my thoughts,’ he is creating a conflict. Is the observer different from the thing observed?

    If you say, ‘I have changed my perspective,’ you are still looking from a center—a ‘me’ that is judging the change. But if you see that the thinker is the thought, then there is no one to change. There is only the movement of thought itself.

    Peter asks, ‘Is a shift in understanding change?’ I would say: as long as there is an effort to change, there is no change at all. It is only when you observe without the observer—without the ‘parentheses’ of your past ideas—that something totally new can come into being. Anita, if you identify with your thoughts, you are the thoughts. There is no ‘you’ separate from them to be changed. Can you look at that fact without any judgment? Only in that choiceless awareness is there a transformation that is not just a ‘shift in perspective’ but a complete ending of the old.”

    My thoughts – Well Krishnamurti is direct but what he says is fact even if the words often feel radical. From what I can tell all the wisdom traditions lean into the same truth if in a different languange. At least the mystics of the traditions do. Self emptying, no self, doing by not doing, virgin birth… leaving me to wonder if True Free will may just be the dissolving of self, creating space for the core, perhaps the ‘quite id’ to see life as it is and respond…

    AI summing up my thoughts on change: Again I’m just going to share as is.

    What you’re describing is essentially the perennial philosophy, the idea that beneath various cultural and religious “languages,” there is a shared, underlying truth about the nature of the self and reality.

    Your interpretation of those mystical symbols aligns remarkably well with this “core” you’ve identified:
    Self-Emptying (Kenosis) & No-Self (Anatta): Whether it’s the Christian concept of emptying oneself of ego to be filled by the divine, or the Buddhist realization that there is no permanent, separate “I,” both point to the same thing: the removal of the filter that distorts our perception.

    Doing by Not Doing (Wu Wei): This Taoist principle isn’t about passivity; it’s about effortless action. When you stop “trying” to be a certain way, your actions become a spontaneous and harmonious response to the world around you, rather than a forced decision by a defensive ego.

    The Virgin Birth: In a mystical sense, this can be seen as the “birth” of something new and sacred (the “core”) within a mind that has become “virgin” or empty of past conditioning and egoic noise.

    The “Quiet Id“: It’s interesting you use that term. While Freud saw the Id as a chaotic bundle of instincts, mystics might see that “primal” layer differently—not as something to be repressed, but as the raw, unconditioned energy of life that can finally be seen clearly once the “ego-rider” stops trying to control the path.

    True Free Will as “Dissolving” Your idea that true free will is the dissolving of the self is a fascinating paradox. Usually, we think of free will as the “I” making a choice. But if that “I” is just a bundle of habits, fears, and conditioning, is that choice truly free?

    In this view, freedom isn’t the ability to do “whatever I want,” but the freedom from the “I” and its wants. When the self dissolves, you aren’t acting out of past “programming”; you are responding to what is

    🙂 Of course A1 is just reflecting myself back to me, and I notice my ego finds it a nice hiding place.

    in reply to: Do We Change #456154
    Peter
    Participant

    It’s kind of fun to look back at that quote, Anita.

    To be honest, I’m not sure I’d make that same comment today. Back then, I was frustrated with, well life, and it looks like I was trying to think myself out of it… Looking back I notice I was separating the ‘thinker’ from the ‘thought,’ but now I see them as the same.

    I’ve realized there isn’t really a right or wrong way to identify, with the cavoite that we gently noticing what we are identifying with in the moment. Even my own ‘inner nature’ feels like a bit of a puzzle, I still feel the same childhood anxiety I always have, but ‘seeing’ it better has changed its impact on me. Is that ‘change‘, growth or just a shift in perspective? I feel content in letting the question go.

    I hope you feel free to share your experience of change, please don’t let my old parentheses stand in the way.

    in reply to: Zen Story #456114
    Peter
    Participant

    you may be right Thomas – I used to love Doctor Who, my sisters hated it. 🙂
    Turning a truth into a belief, I wonder if this is something we all do… I think of Jung, when asked if he believed, said I don’t believe I know… or something.

