Time on Our Hands

As I have often written, time is such a difficult subject, but nonetheless a fascinating one. But in this essay I want to direct my reader’s attention to another fascinating issue about time. It is the notion of the benefit of “Spare Time”. The traditional Protestant ethic would suggest that having spare time is surely […]

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Your Book of Life

If you were a book, you would be a book of memories. The idea that your memories make you who you are is a common one. They are probably not the whole story of you but it is difficult to deny that they are a significant part of that story. Mark Rowlands Professor of Philosophy […]

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An Unexamined Life?

Perhaps the most famous quote attributed to Socrates is: An unexamined life is not worth living. It is undoubtedly true that to be a well-functioning, competent human being requires that we have adequate self-knowledge. We need to be realistically aware of our strengths and weaknesses, our skills and vulnerabilities. So there is indeed value in […]

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In Loving Memory

It is an inevitable consequence of growing older that we increasingly know more people who have died! We dutifully attend funerals and endure endless eulogies. To begin with we are often introduced to the deceased by a religious person officiating at the funeral of someone who barely entered a church in their lives. This well-meaning […]

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Family Matters


It has been distressing in recent times to witness the debates in the press about access to children for separating partners. We hear of children murdered by one partner merely to deprive the other. We hear of children pushed and pulled between households without seemingly any concern for their welfare. We despair for such children. […]

February 10, 2010

Ignorance


This week I’d like to explore the concept of ignorance with my readers. Like many words there is a certain ambiguity about ignorance. Often we use the term simply to mean a lack of knowledge about a subject or an issue. This kind of ignorance is tolerated because it occurs largely as a matter of […]

February 4, 2010

Change – How We Resist It!


Some years ago, I remember reading how in the Napoleonic Wars the British Government created a position for someone to man a bonfire on the cliffs of Dover. His job was to light the bonfire if he saw the French fleet approaching so that the British might prepare for an attempt at invasion. Apparently that […]

January 28, 2010

Impermanence


In an essay called What Makes You Not a Buddhist Tibetan teacher Dzongsar Khyentse stated that: If you cannot accept that all compounded or fabricated things are impermanent, if you believe that there is some essential substance or concept that is permanent, then you are not a Buddhist. Whether you want to be a Buddhist, […]

January 19, 2010

What Does It Mean?


Lewis Carroll began his poem, The Jabberwocky, thus: `Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe; All mimsy were the borogoves, And the mome raths outgrabe. Does this mean anything? It follows most of the conventions of English language, because we can distinguish: • Nouns – toves, wabe, borogoves, raths […]

January 12, 2010

Self Acceptance


Many years ago, my good friend and mentor, Dr Phil Harker, put to me that psychological maturity comes from a process wherein an individual should get to know themselves, and then accept themselves, and finally if they were truly enlightened, forget themselves. But of course the process is not as straight-forward as it might seem. […]

January 6, 2010

The Season of Hope


We have just celebrated our version of the Northern Hemisphere’s festival of the Winter solstice. This is a ubiquitous celebration. It was celebrated by the Celts, the Germanic peoples, the Chinese, the Jews, the Hindus, the Egyptians, the Persians to name but a few. It was subsumed by the early Christians and in our Western […]

December 30, 2009

Spirituality In The Workplace


In earlier blogs we have learnt that it is our consciousness that distinguishes us from other animals. Because of this we can not only think but be aware of our thoughts. We can not only make decisions but are conscious of the process of decision making. Because of this we are not only aware of […]

December 22, 2009

The Conscious Observer


As I sit here in my office I can see the small tree in the front yard. It is a favourite place for the bull-finches to sit before they venture down to the bird bath. Naming, as we have seen before, is part of the process of duality. It is differentiating something of a particular […]

December 17, 2009

On Time


I have always been fascinated by time. It has often seemed to me that if I could understand time, I might come closer to understanding reality. Turning to our scientists and philosophers does not easily clarify the matter. Newton, Kant and Leibniz all had varying opinions of the real nature of time. To begin with, […]

December 9, 2009