The Forum > General Discussion > Is binary thinking really what causes the most trouble?
Is binary thinking really what causes the most trouble?
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"This faith in the black and the white, this Bivalence, reaches back in the West to at least the ancient Greeks. Democritus reduced the universe to atoms and void. Plato filled his world with pure forms of redness and rightness and triangularity. Aristotle took time off from training his pupil Alexander the Great to write down what he felt were the black-and- white laws of logic, laws that scientists and mathemeticians still use to describe and discuss the grey universe.
Aristotle's binary logic came down to one law: A or not-A. Either this or not this. The sky is blue or not-blue. It can't be both blue and not blue. It can't be A AND not-A. Aristotle's 'law' defined what was philosophically correct for over two thousand years.
The binary faith has always faced doubt. It has always led to its own critical response, a sort of logical and philosophical underground. The Buddha lived in India five centuries before Jesus and almost two centuries before Aristotle. The first step in his belief system was to break through the black-and-white world of words, pierce the bivalent veil and see the world as it is, see it filled with 'contradictions,' with things and not-things, with roses that are both red and not red, with A AND not-A.
You find this fuzzy or grey theme in Eastern belief systems old and new, from Lao-tze's Taoism to the modern Zen in Japan. Either-or versus contradiction. A OR not-A versus A AND not-A. Aristotle versus the Buddha."
This is really the crux of the matter, and what has led me to think about our modern 'Western' outlook and it's roots.