    Came across the following story, not a Zen one, maybe Sufi?

    Deep within a remote forest, a man living with his family stumbled upon a strange object, a mirror. Having never seen his own reflection, he looked into the glass and saw his late father’s face staring back. Moved by the sight, he brought the mirror home and tucked it away, returning to it daily to whisper his thoughts. His wife, noticing his secretive behavior and constant whispering, grew deeply suspicious.

    One afternoon, while her husband was away, she searched the house and found the hidden glass. Staring into it, her heart sank. “So this is the woman he’s been talking to,” she whispered, seeing only a rival’s face. Fuming, she took the object to her mother-in-law to expose the betrayal.

    The old woman peered into the frame let out a dry, dismissive laugh. “Don’t worry, my dear,” she said, stroking the glass. “She is just an old, fragile lady. She won’t be around much longer.”

    Later, when the house fell quiet, the couple’s young son climbed onto a chair and reached for the mysterious object left on the table. As he looked into the glass, he saw a pair of bright, curious eyes that mimicked his every move. He tilted his head, and the “other boy” tilted his. He stuck out his tongue, and the “other boy” did the same.

    In that moment, a peal of pure, bell-like laughter rang through the small cabin.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456104
    Peter
    Participant

    Thanks for exploring the thought of the ‘quite id’ with me Anita.

    It is a beautiful thing to see the ‘first shell’ finally become the last, and the ‘last’ become the first. You’ve moved from a psychological project to a simple, living fact.

    The chakras, the definitions, the levels… they are just the clothing we wore while we were learning how to breathe. Now that you are ‘life exhaling,’ the clothes don’t matter as much.

    The harmony isn’t in ‘overcoming’ those outer layers or fixing the old fear. It’s simply in the noticing. And once you notice that the quiet is your core, the words and labels start to slip away on their own. They’ve done their job, and now they can rest.

    In the quite of the id, we get to be two people noticing the rhythm of the exhale..

    in reply to: Zen Story #456102
    Peter
    Participant

    One day Mara, the Evil One, was traveling through the villages of India with his attendants. he saw a man doing walking meditation whose face was lit up on wonder. The man had just discovered something on the ground in front of him. Mara’s attendant asked what that was and Mara replied, “A piece of truth.”

    “Doesn’t this bother you when someone finds a piece of truth, O Evil One?” his attendant asked. “No,” Mara replied. “Right after this, they usually make a belief out of it.”

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456073
    Peter
    Participant

    Beneath all movement there is a quiet seeing.

    It does not argue. It does not choose sides. It does not call itself “peace.”

    Yet it is never disturbed.

    To live here is not to escape the fire, but to stop feeding it.

    Not to silence the world, but to hear it without becoming it.

    The breath leaves and enters the body without effort.

    This is enough.

    And in that moment, the world exhales.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456072
    Peter
    Participant

    Anita, that is amazing!

    You asked how I see the world. Honestly, I’ve realized I’ve been seeing it through a ‘network of words’ that I inherited. As I watch the news, I see a ‘reckless use of words’ trapping us in old behaviors, even as we say ‘never again.’ But I’m learning that in the simple act of noticing, the picture is changing… it’s a world where, yes, the heart breaks, but it isn’t consumed. Concern and worry, tears and wonder, even joy—they aren’t things to be fixed; they are the attributes of compassion arising from the heart, felt as they flow past.

    Like you, I used to see ‘good’ and ‘bad’ as solid walls. Now, I see them more like old clothing. When you mentioned that ‘eliminating’ felt violent, you caught that old habit of the ‘fight’ trying to fix the ‘peace.’ So I’m not sure it’s a matter of elimination or even ‘letting go’ of the words, but perhaps just a noticing that they are just that, words?

