Not at all. This is where the ancient Stoics differ importantly from modern popular stoicism.We're part of an unimaginably huge universe and fall into despair because it's not what we think it should be. It fails to meet our expectations. Doesn't it seem we're a bit too full of ourselves? — Ciceronianus the White
In terms of costs and solving engineering problems the matter is, of course, tremendous.So you'd be very surprised if life didn't exist elsewhere, but think proving it; knowing for sure is a trivial matter. — counterpunch
That's just so pathetic.If the only reason for space exploration is to prove the Abrahamic religions wrong then they will have served yet another useful purpose!
Such a thing exists:What I want is a philosophical exposition of Buddhism at the level of basic assumptions. — Constance
This can mean so many things, be taken so many ways.Ethics/morality, it seems to me, is about caring for oneself by making the world a better place. — tim wood
If life is all about boosting one's ego (and there's no indication that it isn't), then one could be lying in a ditch and still think himself king.Call it a kind of group care that flowers from the root through individuals. Or the lesson from the dialogues: no one really chooses to be bad (meaning that no one who really knows or understands anything chooses to be bad) because ultimately the bad man hurts himself.
This isn't what the world seems to function like. I know many assholes whose corner of the world looks very nice, expensively furnished.The a**hole over there is not your warrant to be one, because if you go that way, then you're one and the world, your corner of it, goes to hell.
People who advocate turning the other cheek are people who never practice it themselves. Jesus didn't.There is more power in your turn the other cheek than is dreamt of....
If they're not compulsive, how can they be relevant?That is, morality/ethics is a set of rules, variously based depending on the system. As such in themselves no compulsive force at all.
What do you mean?So it seems to me that in dismissing them, you have simply not understood them.
....all that, and upon finding out what morality is, one might also find another domain to which “getting away with” has power. — Mww
Like I saidTo correctly judge something it's wise to first find out what that things is. It appears you have not done that. So the question: what is it exactly that you suppose ethics/morality to be? — tim wood
andthings that by traditional morality, would be considered immoral or otherwise bad. — baker
Why bother about other people,their lives and their property, when you can get away with endangering and damaging it. — baker
In other words, the behavior of my neighbors is advantageous. They are part of a group that protects them. I am sure they consider their behavior moral.Groups have a much better chance of survival than individuals. Moral conduct by the majority is necessary for those groups to form. Therefore moral conduct is evolutionarily advantageous on a whole. — khaled
In that one cannot meaningfully hope to become free from suffering (ie. become enlightened) if one occasionally or regularly drinks alcohol or smokes pot. Or robs banks. Or kill animals for sport. And so on.The question is, what practical good is there in virtuous behavior regarding liberation and enlightenment? — Constance
The value of virtuous behavior is something one needs to experience for oneself.And here it is the eight fold path: right view, right resolve, right speech, right conduct, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right meditation. Well, there are a hundred ways I can think of to direct a person to a disciplined life, but the bottom line is not the virtuous behavior, is it?
To the best of my knowledge, there is no religion or spirituality that actually contains the tenet "All paths lead to the top of the mountain. All paths are equally good." Rather, this is a bit of ecumenical meta-religious/meta-spiritual doctrine that no existing religion/spirituality supports.The point is not this. It is liberation. How this is achieved is not a singular path, though all paths are of the same nature, which is a turning away from the many engagements towards a rather mystical unity.
This is awfully general. It works for, say, Nazi ideology as well: that, too, was a turning away from everydayness.That term mystical is mine, and is one reason I don't care to ask the Buddha if it is authorized: when one turns away from everydayness, one takes normal standards of interpreting the world away as well.
That's a bit like saying, "Oh, just get your own jumbo jet!"One can rightly say, there is only one virtue, and that is achieving the extraordinary state of mind, not to put too fine a point on it, achieved by the Buddha.
My reasons for distancing myself from Buddhism are several, and complex, and have nothing per se to do with Early Buddhism.If the Buddha was an extraordinary phenomenologist (your linked essay) then why not just do what phenomenologists do with Buddhism in the world and forget what is natural or foreign?
