radarmark
Quaker-in-the-Making
Aupmanyav.. good point, like Daoism, Gautama merely taught how to free oneself. No G!d required. In much the same manner, pantheism, panenteism and panpsychism "go beyond" G!d.
Aupmanyav.. good point, like Daoism, Gautama merely taught how to free oneself. No G!d required. In much the same manner, pantheism, panenteism and panpsychism "go beyond" G!d.
I quite agree.Honestly, I continue to be surprised by the readiness with which the iteration that Gautama is an atheist gets repeated so often.
I have a bit to short a attention span for Operacasts eloquent but long posts, but I tend to agree with the first part at least. I have never heard that he actually dismissed a divinity, please do correct me if that is the case. Choosing not to talk about some things is only an indicator as to the importance of that thing to what one is talking about. So for all I know, the divine or divines might have been very important to Buddha, but not in the points he was trying to make.
"What, asks the Buddha, entitles us to believe that anyone meets Brahma face to face? Prompted by Gotama’s questions, the young brahmins concede that no living brahmin teacher claims ever to have seen Brahma face to face, nor has any living brahmin teacher’s teacher, nor has any teacher in the lineage of teachers for the past seven generations.A notion that I long subscribed to myself. ..
"What, asks the Buddha, entitles us to believe that anyone meets Brahma face to face? Prompted by Gotama’s questions, the young brahmins concede that no living brahmin teacher claims ever to have seen Brahma face to face, nor has any living brahmin teacher’s teacher, nor has any teacher in the lineage of teachers for the past seven generations.
Moreover, not even the Rishis, the ancient seers who made the Vedas available to man and whose words the brahmin priests learn and chant and transmit down through the generations, claim to have seen Brahma face to face. What we have, then, is the astonishing state of affairs in which the followers of the brahmanical religious tradition are striving towards a goal for the existence of which no one has any evidence. Their religious goal, says the Buddha, is laughable (hassaka), vain (rittaka) and empty (tucchaka)."
http://www.unm.edu/~rhayes/atheism.pdf
Could anyone, even an atheist, say it more clearly? My problem is that I internalize information. If you ask for references, then I find it very difficult to reproduce them. But if you insist, I will find more for you. As for RigVeda, the hindu creation hymn, Book 10, Hymn 129, Nasadiya Sukta, that being my favorite Rig Veda: Rig-Veda, Book 10: HYMN CXXIX. Creation., clearly says:
"Who verily knows and who can here declare it, whence it was born and whence comes this creation?
The Gods are later than this world's production. Who knows then whence it first came into being?"
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There is a school of thought in Indian philosophy that takes the gods as powerful but not omniscient and not complicit in creation. It is this understanding of the gods that is referenced in the Rig-Veda citation above.
As for the PDF article at the top of your posting, the description there of the thirteenth sutta of the Digha-Nikaya is profoundly misleading. The whole sutta is readily available on the web here --
DN 13 - Tevijja Sutta
When one reads the whole sutta, it's plain that Gotama Buddha is criticizing those Brahmins who claim encounters with Brahma while having been ill-equipped for such encounters in the first place. G.B. then goes on to explicitly describe just what is needed to encounter Brahma that such Brahmins lack: to wit --
"He then dwells pervading one quarter with a mind imbuded with compassion, likewise the second, likewise the third, likewise the fourth. Thus above, below, across, and everywhere, and to all as to himself, he dwells pervading the entire world with a mind imbuded with compassion, vast, exalted, measureless, without hostility, without ill will. 'Just as a mighty trumpeter makes himself heard without difficulty in all four directions; even so, Va̅seṭṭha, of all things that have shape or life, there is not one that he passes by or leaves aside, but regards them all with a heart set free (ceto-vimutti) though deep-felt compassion.
'This I say, Va̅seṭṭha, is the way to the state of union with Brahma̅."
It is astonishing to me that a modern writer like Richard P. Hayes should write such a wholly misleading piece like this and wholly ignore the whole last third of one of the earliest dialogues in the whole Pali tradition! The only laughable thing here is the hopelessness of typical Brahmins themselves as described in the sutta -- and the apparent ignorance or worse shown by Hayes in this article!
Operacast
Being new to the idea of posting my findings of the last 50 years onto a public forum, do I need to provide a personal background to establish credability or just plunge right in? For example:
If you substitute the phrase"the sky" for the word heaven(ancient Greek-hevn) does it change your perception of what was being said at that time?
As this forum is about the origins of Jesus, has anyone given any thought to the idea that Jesus was an Essene preacher? The Essenes were a Jewish sect that were adamantly against the Pharisees and the Sadducees (much like Jesus and his apostles) and a vast majority of Jesus' teachings mirror those of this particular sect. This theory makes the most sense to me personally, as the idea that he would be allowed to preach in synagogues without some form of education always struck me as odd. And the Essenes were monastic, so it could also explain why he seemed to drop off the map for a while.
Who is Hayes? I am not at all interested in what Hayes says. I was quoting the supposed words of Buddha... and I include myself in that as having been overhasty in feeling that Hayes was making a mistake that actually only Aupmanyav was making.