Creation

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  • Tenrai
    Member
    • Aug 2017
    • 112

    Creation

    I have a fairly large community aquarium, well planted with tropical fish of all sizes and colours. I was just watching the fish weaving through various delicate plants..... and I got to wondering "Why?"..... why are these living animals and plants so beautiful?
    I realised then that I do not have an answer at all? This was kind of like a huge emptiness......
    Can I ask the very simple question "Why.... Just why?"

    Gassho
    Tenrai
    Sat Today
  • Doshin
    Member
    • May 2015
    • 2620

    #2
    My life has been centered around biodiversity, its adaptation for survival, its evolutionary path and I have never seen a creature that was not beautiful in its own way as it expressed its being...as to why...it just is and I am happy you and others share that sense too.

    Doshin
    St

    Comment

    • Jundo
      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
      • Apr 2006
      • 42586

      #3
      Originally posted by Tenrai
      I have a fairly large community aquarium, well planted with tropical fish of all sizes and colours. I was just watching the fish weaving through various delicate plants..... and I got to wondering "Why?"..... why are these living animals and plants so beautiful?
      I realised then that I do not have an answer at all? This was kind of like a huge emptiness......
      Can I ask the very simple question "Why.... Just why?"

      Gassho
      Tenrai
      Sat Today
      Hmmm. The beauty of a flower is not in the flower alone, but in the bee that is attracted by the colors to feed, thus to enable the flower to reproduce. The result is a win/win situation for flower and bee.

      From my brief reading, the bright colors of tropical fish are "key to astoundingly complex strategies to attract mates, repel rivals and hide from predators."



      Alas, we humans find some too beautiful which, I understand, has resulted in depletion of some species (such as "Nemo") to fill aquariums.

      It is a dog eat dog, and fish eat fist, and man capture fish world out there! Beautiful colors and patterns play a part in all of it. That is Samsara, this sometimes win/lose, live/die world. Sometimes win/win, sometimes win/lose ... maybe even sometimes lose/lose.

      Buddhism does not have one simple explanation for beauty. It only notes that beauty exists in both the beheld AND the eye of the beholder. However amazing that our human eyes evolved to be so finely tuned to the wavelengths of light, able to experience such bright colors and patterns. The bright colors and patterns do not exist without BOTH your eyes and brain AND the atoms and photons which transmit those patterns.

      This world is complex, it is all of us, people and flowers and bees and coral reefs and fish. That is the true Beauty if you ask me. The Great Win/Win.

      Gassho, J

      STLah
      Last edited by Jundo; 05-16-2020, 12:03 AM.
      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

      Comment

      • Kotei
        Dharma Transmitted Priest
        • Mar 2015
        • 4662

        #4
        Hello,

        I believe that our sense of beauty has developed from our origin in nature.
        A living, thriving piece of nature is where we can survive and all is OK. So we're feeling it as beautiful and stay there.

        Gassho,
        Kotei sat/lah today.
        義道 冴庭 / Gidō Kotei.

        Comment

        • Horin
          Member
          • Dec 2017
          • 385

          #5
          I think that although in the perfection and the beauty of the world there's still no objective beauty at all. Our sense and taste of beauty and ugly is conditioned so avoid some animals a certain type of flowers, people are attracted to different types of people with different attributes..."A" loves a kind of music and lose myself into it while "B" may be annoyed by that music.. and "a palace for fish is water for human beings...heavenly beings see water as a palace and gaki as pus and blood"..
          And still we can see the beauty of the whole scenery, the perfection and loveliness in everything, in garbage, in a single word, in one gesture, in the flowers, in the animals, in our annoying neighbor, in the loud noises of the traffic and the construction area nearby and in each moment on the cushion, beyond beauty-ness and uglyness


          Gassho

          Ben

          Stlah

          Enviado desde mi PLK-L01 mediante Tapatalk

          Comment

          • Kokuu
            Dharma Transmitted Priest
            • Nov 2012
            • 7290

            #6
            I have a fairly large community aquarium, well planted with tropical fish of all sizes and colours. I was just watching the fish weaving through various delicate plants..... and I got to wondering "Why?"..... why are these living animals and plants so beautiful?
            I guess that sometimes there just doesn't need to be a reason and we can just enjoy things as they are, resting in the colours, sounds and smells of the world without needing to know why and allowing our conceptual projections to drop.

            As a biologist, like Doshin, I know that evolution has made certain organisms appear attractive to others for evolutionary reasons and can explain how and why this happens but it still doesn't explain the idea of beauty. As Horin says, it is an arbitrary and subjective concept.

            The environmental scientist James Lovelock was once asked if he had ever had a religious experience and he replied that yes, for him, life itself was a religious experience.

            If that is the case, and I believe it is, it would be a shame not to enjoy it.


            Gassho
            Kokuu
            -sattoday/lah-

            Comment

            • Shoki
              Member
              • Apr 2015
              • 580

              #7
              Hmmmm....I don't know. One thing that strikes me from a few snorkeling experiences I've had on tropical coral reefs is that each fish has perfectly coordinated colors. Green and yellow, orange and white, black and red. They never look mismatched. Like sharp dressers or stylish football uniforms.

