acosmism in German
How to Pronounce Acosmism
8 letter words ending in M
Madhyamaka: Jan Westerhoff
Why you are not a "soft" atheist
Jimmy, Albert, Aleister, and Acid
acorns in German
acorn weevil in German
How to Pronounce Acorns
Stephen Wolinsky - Neuroscience & The Self Illusion
acosmic in German
How to Pronounce Acosmist
acorn woodpecker in German
acosmism in German
How to Pronounce Acosmism
8 letter words ending in M
Madhyamaka: Jan Westerhoff
Why you are not a "soft" atheist
Jimmy, Albert, Aleister, and Acid
acorns in German
acorn weevil in German
How to Pronounce Acorns
Stephen Wolinsky - Neuroscience & The Self Illusion
acosmic in German
How to Pronounce Acosmist
acorn woodpecker in German
Acosmism, in contrast to pantheism, denies the reality of the universe, seeing it as ultimately illusory, (the prefix "a-" in Greek meaning negation; like "un-" in English), and only the infinite unmanifest Absolute as real.
This philosophy begins with the premise that there is only one real thing, and it is infinite, and non-dual; The Absolute. But the phenomenal reality of which we are normally aware is just the opposite: finite, and dualistic. And since the Absolute is the only reality, that means that everything that is not-Absolute cannot be real. Thus, according to this viewpoint, the phenomenal dualistic world is ultimately an illusion (maya to use the technical Indian term), irrespective of the apparent reality it possesses at the mundane or empirical level.
Acosmic monistic spiritual practice emphasizes attaining the Absolute through a kind of intellectual or conceptual realization. This may involve holding the thought that "I am that" (the Absolute), as in the philosophy of the Advaita Vedanta school and its recent advocates; or alternatively through a standing back and simply watching the thoughts and sensations arise and pass away; realizing all the time that they are not a part of one's true Self. Both these approaches are termed the path of jnana ("knowledge").
Jan Westerhoff is a philosopher and orientalist with specific interests in metaphysics and the philosophy of language. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and SOAS. At present he is a Reader in Philosophy at the University of Durham as well Research Associate at SOAS. For two years he was Research Fellow in Philosophy at the City University of New York and seminar associate at Columbia University. Before that he was a Junior Lecturer in philosophy at the University of Oxford.
He is a specialist in metaphysics and Indo-Tibetan philosophy. His research interests also include the history of ideas in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.