no textual basis — baker
And to ordinary people.That said people attribute all sorts of shite to Socrates or Plato or Nietzsche or Einstein or MLK too. — StreetlightX
How is it that so many people feel no qualms about ascribing words to the Buddha for which they have no textual basis to assume he actually said those things or something like them? — baker
What is it about Buddhism that seems to invite so much ignorant but confident misrepresentation or even invention?
What is it about Buddhism that seems to invite so much ignorant but confident misrepresentation or even invention? — baker
Certainly, there are text-critical issues, as with any text, and esp. with older ones. I am in no way suggesting that the authorship and authenticity of the Pali Canon (or any other religious scripture) is a matter that can easily be resolved, a trifle.I think in the first place this may have to do with the fact that it is impossible to establish with 100% certainty which quotes can be attributed to the historical Buddha.
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Fourth, Buddhist teachings may also have been distorted for political reasons. — Apollodorus
And possibly don't even know about.Second, the Buddhist texts form a large corpus that few Westerners bother to read.
Do read my post above yours. — baker
Does that mean that we can attribute to him whatever we want to? — baker
Even despite that, however, posters admonishing you to 'live fully in the present moment' can be safely assigned to the domain of 'fake Buddha quotes'. — Wayfarer
Granted, I've observed similar with Hindus and the Vedas: They confidently insist that the Vedas say this or that, but couldn't provide a reference if their life depended on it. Not to mention how deeply offended they feel that someone would request an actual textual reference, rather than just taking their word for gold — baker
I'm just completely amazed by their confidence, and I wonder what role it plays in spiritual development.I don't say people can attribute whether they want; well actually they can, but we don't have to take them seriously. — Janus
Modern misattributions are obviously even further removed both temporally and culturally, but nonetheless a misattribution is a misattribution, and unfortunately since he wrote nothing we have no way of determining just what is and what is not misattributing what was said by Gautama. That said, if we take the earliest texts as authoritative then we should be able to clearly identify anything which does not tally with those. — Janus
The gist of it is, there is probably no single authoritative version of the Buddha's teachings, in that there are parallel re-tellings of many of the suttas (sayings) in various dialects - no 'single source of truth' has been unearthed. — Wayfarer
Ancient philosophy has to be updated to apply to 21st society. Buddha also didn't have the benefit of modern science and psychology. We do. So it would be ridiculous not to update Ancient philosophy in the light of modern psychology and learning. — Ross
Before doing so, it seems it would behoove to first look into what ancient philosophy actually said, so that we know what exactly it is that we're updating/improving. — baker
So you have thoroughly studied and realized paṭiccasamuppāda and found it lacking?
Do tell us how you improved on it! — baker
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