- Ego (spirituality)
In
spirituality , and especially nondual, mystical and eastern meditative traditions, the human being is often conceived as being in the illusion of individual existence, and separated from other aspects of creation. This "sense of doership" or sense of individual existence is that part which believes it is the human being, and believes it must fight for itself in the world, is ultimately unaware and unconscious of its own true nature. The ego is often associated withmind and the sense oftime , which compulsively thinks in order to be assured of its future existence, rather than simply knowing its own self and the present. [Samael Aun Weor, "The Revolution of the Dialectic", Thelema Press, 2003, (1960)] [Jiddu Krishnamurti, "The Ending of Time", HarperSanFrancisco, 1985]The spiritual goal of many
tradition s involves the dissolving of the ego,fact|date=May 2007 allowing self-knowledge of one's own true nature to become experienced and enacted in the world. This is variously known as Enlightenment,Nirvana , Presence, and the "Here and Now".Eckhart Tolle comments that, to the extent that the ego is present in an individual, that individual is somewhat insane psychologically, in reference to the ego's nature as compulsively hyper-active and compulsively (and pathologically) self-centered. However, since this is the norm, it goes unrecognised as the source of much that could be classified as insane behavior in everyday life.fact|date=May 2007 In South Asian traditions, the state of being trapped in the illusory belief that one is the ego is known as maya orsamsara .Descriptions of the ego
The German/ Canadian
spiritual teacher ,motivational speaker , andwriter Eckhart Tolle writes about the ego in his bookA New Earth .:"The extent of the ego's inability to recognize itself and see what it is doing is staggering and unbelievable. [...] To become free of the ego is not really a big job but a very small one. All you need to do is be aware of your thoughts and emotions - as they happen. This is not really a 'doing' but an alert 'seeing'. In that sense, it is true that there is nothing you can do to become free of the ego. When that shift happens, which is the shift from thinking to awareness, an intelligence far greater than the ego's cleverness begins to operate in your life. Emotions and even thoughts become depersonalized through awareness. Their impersonal nature is recognized. There is no longer a self in them. They are just human emotions, human thoughts. Your entire personal history, which is ultimately no more than a story, a bundle of thoughts and emotions, becomes of secondary importance and no longer occupies the forefront of your consciousness. It no longer forms the basis for your sense of identity. You are the light of Presence, the awareness that is prior to and deeper than any thoughts and emotions." [Tolle, "A New Earth", pp.117-118.]The Armenian mystic
G.I. Gurdjieff , as well as the self-described Gnostic writer and teacher ofoccultism Samael Aun Weor , posits that the ego is inherently constituted by many "I's": : "One of man's important mistakes," he [Gurdjieff] said, "one which must be remembered, is his illusion in regard to his I. "Man such as we know him, the 'man machine,' the man who cannot 'do,' and with whom and through whom everything 'happens,' cannot have a permanent and single I. His I changes as quickly as his thoughts, feelings, and moods, and he makes a profound mistake in considering himself always one and the same person; in reality he is "always a different person", not the one he was a moment ago. [P.D Ouspensky, "In Search for the Miraculous"]: "I am going to read a newspaper," says the "I" of intellect. "To heck with reading," exclaims the "I" of movement, "I prefer to ride my bicycle." "Forget it," shouts a third ego in disagreement, "I'd rather eat; I'm hungry."Samael Aun Weor, "Revolutionary Psychology", Thelema Press, 2005 (1974)]
Weor used the terms "Being" (equivalent in meaning to Atman in
Hinduism [Samael Aun Weor, "The False Sentiment of the I" ( [http://www.gnosticteachings.org/content/view/149/64/ available online] )] ) and "ego." drawing the distinction that the two states possible are that of Being, which is "transparent, crystal-clear, impersonal, real, and true," and that of the "I," which is "a collective of psychic Aggregates that personify Defects, whose only reason to exist is ignorance." [Samael Aun Weor (1974), "The Secret Doctrine of Anahuac" ( [http://www.gnosticteachings.org/content/view/344/10106/ excerpt] )] He characterized this distinction::"Superior and inferior 'I's' are a division of one organism itself. The superior 'I' and the inferior 'I' are both the 'I'; they are the whole ego. The Intimate, the Real Being, is not the 'I.' The Intimate transcends any type of 'I.' He is beyond any type of 'I.' The Intimate is the Being. The Being is the reality. He is what is not temporal; He is the Divine. The 'I' had a beginning and inevitably will have an end, since everything that has a beginning will have an end. The Being, the Intimate, did not have a beginning, and so He will not have an end. He is what He is. He is what has always been and what always will be." [Samael Aun Weor, "The Elimination of Satans Tail" ( [http://www.gnosticteachings.org/content/category/10/97/98/ available online] )]ee also
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Self (spirituality)
*Ego death Notes
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