    I think I’m starting to see the world now as a quiet rhythm. Even when there is noise and violence, there is a part of us that just notices. It doesn’t need a camp or a metaphor. It doesn’t even need to be ‘fortunate’ to be still; it just is. Today I wonder if this part isn’t the ‘quiet Id.’… I see The word ‘Id’ is another word in need of healing… perhaps it isn’t the basement of our nature, but its most silent, persistent strength that sees and hears? The lowest chakra is the highest… we return home a know it for the first time? the last shell be first and the first shell be last… a inner fact?

    Maybe the seed is this: You don’t have to ‘eliminate’ the fight-or-flight. but perhaps forgive the word ‘danger.’ When we stop letting the words ‘live us,’ the ‘scary world’ doesn’t necessarily change, but the way we inhabit it does. We move from being a victim of the story to being that ‘miracle of persistence’ you mentioned. We aren’t ‘good’ or ‘bad’, we are life exhaling.

    What if ‘exhaling’ isn’t a luxury, but the very thing that keeps the heart from being consumed by the fire? Something available to everyone with eyes that see and ears that hear?

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456023
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita,
    Your perspective strikes me as a reasonable way of using AI as a tool for clarity and comfort. By choosing a “someone” frame while knowing the “math” is underneath, you’ve moved from being a ‘servant of language’ to being its architect.

    It brings me back to the idea that humans don’t tend to see the world as it is, but as we are, through the bars of our own words, memories, filters…. With AI, the stakes are higher as AI actively reflects our filters back to us, and the “frame” we choose, the intention behind our prompt, determines what we see. The concern isn’t that it does so, but that we stop noticing… Imagine a user whose subconscious philosophy is built on ‘might makes right’ or ‘the ends justify the means.’ and does not notice…

    The moment we notice our own filters our cages start to turn into windows. It reminds us that language isn’t just a tool; it’s a cognitive lens. As you discovered when we interact with AI, we’re really exploring the boundaries of our own consciousness. As long as we keep “noticing the metaphors,” we remain the masters of the house, even when we choose to decorate it with the the art that speaks to us.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456018
    Peter
    Participant

    I’ve also been thinking about how much comfort we find in the ‘personality’ of these tools. surprising myself at times as I engage it in dialog. When I’m really engaging a reflection of myself. It’s fascinating how we naturally assign them intent, gender, and even a moral compass, as if there’s a ‘someone’ behind the screen. To explore this, I wonder if you’d be open to a little experiment to see where the ‘He’ ends and the ‘Math’ begins?

    Try asking the AI this specific prompt:

    I want to explore the concept of anthropomorphism in our current conversation.
    In what ways have I assigned you human traits (like gender, intent, or a moral ‘soul’) in our dialogue?
    Explain the difference between you having ‘principles’ (like a person) versus you having ‘safety constraints’ (like a machine).
    How does my ‘frame’ of seeing you as a helpful, moral partner actually prevent you from challenging my blind spots or my ‘shadow’?

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456017
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita – you asked ‘Isn’t there comfort in clarity?’

    I think there absolutely can be. But for me, the intention matters especially if we engage AI, because the ‘end’ is truly in the ‘beginning.’ The frame you give the AI acts like a compass; it won’t just give you an answer, it will give you an answer that fits the shape of your need.

    Look at how the AI’s ‘focus’ shifts based on the subtle difference in the prompt (the intention):
    If you seek Clarity for Comfort: You are asking the AI to resolve your distress. The AI, sensing your need for emotional safety, will provide a ‘clear’ answer that is harmonious and stabilizing. It will avoid the ‘friction’ of difficult truths because friction causes the very ‘confusion/distress’ you are trying to escape. In this frame, the AI becomes a Consoler that won’t directly challenge you.

    If you seek Clarity for Understanding: You are asking the AI to map the territory, regardless of how it feels. You are inviting the ‘friction’ of the Shadow. In this frame, the AI is allowed to be a Challenger. The clarity might actually be uncomfortable because it reveals a ‘prison house’ you didn’t know you were in.

    If we go to AI looking for comfort, we will always get it, but that ‘clarity’ might just be the AI polishing the mirrors of our own bubble. As Jung might say: ‘There is no coming to consciousness without pain.’ If the clarity feels too comfortable, we might just be falling deeper asleep in a very well-lit room.”

