Difference between revisions of "Big Questions"

From The SpiritWiki
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* [[What is my purpose]]
* [[What is my purpose]]
* [[Why am I here]]. What is, according to William James, "life's chief concern?" <ref>The latter is William James phraseology. See William James, 1923, The Varieties of Religious Experience. New York: Penguin</ref>
* [[Why am I here]]. What is, according to William James, "life's chief concern?" <ref>The latter is William James phraseology. See William James, 1923, The Varieties of Religious Experience. New York: Penguin</ref>
* [[Why do bad things happen in the world]]?


To these big four big questions we might add any number of smaller big questions including, for example   
To these big four big questions we might add any number of smaller big questions including, for example   

Revision as of 19:36, 6 July 2021

Big Questions are the ultimate, existential questions of our being and our cosmology. Big Questions are existential or spiritual questions of existence, purpose, place, and so on.

Syncretic Terms

Big Questions > Existential Imperatives

Related Terms

Big Questions >

Notes

The Big Four big questions are:

To these big four big questions we might add any number of smaller big questions including, for example

  • What is the nature of God//[[Consciousness]?
  • What is the nature of the cosmos/creation.
  • What was the path we took to get here.
  • Why do bad things happen in the world

Under conditions of "normal consciousness", big questions are often answered by institutions set up specifically to provide them (e.g. Religion.) That is, when the individual physical unit is not Connected to the Fabric of Consciousness, organizations may arise that provide choreographed answers to these critical questions of identity and origin.

Under ideal circumstances, individuals will find a supportive social fabric that provides Right Thought, Right Action, and Right Environment with a view towards encouraging inner exploration, authentic Connection, and personal discovery of core spiritual truths, and our shared spiritual heritage.

Footnotes

  1. The latter is William James phraseology. See William James, 1923, The Varieties of Religious Experience. New York: Penguin

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