WORDS AS POINTERS
Words are not truth, but they can point to truth. As it is said in Zen Buddhism, the finger
pointing at the moon is not the moon, or as the semanticist Alfred Korzybski
put it, the map is not the territory.
Unfortunately we get hung up on the words. It is like throwing a stick across the yard, pointing at it and saying to Fido, "fetch." The dog stares at the finger. We stare at the words.
It is similar with ritual. A
religious service shows the way to something, rather than is that something
itself.
Regarding words, once the truth is recognized, the words pointing
to it may be discarded. The Taoist sage
Chuang Tzu wrote:
“Fishing baskets are employed to catch fish, but when the fish are
got, the men forget the baskets; snares are employed to catch hares, but when
the hares are got, men forget the snares. Words are employed to convey ideas, but when
the ideas are grasped, men forget the words.”
The Buddha said in a like way that when the raft of his teachings
has been taken to the opposite shore (enlightenment), there is no need then to
carry the raft across the land.
The spiritual teacher Eckhart Tolle said concerning words that much emphasis is placed in our culture on the value of printed and
spoken words for conveying truths. Unfortunately, these words are
taken literally at times, as if truth itself. Words are not truth, but
they can point to truth.
He said that we often ANALYZE words as
though they are the truth. What is the real meaning of this or that word?
we say. Let's go into this more deeply, we say. But analyzing the
pointers is pointless. The pointers are not the point.
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