Namaste Agnideva,
thank you for the post.
Samabudhis' post is spot on. i would like to expand on it a bit, if i'm able.
Agnideva said:
Namaste all,
I understand that nirvana is not the final "goal" of Buddha Dharma, but rather one may consider Buddhahood as the "goal." Am I correct in saying this?
well.. yes and no
generally speaking, as Samabudhi explained, the final destination of the path is indescribable and Buddha Shakyamuni refused to speculate upon it.
often this is related in a parable of ours which goes something like this:
only when you, yourself, drink the water will you know if it is warm or cool.
so.. this destination, if you will, is an experiential state which defies description since we cannot get our minds "around" the subject to "grasp" it.
we can speak of these things through allegory, metaphor and similie only due to mutal concensus about the meaning of the terms. without this concensus, communication would be very difficult in this matter.
If so, then is Buddhahood the "goal" because a large number of beings can be enlightened by a Buddha?
remember, in our path, beings Awaken themselves, Buddhas do not do it for them. Buddhas are, for the purposes of this discussion, guides along the path.. illuminating the pitfalls and dangerous areas for us, but we, alone, are the ones walking the path.
having said that, the ultimate aim of Buddhist practice, to use such a term, is the ending of dukkha. it can get a bit technical... you know how the Dharma traditions can be
another way of forumlating the same sort of view is to say that the aim of Buddhist practice is, in fact, to become a Buddha. so, the question would..i think, naturally turn to what a Buddha is.
this is an interesting question, from several points of view, i think.
Buddha Shakyamuni was asked, rather directly, about what sort of being he was. he was asked if he was a god, he said "no". asked if he was a human, he again said "no". "well," they said, "what are you?" "Awake".
from this, we can conclude several things, depending on our understanding of the rest of the Buddhadharma. one of the things, though, which is rather independent of any particular study of Buddhism which stands out, in my view, is the negation of standard descriptive modes of being and leaving the remainder unanalyzed and unfettered by discurisve intellect.
Could Bodhisattvahood be also considered a "goal" then, since Bodhisattvas forgo enlightenment for the sake of sentient beings?
to a certain extent, yes. however, it would probably be a more apt analogy to think of this state of being as a "way station" or a "rest stop" along the journey, as the idea of "goal" seems to connote a discrete thing which complete once attained.
Another question I have is regarding nirvana. What happens after a Buddha enters mahaparinirvana? Is it a state (or statelessness) of neither being nor non-being? Or is it that mahaparinirvana is beyond description?
i think that this sort of question is going to be difficult to answer, mainly since the Buddha used two sorts of methods to describe what Nirvana was like. he used a postive description and a negative one, depending on which sort of beings he was talking to. for all intents and purposes, Nirvana, is the ceasing of the discursive intellect and the arising of primordial Wisdom and Compassion in a total non-dual paradigm, a sense of awareness aware of awareness.
in many descriptions, Buddha explains that the passions are like a fire in our mind, our minds are on fire with our passions and fetters and, in this sort of description, Nirvana is described as the extinguishing of the fires of the mind.
however, these descriptions are merely verbal placeholders of an experiential state of being wherein such descriptions have no place to attach.
i suspect that only a Buddha would be able to explain it fully... and even if that were the case, we, not being Buddhas just quite yet, may not have the ability to fully grasp what is being communicated to us. so, for all intents and purposes, that may mean that Nirvana, per se, is something which our descriptions and explanations of only outline, not describe.
of course, there are a variety of views to be found within the Buddhist tradition on subjects just like this. as such, our views here may not match views which other Buddhists have
metta,
~v