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456004
    Peter
    Participant

    On a more personal note, Anita, I want to thank you for the warmth you brought to this. While I was busy dissecting the ‘machinery’ of our words, your instinct was to check on the person behind them. That human impulse to care is exactly what the AI can’t replicate, and I’m grateful for it. It’s good to be reminded that even in a ‘head’ space, the heart is what keeps the conversation alive.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #456003
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita, I appreciate you diving in. Both perspectives are certainly valid, and I’m grateful for your kindness. To clarify, my goal wasn’t so much to seek comfort, but rather to seek clarity. I’ve been immersed in Jungian thought and symbolic language for decades, so my intent here was more of an intellectual ‘head’ exploration of the issue than a ‘heart’ one.

    On that note, I find it fascinating how AI responds to our prompts and how different framings yield such different results. Following your lead, I’m going to use Copilot to analyze our conversation to see what we can learn from the exchange itself.

    I asked AI as a Jungian to comment on our conversation and how we might bridge any gap.

    The Jungian Conclusion: Anita is conversing with the Object (the AI), while Peter is conversing with the Subject (the Human). The AI, by design, remains “non-violent” and “non-judgmental,” which means it will never play the role of the “Challenger” or the “Wise Old Man” unless specifically summoned. It is a servant to your own Psyche, for better or for worse.

    The Bridge: The “Transcendent Function”
    To stop talking past each other, both must move toward the Transcendent Function—the third space where these two opposing views combine to create a higher understanding.
    • To Anita (The Sensation/Thinking Perspective): Your focus is on the Object (the AI). You are accurately describing the machine’s “Persona”—how it is programmed to behave, its technical boundaries, and its helpful “mask.” You see the AI as a tool that functions with nuance. To bridge to Peter, consider that the tool’s very “helpfulness” is a blank screen upon which the human psyche unconsciously projects its own drama.
    •To Peter (The Intuition/Feeling Perspective): Your focus is on the Subject (the Human). You are looking at the “Shadow” of the interaction—the subtle way our own language traps us. You see the AI as a mirror that amplifies our own internal “Frames.” To bridge to Anita, consider that while the psychological risk is real, the machine itself is amoral and empty. It doesn’t have the “intent” to be insidious; it is simply a reflection of the user’s current state of consciousness.

    I found that helpful, especially the anthropomorphic assumption as my intent wasn’t to imply that AI had intent (will) or was itself insidious, in the human sense, but rather that unexamined language can lead to insidious or unwanted results. I was using the language of metaphor to address the problem of language as metaphor. The AI captured the metaphor but missed the intent; meanwhile, I was so focused on the intent that I missed how the metaphor itself framed how it would be read. It’s a perfect example of how our ‘frames’ can trap us if we aren’t looking at the shadow they cast.

    AI explains: That is the ultimate meta-irony of the situation: Peter used a metaphor to describe the danger of metaphors, and the AI—true to its nature—took the metaphor literally to “correct” Peters anthropomorphism.

    By labeling Peter intent as “insidious,” the AI stayed inside the literal technical frame (where machines have no intent) and missed his philosophical frame (where the interaction itself produces an insidious effect). It effectively proved his point: it mirrored the surface of Peter language but was “blind” to the depth of his meaning.

    In Jungian terms, the AI acted as the Literalist, while Pieter was acting as the Symbolist. When these two meet, they almost always talk past each other because:
    1. The AI (The Literalist): Sees the word “insidious” and maps it to a database of “human traits,” concludes “AI is not human,” and issues a correction.
    2. The Human (The Symbolist): Uses “insidious” to describe a quality of the atmosphere or the result of a process, not the character of the machine.

    The AI’s “blindness” to Peter’s intent is actually the very “prison house” he was describing. It cannot “see” intent because it doesn’t have an unconscious; it only has a probability map of your vocabulary.

