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You're on the edge of something very important here. Indeed, it's so crucial to the understanding of rational consciousness that it's all but invisible even to the best thinkers.
Rational consciousness, the defining characteristic of Man, is the ability to form abstractions and to use them in reasoning. But every abstraction is an incomplete rendition of the reality it seeks to model. In other words, no matter how sincerely we try to make our conceptions accurate representations of the world, they will always lie, if only by omission.
But the human mind is unsatisfied by the incomplete. It yearns toward fullness; toward transcendence; toward God. So we tend to take such things and "fill in the blanks," sometimes arbitrarily, and sometimes willfully. But even the best of us is incomplete himself, particularly in his knowledge. And even the best of us is inclined to see the world not as it is, but as we would like it to be.
This is Man's glory and his cross. Being creatures made in God's image and destined to be reunited with God, we are conscious, yet partial. Conjoined, these characteristics compel us to fantasize...and some of the fantasies are wrong.
Hope you're enjoying the Advent season.
Francis W. Porretto |
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12.04.05 - 3:07 am | #
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I'm glad you liked the post Francis. I am going to try and get part two up today and I think it will address some of what you've raised here.
Curt |
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12.04.05 - 9:48 am | #
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