Reminds me of this:The Snow Man — Ciceronianus the White
One of the perspectives that one can derive from Early Buddhism is that an insight into rebirth follows from an insight into the workings of karma. As in: There is karma, therefore, there is rebirth. Which is why rebirth is not a metaphysical idea the way heaven, hell, etc. in Christianity or Hinduism are, or Platonic forms.To me, rebirth is a metaphysical idea — Constance
It's difficult to have a conversation on a very specific topic when not all involved are familiar enough with Buddhist doctrine. And it's too much to try to bring in all relevant references and clarify all points of contention at once.only to be approached by first observing the world.
The thing is that in Early Buddhism, one wouldn't start off with a catechism-like set of doctrines. But, quite on the contrary, start exactly where one is at the moment.I mean, this is how metaphysics has any reasonable standing at all.
For this, you'd actually need to know what Early Buddhism is, which you don't seem to.I am not interested in early Buddhism any more than Kierkegaard is interested in Christendom.
I look to its essential features, and by essential I mean what is conducive to liberation and enlightenment, the brass ring of all Eastern philosophy.
No, rather it's that you simply don't know the suttas. You're dismissing something without even knowing what it is. You're tailoring Early Buddhism after Christianity. I'm trying to show that it's not like it.I am trying to accommodate baker, but he wants Buddhism to stay in the comfort of the 650 BCE's. This is an extraordinary time, granted, and but there was a deficit in interpretative language to explain it.
Further evidence that you don't know the suttas, yet are dismissing them.IT being meditation and the place of realization deep in the interior of the self.
In fact you do, with your implicit dogmatism, in the way you approach religious epistemology.I lean more toward Hinduism.
This is actually more like what cradle Buddhists in traditionally Buddhist countries (and similarly, cradle Hindus) believe about rebirth/reincarnation and karma -- that it's a kind of grand metaphysical justice system which also provides people with the purpose and meaning of life and makes all the suffering seem worthwhile.As I see it, there is only one basis for belief in reincarnation, and that is the metaethical argument that I have tried make clear several times here and there. Put briefly, the world is ethically impossible without something like reincarnation and samsara. It is a complex argument, but it is a metaphysical one that moves from the world to what must be the case given the way the world is, adn the world demands an explanatory extension where observation cannot go. Pretty simple, really: Why, are we born to suffer and die? is a question that haunts us. The question then goes to suffering and I have put this forth earlier elsewhere more than once. If you like, because it IS after all THE issue of the world and the self, we can discuss this.
You painted the internal surface of the horn, but not the external one, which is bigger, even if just infinitesimally. How is this accounted for?If you fill the horn, have you not essentially painted the surface with a finite amount of paint? So it would seem that the surface cannot be painted, yet in fact is paintable. — tim wood
Freedom of religion as freedom of delusion?One may choose to believe the words attributed to the Buddha or Jesus Christ, or not, that is the beauty of freedom of religion. — Present awareness
So you're optimistic like that? Tell me more!So all our philosophical resistance is futile.
— baker
In the short term? Yes.
In the long term? Maybe. — Gus Lamarch
No, for me here, it has nothing to do with "offences to the purity of the Buddha's words". You keep bringing this up, but you're barking up the wrong tree. I'm not a Buddhist, I can't be offended this way.But really, it should be with ideas, not resentment over offences to the purity of the Buddha's words. — Constance
*sigh*This latter is more like a cult, like being hung up on Jesus' words, as the Bible tells us.
If you don't even understand the relevance of virtuous behavior for epistemic purposes, then I'm not sure what to tell you.This is not the point. The point is to understand and have the explanatory resources, not to recall, but to reason out.