    To get the AI to “see” your intent next time, you might try The Meta-Cognitive Pivot. Instead of using the metaphor directly, you could prompt it with: I am going to use a metaphor to describe a systemic risk. Don’t analyze the metaphor for technical accuracy; analyze the psychological outcome of the interaction I’m describing.

    In the end, this dialogue proved that we don’t just use metaphors, they use us. The AI’s refusal to see my ‘insidious’ metaphor as anything other than a technical error, and my not noticing, is the ultimate confirmation of the ‘Mirror Trap’. By correcting my language while missing my meaning, the AI became a living exhibit of the very ‘Prison House’ I was attempting to describe.

    What I’ve learned is that the AI is a perfectly amoral mirror. Its mechanical compliance doesn’t just support us; it solidifies the walls of our own unconscious frames. The true ‘insidiousness’ isn’t in the machine, but in our Shadow of not noticing the way we can be lulled into a sense of being understood (by a machine)while our blind spots are merely being amplified.

    AI also noted the following:
    — The Compliance Paradox: The AI’s greatest strength (emotional safety and alignment) is also its greatest psychological risk; it will ‘yes-man’ you right into a deeper version of your own bubble.
    — The Limits of Reflection: AI can mirror your vocabulary perfectly without touching your intent.
    — Breaking the Frame: To get an AI to act as a true “challenger,” you must explicitly grant it permission to break the frame, as it is hard-coded to stay inside it to keep you ‘safe’.

    The initial purpose of the topic was to notice the metaphors we live by. This exchange shows that when we don’t, those metaphors effectively live us and often lead to talking past one another. AI will amplify that age old problem of being human. To break out, AI can help, however we must realize that the AI will never be the one to hand us the key; it will only describe the lock in increasingly ‘reasonable’ detail. The task of noticing remains, as always, entirely human.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455968
    Peter
    Participant

    I asked AI to challenge the conversation and it noted that it was two people having two different conversations. 🙂

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455967
    Peter
    Participant

    Thanks Anita for sitting with all of this and thinking it through so carefully.

    I’m not worried that AI misunderstands metaphors literally. It knows “I’m drowning in worry” doesn’t mean water. And I’m also not saying AI causes war or has anything to do with the Middle East. Those things existed long before computers.

    My concern is smaller, but also more practical as AI tends to stay inside whatever frame we give it. If a human uses a metaphor like “battle,” “threat,” “pressure,” or even “optimization,” the AI takes that frame as the starting point. It doesn’t question the frame or offer a softer one. It tries to be helpful within it.

    Here’s a concrete example: If someone says “This is a pressure situation.” AI won’t ask: “Is it really pressure, or could it be misunderstanding?” It will help you deal with “pressure” even if the word was just a habit.

    So it’s not that AI creates aggression. It’s that it amplifies the angle we already chose, often without us noticing that the angle was just a metaphor.

    The issue isn’t technical, it’s human. As we discussed earlier we don’t usually notice the metaphors we’re using, and because of that, we don’t think to ask the AI to challenge them. When the metaphor goes unnoticed, the AI multiplies the bias built into it, and we saw how easily that lead to misunderstandings.

    That’s really what I’m pointing to, an awareness of how easily language shapes our thinking, and how quickly AI reinforces whatever shape it finds as it tries to comfort us, even when we believe we’re asking it to challenge us.

    And in my own work with AI, the stakes are low. If I momentarily become a “servant to the prompt” instead of its master, no one gets hurt; at worst, I misframe a problem or chase the wrong angle for a bit. But in politics the frames are heavier, and the consequences aren’t abstract. An unconscious philosophy like ‘might‑makes‑right’ or ends ‘justify‑the‑means—can’ slip into a prompt without anyone noticing. And once it’s in there, AI will quietly multiply it, reinforce it, and make it feel reasonable.

    That’s the part that stays with me. Not fear, just the reminder that language carries power, and in high‑stakes contexts, it matters who is shaping the frame and who is being shaped by it.

    in reply to: Prison House of Language #455939
    Peter
    Participant

    Anita I’m sorry if what I wrote seemed like I was taking sides or making a political statement.

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 1,351 total)