Author Archives: vinaire

I am originally from India. I am settled in United States since 1969. I love mathematics, philosophy and clarity in thinking.

The 12 Aspects of Mindfulness

Reference: The Book of Subject Clearing

Mindfulness provides the discipline for looking and contemplation. The core of mindfulness may be described as follows:

1.     Observe without getting influenced by your expectations and desires.

Desires make one want certain outcomes. This leads to speculations that have no basis other than one’s expectations. But it is only when you know what is there can you predict future in a reasonable and consistent manner.

2.     Observe things as they are, without assuming anything.

Familiarity makes one assume certain things to be there. Such assumptions can take the form of beliefs, convictions, biases, fixed ideas, etc. The visualization is already there in the mind, and it gets superimposed over what is actually there. However familiar something may be, it is never permanent, and it may not actually be there.

3.     If something is missing do not imagine something else in its place. 

If something is missing, then recognize that it is missing. Do not imagine something in its place. If someone asks you a question and no answer come up in your mind, then do not feel obliged to make up an answer. Accept that you do not have an answer.

4.     If something does not make sense, then do not explain it away.

If something does not make sense, then recognize that it does not make sense. Do not try to justify it. Justification simply puts the blame somewhere without resolving the inconsistency. When you are faced with an inconsistency, and you feel an impulse to explain it away, then be alert to what you might be taking for granted. At times it may take some out-of-the-box thinking to realize what is going on.

5.     Use physical senses as well as the mental sense to observe.

We associate the idea of sense organs with eye, ear, nose, tongue, and body. We use them to observe physical objects, such as, chair, car, house, etc. However, the mind is also a sense organ, which senses ideas, thoughts, feelings, emotions, etc. These are mental objects. When being mindful, recognize both physical and mental objects for what they are.

6.     Let the mind un-stack itself. 

Let the mind un-stack itself naturally through patient contemplation on whatever comes up. Observe the issue uppermost in the mind, and then the next, and the next. Let the mind deal with issues in the order it wants to.  There should be no effort to recall, to dig for answers, or to interfere with the mind in any way.  Simply look at what is right there in front of the mind’s eye at any moment. The mind will never present anything overwhelming when allowed to un-stack itself.

7.     Experience fully what is there.

Experiencing is the deepest form of mindfulness. A person is deeply mindful of his feelings, emotions and impulses when he is experiencing them. So, dive into the very heart of whatever arises in the mind without resisting. If the mind is racing, then experience it racing without contributing to it.

8.     Do not suppress anything from yourself.

Not suppressing anything from yourself is being totally honest with yourself. Follow your attention wherever it goes and do not suppress. Do not avoid something just because it seems shameful or painful. It is the suppression of perceptions, memories, knowledge, visualizations, thinking, etc., that causes all difficulties in life. By not suppressing you establish complete integrity of your perceptions.

9.     Associate data freely.

In order to practice mindfulness, you will have to let your mind associate data freely. Mindfulness is being comfortable with the very activity of thinking itself. So, let the mind associate data freely on its own.

10.  Do not get hung up on name and form.

Name acts as a broad reference point to something. Form is one of the many ways that a thing may be represented. The knowing of a thing goes beyond its name and form. Fixation on name and form may act as built-in judgment of what is there. To know something, one must go beyond name and form and look at it more closely including all its associations.

11.  Contemplate thoughtfully.

When mindfulness is practiced, thinking becomes contemplation. Problems are solved by looking at them non-judgmentally and recognizing the relationships. One looks around to get the missing information instead of trying to “figure it out”.

12.  Let it all be effortless.

When you let it be, it becomes effortless. Effort comes into play only when there is resistance to letting it be. It is completely safe when you let the body and mind unwind gradually on their own. Trouble occurs only when you become anxious and start to dig for answers.

Mindfulness seems to be fundamental to all scientific observation, meditation, prayer, and other forms of spiritual practice. Incorporate mindfulness in your life as much as possible.

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Exercise

The examples for these 12 aspects are provided in the following exercises. Practice these exercises until they become a natural part of your attention:

  1. Observe without Desires
  2. Observe without Assuming
  3. Observe what is Missing
  4. Observe the Incomprehensible
  5. Observe all Senses
  6. Let the Mind Un-stack
  7. Experience Fully
  8. Do not suppress
  9. Associate Data freely
  10. Observe beyond Name and Form
  11. Contemplate thoughtfully
  12. Let it be effortless

Follow the above exercises by the following:

13. Handling Introversion
14. Powerful Mindfulness Exercise 1
15. Powerful Mindfulness Exercise 2

The following is an excellent lecture: Meditative Mind

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Science and KHTK

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The basic character of science is mindfulness – seeing things as they are without assumptions.

 

Science looks at inconsistencies and makes discoveries. This requires realization of what one has been assuming all along. That brings about a better understanding of what is there.

 

The physical universe exists because awareness of the physical universe exists simultaneously. Awareness seems to be an integral part of the universe.