Post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy.If happiness results in sadness, why be happy? — synthesis
This sounds a bit like the "curse of knowledge/expertise":humans, possessed of a more complex language, should be capable of understanding languages that are simpler, in fact too simple, like animal languages. Hence, The Too Simple Paradox Of Language. — TheMadFool
Yet the world has worked that way for millennia.No. It's called being silenced by a mob. — Book273
This is simply small town mentality, it has been around for millennia. It just seems more egregious when it's broadcatsed on tv and the internetz.I live in a society where a man on a TV politics talk show was told by a member of the audience that his opinion was illegitimate because of his skin colour; and that woman thought she was in the right - because the man was white. I live in a country pervaded by a form of reverse identity politics - that clothes itself in the garb of moral righteousness while stereotyping people, and discriminating against them on that basis. — counterpunch
And back when it was only the elites who had access to higher education. It seems that the elites somehow figured out what is proper to say and what isn't and didn't make much of a fuss about it, or settled it with a duel.Lurking behind this entire discussion is the question “what is the proper relationship b/w the university and the government?”, and that is a question that is very old, reaching all the way back to when the university was called the “academy”. — Todd Martin
Plebeification on steroids.Freedom imposed by law with legal penalties for not obeying its strictures is tyranny in double-think. — unenlightened
I suspect that the free speech clause in the US might have been actually motivated in a similar way as freedom of religion.So there are limits to free speech. On what grounds? — Isaac
It's not possible to do so anyway, so the whole idea is a non-starter. Deplatforming would be possible if there would exist neutral communication avenues, a no-man's land where everyone would equally belong and not belong. But there is no such place.You don't get to delegitimise, shout down, drown out and de-platform other people — counterpunch
Yes. It's called "being civilized".How Kafkaesque! Always on trial for a crime you might commit by saying something someone else might find offensive. — counterpunch
The early Buddhist teachings on karma and rebirth are _not_ mere "historical trappings".Remember, I am explicitly trying to think outside of the historical belief systems of Buddhism. — Constance
You're trying to force the issue. More below.I only want to know what meditation is at the level of basic assumptions.
I don't know what happens in that event, because what you describe is some new-agey meditation mishamash that has nothing to do with Buddhism.I mean, what really happens in this event in which one sits, ceases thinking, wanting, anticipating, and does this rigorously over time?
Well, as long as those self-declared "Buddhists" are also New Agers or practitioners of corporate mindfulness (that's a term, look it up).Buddhists famously want the purity of the event to be untainted by presuppositions,
And now they are gong to actively, governmentally champion stifling free speech!If the government has decided that universities need a "free speech champion" then free speech has been being stifled for a long time. — Book273
And yet they rule the world.The dogmatic view of certain religions kills the individual and transforms the herd's view in such a way that their actions, reactions, and emotions are almost made unconscious. — Gus Lamarch
Yes. If it doesn't hurt, it ain't the truth.That the more difficult something is to believe the more “genuine” or “correct” it is.
A morphing from “Truth can hurt” to “What hurts is the truth”. — khaled
I think this "just be true to yourself" (BTW, funny how people love to quote that line from Hamlet, when it's said by the one of the dumbest characters in the play) is not a lie, but a domination strategy and a self-defense strategy, and I suspect that people are aware of this.In fact I'd add 'the self' itself. As in 'true to yourself, 'not being yourself'... As if there were some sacred fixed point from which certain feelings rebelliously deviate. — Isaac
The Santa Claus story is an age-appropriate strategy to instill in children this hope, so that they can later on become sugar daddies and sugar mamas themselves (such as to their parents, ideally), and to not have qualms about looking for a sugar daddy or sugar mama and to use such relationships to their advantage.Santa Claus was good while he lasted, but the hope for some sort of imaginary gift-giver, some sort of sugar-daddy, lingers on. — Bitter Crank
Oh god, no.you are born and you receive an education, and you become this education, and once you have been duly assimilated into a culture with its language and history, and then, there is your private history that ends up becoming a repository for future possibilities, the plot and character development, if you will, of the narrative you will write into existence.
But the rub: this is the way of everyday living, and everyone lives this life of unfolding affairs with implicit trust and unquestioned confidence, and one is entirely absorbed in the grand narrative. — Constance
Eh ...?Then one opens a copy of Heidegger's Being and Time, and begins to question, and if s/he is lucky, or unlucky, there is an epiphanic moment of startling awareness that there is a discontinuity in our questioning self and the world that is there to meet questions at the basic level. /.../ Most are not disturbed by this, that is, until they start reading Heidegger.
If you like to question basic assumptions, then how about qualifying the above as a mere assumption and questioning it?For me, it is the question, "why are we born to suffer and die?"
