Cognisant
cackling in the trenches
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As commonly explored in fiction an enlightenment (as there are many variations on the theme) is an epiphany which brings about some manner of change in the one who is enlightened which changes how they interact with the world, which in turn brings about the resolution of the conflict/dilemma that the story's plot revolved around.
A simplistic example would be a shōnen manga protagonist getting some manner of power-up from realizing their hidden potential, solving a riddle in their master's teachings, reaffirming their motivations through the bullshit power of friendship, etc. Generally speaking the better justified this power-up is the more seriously the story takes itself and the less like "a stupid cartoon for children" it seems. The weighted clothing in Naruto and DBZ are quite silly, the restraint levels in Hellsing are only slightly less silly, Luke Skywalker having the fortitude and insight to stop playing the emperor's game was ingenious.
Both Sidious and Darth Vader could have killed him easily but by refusing to fight Vader he forced Sidious to take matters into his own hands, he knew if father and son had time to talk things out Luke would eventually turn Vader against him which is exactly what happened. What Sidious didn't realize was that Vader was willing to sacrifice himself to save his son, so from the moment Luke refused to fight he was screwed. Luke's epiphany was realizing that he didn't need to defeat the emperor, rather that it was a fundamentally a philosophical conflict so it was never really about winning the war, to defeat Sidious all he has to do is win the debate.
I think this is a fantastic example of enlightenment being the deciding factor in a protagonist's victory over adversity and if there is such a thing as real enlightenment I expect that's what it will be, not a key that unlocks your untapped power but rather the wisdom to truly understand the nature of the game being played.
Unfortunately that epiphany itself can be interpreted one of two ways, to an objectivist enlightenment is the pursuit of understanding an objective reality, whereas to a subjectivist enlightenment is transcending the limitations of what was supposedly reality. In the movie The Matrix it seems Neo's incredible talent for bending the matrix to his will is because he's accepting what everyone else is teaching him, that the matrix isn't real (which is true) but everyone else already believes that so what is it really that makes him so special?
I'd argue it's the fact that unlike Morpheus for whom the unreality of the matrix is akin to a religious belief, Neo's epiphany stems from a place of understanding, he's a software developer who just found out the entire world he knew is actually software running on a computer. As a programmer himself he's attacking it in ways more sophisticated than simply willing it to do what he wants, this is what it actually means when he can see the code, it's not that he's just that fucking special it's that he actually understands what he's seeing beyond the surface level of what it's meant to represent.
Granted it's just a fictional universe and that's just my personal theory, but it makes sense doesn't it?
Going back to reality again it makes sense that a true all encompassing enlightenment isn't just going to be an epiphany or even a series of epiphanies, it will require an incredible depth of understanding and profundity of wisdom. Likewise the goal of transcendence (from the limitations of the human condition) isn't simply a prize to be won when you guess the right answer, it's something that will require an enormous amount of effort. If you want to make a sword it's not enough to know metallurgy and blacksmithing techniques you actually need to put that knowledge into practice and practice it until you're good at it and only then through blood sweat and tears will you actually be able to make something of merit.
I've neglected to give an in-depth explanation of what being transcended means but it's late and I have work tomorrow.
A simplistic example would be a shōnen manga protagonist getting some manner of power-up from realizing their hidden potential, solving a riddle in their master's teachings, reaffirming their motivations through the bullshit power of friendship, etc. Generally speaking the better justified this power-up is the more seriously the story takes itself and the less like "a stupid cartoon for children" it seems. The weighted clothing in Naruto and DBZ are quite silly, the restraint levels in Hellsing are only slightly less silly, Luke Skywalker having the fortitude and insight to stop playing the emperor's game was ingenious.
Both Sidious and Darth Vader could have killed him easily but by refusing to fight Vader he forced Sidious to take matters into his own hands, he knew if father and son had time to talk things out Luke would eventually turn Vader against him which is exactly what happened. What Sidious didn't realize was that Vader was willing to sacrifice himself to save his son, so from the moment Luke refused to fight he was screwed. Luke's epiphany was realizing that he didn't need to defeat the emperor, rather that it was a fundamentally a philosophical conflict so it was never really about winning the war, to defeat Sidious all he has to do is win the debate.
I think this is a fantastic example of enlightenment being the deciding factor in a protagonist's victory over adversity and if there is such a thing as real enlightenment I expect that's what it will be, not a key that unlocks your untapped power but rather the wisdom to truly understand the nature of the game being played.
Unfortunately that epiphany itself can be interpreted one of two ways, to an objectivist enlightenment is the pursuit of understanding an objective reality, whereas to a subjectivist enlightenment is transcending the limitations of what was supposedly reality. In the movie The Matrix it seems Neo's incredible talent for bending the matrix to his will is because he's accepting what everyone else is teaching him, that the matrix isn't real (which is true) but everyone else already believes that so what is it really that makes him so special?
I'd argue it's the fact that unlike Morpheus for whom the unreality of the matrix is akin to a religious belief, Neo's epiphany stems from a place of understanding, he's a software developer who just found out the entire world he knew is actually software running on a computer. As a programmer himself he's attacking it in ways more sophisticated than simply willing it to do what he wants, this is what it actually means when he can see the code, it's not that he's just that fucking special it's that he actually understands what he's seeing beyond the surface level of what it's meant to represent.
Granted it's just a fictional universe and that's just my personal theory, but it makes sense doesn't it?
Going back to reality again it makes sense that a true all encompassing enlightenment isn't just going to be an epiphany or even a series of epiphanies, it will require an incredible depth of understanding and profundity of wisdom. Likewise the goal of transcendence (from the limitations of the human condition) isn't simply a prize to be won when you guess the right answer, it's something that will require an enormous amount of effort. If you want to make a sword it's not enough to know metallurgy and blacksmithing techniques you actually need to put that knowledge into practice and practice it until you're good at it and only then through blood sweat and tears will you actually be able to make something of merit.
I've neglected to give an in-depth explanation of what being transcended means but it's late and I have work tomorrow.