 

The KHTK Model of The Universe adds the dimension of abstraction to the physical dimensions of this universe. Awareness seems to lie in this dimension of abstraction. This is a more comprehensive view of the universe.

 

Science would be more complete if it looks at inconsistencies in this comprehensive view of the universe, which includes awareness as an integral component.

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References:

The Premise of KHTK

What is KHTK?

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The Tyranny of Religion

Misuse of religion

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Space, Inertia, Mass and Gravity (Part 2)

Mass

Reference: Space, Inertia, Mass and Gravity (Part 1)

Comment 2/17/2023:
Looking back at the “disturbance theory,” it now seems as the “theory of cyclical motion.” Motion is the basis of this universe. Space and time are dimensions of motion and not senior to it. The cyclical motion generates “fixedness.” The “fixedness” generates force in the form of inertia. The inertia appears to us as substance. The mystery is, “What is at the bottom of motion?”

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Note (3/6/16): Here inertia is confused with resistance due to inertia. My current understanding is as follows:

  • Inertia is the fact that there is resistance to change.
  • Force is the resistance due to inertia.

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  1. Alone out in the space, it is hard to discern whether one is moving or not. When one is moving at a uniform speed, whether slowly, rapidly, or even at the speed of light, it feels the same as when one is at rest. This reminds us of Newton’s first law of motion.

  2. However, any change from uniform speed is instantly felt. It is this change from status quo that generates a reaction. The reaction is in the form of a resistance to change. We are familiar with this reaction per Newton’s Third law of motion

  3. This resistance is called inertia. The inertia is generated in reaction to the change from uniform speed regardless of what that speed is. Therefore, inertia is the same in all frames of reference.

  4. Change in speed per unit time is called acceleration. Inertia generated in reaction to acceleration is proportional to that acceleration.

  5. Force is required to overcome this inertia in order to change the speed of the object. This force will also be proportional to acceleration. We are familiar with this as Newton’s second law of motion.

  6. The proportionality constant between force and acceleration is mass. Mass, therefore, is the amount of inertia overcome per unit acceleration.

  7. Since inertia generated is the same for all frames of reference, mass will be independent of the frames of reference.

  8. The idea of mass is tied with acceleration and not with uniform speed. No mass will come into play when a particle is moving at the uniform velocity of ‘c’.*

  9. According to the postulate of the theory of relativity, the velocity of a particle cannot be accelerated beyond ‘c’ as that would violate the absoluteness of SPACETIME.

  10. Therefore, it is a reasonable conjecture that any acceleration beyond ‘c’ shall not increase the speed of the particle; instead that acceleration shall be stored as mass. The stored acceleration shall appear as gravity associated with the mass.

*Similar observation is noted in the paper THE CONCEPT OF MASS by Lev B. Okun.

Reference: Space, Inertia, Mass and Gravity (Part 3)

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Space, Inertia, Mass and Gravity (Part 1)

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Comment 2/17/2023:

I now see free space as a gravitational substance of minimum consistency. Light is a substance of heavier consistency. Light encounters resistance as there is a force gradient due to difference in consistencies.

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NOTE: Here ‘free space’ refers to the ‘classical vacuum’ as found naturally in outer space.

  1. The conclusion that speed of light is constant was first postulated and later verified experimentally within a certain limit of precision.

  2. The speed of light is directly related to permittivity and permeability of free space.

  3. Permittivity of space is a constant that relates to the amount of resistance encountered when forming an electric field in a classical vacuum.

  4. Permeability of space is a constant that relates to the amount of resistance encountered when forming a magnetic field in a classical vacuum.

  5. Maxwell’s equations use the constants of permittivity and permeability in describing how electric and magnetic fields are generated and altered by each other in free space.

  6. The speed of light is the inverse of the square root of the product of permittivity and permeability.

  7. Light is an electromagnetic wave that is made up of alternating electric and magnetic fields. These electric and magnetic fields appear to be disturbance in free space.

  8. Thus, light appears to be a disturbance that propagates through free space, the same way that sound is a disturbance that propagates through air.

  9. In a disturbance, only the undulations of media propagate outward from the point of disturbance. There is no mass propagating forward.

  10. The speed of light depends entirely on the permittivity and permeability of free space (vacuum). This is analogous to how the speed of sound depends entirely on the characteristics of air, such as temperature, pressure, etc.

  11. Theory of relativity proceeds from the postulate that the speed of light is constant for all frames of references. The speed of light, therefore, acts as an absolute for the theory of relativity.

  12. Since the characteristics of free space determine the speed of light, free space acts as the absolute frame of reference for the theory of relativity.

  13. Free space seems to be defined fully only when space and time are considered together as ‘space and changes in it’. Regarded separately, space and time appear to be relative as shown by the theory of relativity.

  14. Free space as SPACETIME seems to represent the absoluteness underlying the physical universe.

Reference: Space, Inertia, Mass and Gravity (Part 2)

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