If you have been reading my blogs or if you read the 2045 article in
Time Magazine or if you watched the Jeapordy show with Watson or even
know about it then likely you might understand what is meant by "The
Coming Singularity" predicted for 2045 or therabouts for mankind. It is
at this stage where Computer artificial intelligence goes beyond what
any human or groups of humans are capable of. Yes. This does not apply
to all things but only those things specific to what digital
intelligence can accomplish. But by then the word "artificial human" or
"clone" will not just be science fiction it will also be actual in
everyday life. What we all do with this, hopefully, we all will have a
vote on, so only those who own computers and robots don't control
everything on earth and get all the jobs.
However, I was thinking in another direction. Since man was first
invented some people have been trying to perfect themselves for the
benefit of all life on earth. Some of people that immediately come to
mind are beings like Jesus, Buddha, Confucious, Lao Tsu, Gandhi,
Mandela, Martin Luther King, etc. Many of us have tried to become
enlightened so people wouldn't have to suffer so much and could live
better lives.
I was thinking today that the coming singularity might also help to
create "Immortal Mahasiddhas" whose lives would be lived to benefit all
beings first on earth and then throughout the Galaxy. If one combines
the path to enlightenment with the Singularity this could be achieved by
many many beings.
The following is the definition of Mahasiddha from Wikipedia:
Mahasiddha
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mahasiddha (
Tibetan:
གྲུབ་ཐོབ་ཆེན་པོ;
Wylie:
grub thob chen po; or
Tibetan:
ཏུལ་ཤུག;
Wylie:
tul shug; Sanskrit Devanagari: महासिद्ध;
IAST: mahāsiddha,
maha meaning "great" and
siddha meaning "adept") is a term for someone who embodies and cultivates
siddhi of perfection. They are a type of eccentric
yogi in both
Hinduism and
Vajrayana Buddhism. Mahasiddhas were
tantric practitioners, or
tantrikas who had sufficient attainments to act as a
guru or tantric master. A
siddha is an individual who, through the practice of
sadhana, attains the realization of
siddhis, psychic and spiritual abilities and powers. Their historical influence throughout the
Indic and
Himalayan region was vast and they reached mythic proportions which is codified in their
songs of realization and
hagiographies, or
namthar, many of which have been preserved in the
Tibetan Buddhist canon. The Mahasiddha are acknowledged as the founders of many Indian and Buddhist traditions and
lineages.
Robert Thurman
contrasts the Tantric Buddhist communities within which the Mahasidda
practiced and taught with the Buddhist universities such as
Nalanda which flourished at the same time:
The Tantric communities of India in the latter half of the
first Common Era millennium (and perhaps even earlier) were something
like “Institutes of Advanced Studies” in relation to the great Buddhist
monastic “Universities.” They were research centers for highly
cultivated, successfully graduated experts in various branches of Inner
Science (adhyatmavidya), some of whom were still monastics and could
move back and forth from university (vidyalaya) to “site” (pitha), and
many of whom had resigned vows of poverty, celibacy, and so forth, and
were living in the classical Indian saiñnyãsin
or sãdhu style. I call them the "psychonauts" of the tradition, in
parallel with our “astronauts,” the materialist scientist-adventurers
whom we admire for their courageous explorations of the “outer space”
which we consider the matrix of material reality. Inverse astronauts,
the psychonauts voyaged deep into “inner space,” encountering and
conquering angels and demons in the depths of their subconscious minds.[1]
It was the Mahasiddhas who instituted the practices that birthed the
Inner Tantras of
Dzogchen practiced by the
Nyingma school of
Tibetan Buddhism. The
other schools of Tibetan Buddhism and other
Vajrayana Buddhists such as
Shingon Buddhism practice
Mahamudra meditation, also a practice initiated by the original Buddhist Mahasiddha. end quote.
I also found at Wikipedia a list of the possible Siddhis that and enlightened adept can attain.
[edit] Five Siddhis of Yoga and Meditation
In the
Bhagavata Purana the Five Siddhis of Yoga and Meditation are described as below:
- tri-kāla-jñatvam: Knowing the past, present and future;
- advandvam: Tolerance of heat, cold and other dualities;
- para citta ādi abhijñatā: Knowing the minds of others and so on;
- agni arka ambu viṣa ādīnām pratiṣṭambhaḥ: Checking the influence of fire, sun, water, poison, and so on;
- aparājayah: Remaining unconquered by others;[4]
[edit] Eight Primary Siddhis
Ganesha with the Ashta (8) Siddhis. The Ashtasiddhi are shown as attendants of Ganesha. Painting by
Raja Ravi Varma (1848-1906)
There is the concept of the Ashta Siddhi (eight siddhis) in
Hinduism. These are:
- Aṇimā: reducing one's body even to the size of an atom
- Mahima: expanding one's body to an infinitely large size
- Garima: becoming infinitely heavy
- Laghima: becoming almost weightless
- Prāpti: having unrestricted access to all places
- Prākāmya: realizing whatever one desires
- Iṣṭva: possessing absolute lordship;
- Vaśtva: the power to subjugate all.[5]
[edit] Ten Secondary Siddhis
In the
Bhagavata Purana Lord Krishna describes the Ten Secondary Siddhis as:
- anūrmi-mattvam: Being undisturbed by hunger, thirst, and other bodily disturbances
- dūra-śravaṇa: Hearing things far away
- dūra-darśanam: Seeing things far away
- manaḥ-javah: Moving the body wherever thought goes (teleportation)
- kāma-rūpam: Assuming any form desired
- para-kāya praveśanam: Entering the bodies of others
- sva-chanda mṛtyuh: Dying when one desires
- devānām saha krīḍā anudarśanam: Witnessing and participating in the pastimes of the Apsaras
- yathā sańkalpa saḿsiddhiḥ: Perfect accomplishment of one's determination
- ājñā apratihatā gatiḥ: Orders or Commands being unimpeded [6]
- end quote from wikipedia under the heading "Siddhis"
- I
personally have either experienced some of these things myself or I
have seen others (especially in India and Nepal) who could do almost all
these things. This might be hard to believe for a person with a western
materialistic mind, but I can say to you that all these things are
possible without any electronic technology present. And some people on
earth CAN and DO one or more of these things all over the earth.
- "There
are more things in heaven and earth than have ever been thought of in
your philosophy, Horatio" quote from Shakespeare in "Hamlet" (this was
from my memory)
- There now follows an exact quote from Shakespeare:
- Hamlet:
And therefore as a stranger give it welcome.
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy. -
- http://www.enotes.com/shakespeare-quotes/there-more-things-heaven-earth-horatio
-
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