Awwware,
I’ve just recalled a book I read this summer: “The Psychology of the Child”.
A brief overview about Jean Piaget’s work. An indispensable book to learn about the genesis of the mind in the child.
We can say that one of the functions of the mind is representational, mind represents elements belonging to the physical world, as mental images, and operates with these mental images, giving birth to a form of thought.
The stages the child follows are:
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Deferred imitation: Imitation of the model after its disappearance.
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Symbolic play: Or the game of pretending. The deferred signifier is an imitative gesture, though accompanied with objects which are becoming symbolic. Through it the child assimilates adults’ world.
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Drawing: An intermediate stage between play and mental image.
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Mental image: Nothing but an internalized imitation. Mind can now evoke the model without the support of a physical object.
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Verbal evocation. Now the model can be evoked in another mind.
We can say then that a function of the mind consists in transferring to consciousness a material reality that is no longer present, in other words, transferring without the agency of the senses.
From now on I speculate, as cosmological issues are involved.
If one of the individual mind’s functions is re-creating in a subjective,limited fashion, what was created in an objective,unlimited fashion by an universal,almighty mind, we could say the following:
Individual minds, as sparks or rays of an universal mind, create as a result of an aggregate of all their minds, the material or physical reality. For example, if all intelligent beings in universe simultaneously visualized a bottle of “Grange 1951” wine, it would instantly materialize, and Nick Rockefeller would drink it.
Or inversely, as white light splits into color lights when passing through a prism, material reality splits into mental realities when “passing through” the prism of Maya Shakti and the five Kanchukas (constrictors):
K?la: sequential experiencing, Niyati: spatial ordering, Raga: attachment to objects, Kal?: limited action, Vidy?: limited knowledge.
Perhaps both would occur simultaneously, or aren’t but two sides of the same phenomena.
We could state then that matter and mind are equivalent, but from different angle or context: Individual vs. Universal. It’s the power in which the phenomena is experienced what marks the difference. Brahman is allmighty and can create a material universe. But the souls it is made of are miserable, and can create just a mental,subjective universe. The result of overlapping all those mental,subjective universes is the material one.
One could say:
"Ok, but what about the period when there was no conscious individual mind experiencing matter? "
And i would reply:
“Is it of any use considering a system that cannot be observed?”
And I would refer him to quantum mechanics and the collapse of the wave function.
I’m sure more flaws might be found, but i hope i’ve thrown some inspiration on your thoughts.
We’ll talk latter, time to sleep.
Bye!