              Gassho
              STlah
              James

              Comment

              • Doshin
                Member
                • May 2015
                • 2620

                #8
                Originally posted by Jundo
                Hmmm. The beauty of a flower is not in the flower alone, but in the bee that is attracted by the colors to feed, thus to enable the flower to reproduce. The result is a win/win situation for flower and bee.

                From my brief reading, the bright colors of tropical fish are "key to astoundingly complex strategies to attract mates, repel rivals and hide from predators."




                Alas, we humans find some too beautiful which, I understand, has resulting in depletion of some species (such as "Nemo") to fill aquariums.

                It is a dog eat dog, and fish eat fist, and man capture fish world out there! Beautiful colors and patterns play a part in all of it. That is Samsara, this sometimes win/lose, live/die world. Sometimes win/win, sometimes win/lose ... maybe even sometimes lose/lose.

                Buddhism does not have one simple explanation for beauty. It simply notes that beauty exists in both the beheld AND the eye of the beholder. However amazing that our human eyes evolved to be so finely tuned to the wavelengths of light, able to experience such bright colors and patters. The bright colors and patterns do not exist without BOTH your eyes and brain AND the atoms and photons which transmit those patterns.




                This world is complex, it is all of us, people and flowers and bees and coral reefs and fish. That is the true Beauty if you ask me. The Great Win/Win.

                Gassho, J

                STLah
                Jundo,

                I have always appreciated your wide knowledge and interests. I remember thinking that as we spent a day in the car seeing beauty in the Gila and the wide ranging conversation. After reading your response I thought you could have been a biologist. That is a compliment A book you might like to read to put together ideas for another of your book is The Evolution of Beauty by Richard Prum (2017). I just remembered I down loaded it a few years ago, started it and something came up. I remembered I have it somewhere in my digital library when this thread started. It would be interesting and informative to have a Zen perspective.

                Doshin
                St
                Last edited by Jundo; 05-15-2020, 06:06 PM.

                Comment

                • Doshin
                  Member
                  • May 2015
                  • 2620

                  #9
                  Horin,

                  After 70 years fascinated with nature I am still surprised when I hear someone say ”that is ugly” when I see the same life form with such admiration. So beauty is often in the eye of the beholder. I feel most comfortable and at home with those who see it similarly to me but I smile at them and try to accept their view (maybe after a few words to change their mind

                  Doshin
                  St

                  Comment

                  • Horin
                    Member
                    • Dec 2017
                    • 385

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Doshin
                    Horin,

                    After 70 years fascinated with nature I am still surprised when I hear someone say ”that is ugly” when I see the same life form with such admiration. So beauty is often in the eye of the beholder. I feel most comfortable and at home with those who see it similarly to me but I smile at them and try to accept their view (maybe after a few words to change their mind

                    Doshin
                    St
                    I remember my parents in law often are annoyed by the "bad weeds" and "pest plants" in their garden. I told them that for me there are no bad weeds it's just wild herbs, useful and with their own function in the nature. I like the wild nature the "chaotic" fields and forests without the interaction and maintenance of men

                    Gassho

                    Ben

                    Stlah

                    Enviado desde mi PLK-L01 mediante Tapatalk

                    Comment

                    • Jippou
                      Member
                      • Dec 2017
                      • 114

                      #11
                      As suffering is the best argument for there not being a god, beauty seems to be the best argument for a god. Yes we are contrition we
                      To respond to certain environmental stimuli through evolution but why do why see beauty in sunsets or waterfalls or the mountains? Our capacity to appreciate Beaty seem linked to a quote form Pierre Teilhard de Chardin; We are the universe become conscious of itself. Plotinus and Neoplatonic mysticism is based on ascending to the absolute through contemplation of the beautiful. It can help us on that journey as well.

                      Gassho
                      Sat today; Jason


                      Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

                      Comment

                      • Jundo
                        Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                        • Apr 2006
                        • 42586

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Kokuu
                        I guess that sometimes there just doesn't need to be a reason and we can just enjoy things as they are, resting in the colours, sounds and smells of the world without needing to know why and allowing our conceptual projections to drop.
                        I believe that Kokuu has offered the very best response of all.

                        Gassho, J

                        STLah
                        ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                        Comment

                        • Cooperix
                          Member
                          • Nov 2013
                          • 502

                          #13
                          About a year ago I read a research study investigating why there is beauty in nature. (As an artist I am very interested in the concept of beauty). The researchers arrived at the conclusion that beauty was in nature for its own sake, not procreation, camouflage or any other reason.

                          BEAUTY IS.

                          I love that.

                          Gassho
                          Anne

                          ~lahst~

                          Comment

                          • Sekishi
                            Dharma Transmitted Priest
                            • Apr 2013
                            • 5677

                            #14
                            I think we've gotten some beautiful answers to the question of "why".

                            I propose a different question: "Who?"..... who makes these living animals and plants so beautiful?'

                            I'll just leave this quote from the opening of the Dhammapada here:
                            All things are preceded by the mind, led by the mind, created by the mind.



                            Gassho,
                            Sekishi
                            Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.

                            Comment

                            • Doshin
                              Member
                              • May 2015
                              • 2620

                              #15
                              Tenrai,

                              What a wonderful thread you started. I learned.

                              Thank you
                              Doshin
                              St,

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