Sorry for my late reply, I missed your last post.
This is a tricky one. Often people when intellectually understand that there is no I (or after a few glimpses), they start to putting quotes around it. But it is self deceiving. Since this is not their experience. So how is it for you? Do you actually experience that there is no I, or you just learned it (or maybe even have glimpses of it, which is just a memory now), and now it has become knowledge? From your last replies, it seems to be mostly knowledge. Since as long as you perceive any agency, that the I is real for you. Is it not? Self honestly is essential here. And yes, the intellect is not happy about this :)One note before I answer these questions: I generally avoid putting quotes around "I" or "my" unless absolutely necessary. Given the context of our dialogue, the quotes are kind of assumed - at least by me!
Well, this is exactly that is in question here. And unfortunately, no amount of reasoning, no amount of thinking or analysing will make you see it. Only when the intellect is put aside can it be experientially recognized.It is the conscious effort that suggests an agent to me.
Please go to the experience of 'conscious effort' and describe it step by step. How you do it?
But please make sure that you don't use analogies, don't go to the real of reasoning or philosophizing. Just simply describe your experience of how you do it exactly.
Thoughts come and go just like the sounds and sights around me. They arrive and are 'clocked' with no effort and - for the most part - unremarked and unremarkable.
So is there such thing as an agent behind the phenomenon that seems like as a conscious effort?
WHERE is that agency making an effort?
I would qualify that to say, thinking sometimes requires effort.
What is doing the effort? WHERE is the DOER?
Just look… isn’t that effort itself happens totally effortlessly? Without a doer?
But how could an I enjoy anything? For that to be true, there must be a receiver or an enjoyer of the joy.It is the "I" that enjoys things. I currently lack the imagination to see enjoyment without - crudely - ownership.
This assumes an agency. But where is this agency?
You see, the belief in a person is still hanging around, whom enjoyment is happening TO someone, someone that owns it, someone that enjoys it. It’s still the same belief.
WHERE is the enjoyer? Where?
MY head! What is it that HAS a head?In my head
Where is the owner of the head?
Please don't say that you mean quotation around the I, so there is no owner of the head, but rather really, deeply investigate this base assumption that is so commonly shared.
Yes, but the idea of a self is NOT a REAL, ACTUAL self. And this needs to be seen experientially, no amount of reasoning can help with seeing it.But there is certainly an idea of self and ideas are most certainly real in their effects.
Can an idea be an enjoyer?
Can an idea be the owner of thought?
Can an idea make conscious effort?
Can an idea do anything at all?
Is an idea alive, conscious entity?
Vivien

