Netti-Netti
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Some of them had very strong personalities that go them into trouble.Buddhists have personalities, even the enlightened ones.
Some of them had very strong personalities that go them into trouble.Buddhists have personalities, even the enlightened ones.
Yes, there is an empirical self that is a witness to all these temporary goings on. But there is also an "Absolute, Eternal True Self," the true Buddha Self:
Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaMany venerable saints and scholars have argued for the Self in the past and do so in the present. Great teachers of the Tibetan Nyingma, Kagyu and Sakya schools have and do argue that such a view (i.e. the reality of an essential, deathless Self) is fundamental to the practice of the Buddhist path and the attainment of Enlightenment.
The idea of not being permanently stuck with a suffocating, self-centered, ego-generated self and knowing that I will only cry the tears of love is refreshing, yes.
Some of them had very strong personalities that go them into trouble.
Now if we only knew what "enlightened activity" was.
I think the linguistic stuff can have some value if the idea is to share knowledge and maybe add a bit of inspiration by introducing varied meanings into the world. Co-creation of religious narrative is a possible form of spiritual partnership.I think this also touches on why all this chatting on a forum might be fun or an intellectual pursuit, but discursive reasoning and knowledge acquisition have little or nothing to do with...it.
I think the linguistic stuff can have some value if the idea is to share knowledge and maybe add a bit of inspiration...
This one?Hello to all!
Please, see... on you tube
The Chant Of Metta - English subtitled version
I have been "looking into Buddhism". I have left it alone here on this forum so far but that is going to change very soon. I have long held 'opinions' of my own that cast a dark shadow on Buddhism yet lacked the specific detail to be able to substantiate my views.
Oh, please expose the dark underbelly of Buddhism! It sounds deliciously lurid!
I have been "looking into Buddhism". I have left it alone here on this forum so far but that is going to change very soon.
...and you'll be bringing your usual brand of "fairness and impartiality" with you I see.It is every bit as insidiously disempowering as any of the Abrahamics and just as bloodthirsty.
I wondered what was causing that...I have long held 'opinions' of my own that cast a dark shadow on Buddhism
That would Shinto, not Buddhism.lol, well it could be fairly said that it was Buddhism that 'invented' the suicide bomber and has quite a history of endorsing fascism.
lol, well it could be fairly said that it was Buddhism that 'invented' the suicide bomber
...and you'll be bringing your usual brand of "fairness and impartiality" with you I see.
I was not referring to the Kamikaze, though separating Shinto is nothing but splitting hairs, but to the Buddhist suicide bombers of what is now Sri Lanka.Seattlegal : "That would Shinto, not Buddhism. "
Snoopy:
To me, I suspect you will continue to conflate teachings with "human nature." Your blaming Buddhism for the "invention" of the suicide bomber is analogous to blaming the scientific method for the invention of the atomic bomb.
Post away.I was not referring to the Kamikaze, though separating Shinto is nothing but splitting hairs, but to the Buddhist suicide bombers of what is now Sri Lanka.
I do not think many individuals are capable of real "fairness and impartiality", do you think you would bring it?
To me, this is not at all splitting hairs, but there you go. I know little of Shinto but I believe it is an indigenous polytheistic religion. It is not Buddhism, which came from China.separating Shinto is nothing but splitting hairs
That's because it's my primary delusional impression of you, Tao! Science is a touchstone to compare religions to. If this isn't so, I'm sorry, but that's my perception.It amuses me that so soon into my position of no longer giving Buddhism a free pass you are already using science as analogous with religion, even if you do so without believing it.
I can't speak for the Abrahamics but in reference to Buddhism you won't be surprised if I say that even given the motivation I'm not sure I have sufficient life times to debate this with you. Suffice to say I am in a delusional state of believing that I have a modicum of free thought, do not sanction violence (I start lower down the sentient chain than man) and do not feel in any way exploited by Buddhist teaching.My position will be that the differences between the Abrahamic faiths and Buddhism are virtually non-existent when it comes to the usurpation of free thinking, to the sanction of inhumanity to fellow man and to the exploitation of its adherents.
Perhaps you'll have to lead the way then (no I'm not being sarcastic).I am not a regular frequenter of the Buddhist board but I have seen little, if any, effort to highlight the shortcomings and hypocrisies within Buddhism.
I would distinguish between teachings and people's behaviour. Maybe you wouldn't.Unless you can demonstrate to me that Buddhism is above and beyond reproach?
None of us know everything. I try, even though many may feel I fail miserably, to understand things as much by what they are 'not' as by what they are claimed to be. This can be somewhat frowned upon as I offer only criticism and no solutions. Well I shrug off such criticism and see it as nothing more than a device long used by those who wish to protect their ideas by questioning the integrity of the critic rather than what the critic says. You can know something pretty well from knowing what it is not.I'm as deluded as the next.
Japan has and had a large Buddhist contingent that actively supported the Imperial Japanese aims. Indeed the United Buddhist Leadership in Japan phrased it thus:To me, this is not at all splitting hairs, but there you go.I know little of Shinto but I believe it is an indigenous polytheistic religion. It is not Buddhism, which came from China.
Ohhh no not that again. Science can be used as a tool to examine some of the claims religionists make. But it is my own intellect (yeh go on and giggle) not science that forms my opinion. I wonder how many times I will have to say that before someone here actually understands it. Science, to me at least, is not a religion. It is a process and method of enquiry and a body of verifiable knowledge. Nothing at all like any religion.That's because it's my primary delusional impression of you, Tao! Science is a touchstone to compare religions to. If this isn't so, I'm sorry, but that's my perception.
As I said to you the other day my thinking is that you, and indeed all western Buddhists, are not truly representative of Buddhism as a whole. You chose Buddhism, you were not born into it. Yet if you have the money, such as with certain Hollywood stars, the Dalai Lama is quite willing to sell you 'holiness'.I can't speak for the Abrahamics but in reference to Buddhism you won't be surprised if I say that even given the motivation I'm not sure I have sufficient life times to debate this with you. Suffice to say I am in a delusional state of believing that I have a modicum of free thought, do not sanction violence (I start lower down the sentient chain than man) and do not feel in any way exploited.
So you think people do not behave according to the teachings they have accepted hold value? Curious.I would distinguish between teachings and people's behaviour. Maybe you wouldn't.
s.
Just as an example pertinent to a point I am trying to make.You're looking at the Dalai Lama as a reference of Buddhism?
This is similar to looking at the Papal institution as the ultimate reference for Christianity and I think think this is a bad and unfair way to judge any religion. They are more about their institutional power than the actual religion. Institutions and political power has a tendency to completely corrupt the most beautiful of ideologies. These people reside in the most beautiful of holy sites that stands at great centers for the religion, yet ironically enough this is where we find the most evil manifistations of religion. There is an ancient word of wisdom that says: (probably a horrible translation)
"It is dark at the foot of the candelabrum."
I think there is a lot of truth to that. While the cardinals and popes of room lived a hedonistic life style at the expense of their poor believers, there were people like Francis of Assisi dedicating his life to the poor.
Going to Rome, Kyoto, Canterbury, Mecca or any other center of religious power to find a true master would surely leave you disappointed. They are often too busy carrying power instead of humility and compassion.