I don't know that all Buddhists reject the caste system or that it is a tenet of the faith to do so — thewonder
And that makes sense to you?
— praxis
Sure, in the context. There is not a single thing that exists independently or in isolation from everything else. — Wayfarer
Where does this thing exist? Let me guess, it exists in a ‘formless realm’.
— praxis
No, it exists in relationship. — Wayfarer
Perhaps I shouldn't be so negative. What is there to gain by only seeing what is negative about other worldviews? — thewonder
Beware Siddartha’s “middle way”. Buddha led the most foundational times of his life to the extremes, in both extreme opulence and extreme poverty. Surely that factored into his enlightenment more than any middle way. — NOS4A2
Through the round of many births I roamed
without reward,
without rest,
seeking the house-builder.
Painful is birth
again & again.
House-builder, you're seen!
You will not build a house again.
All your rafters broken,
the ridge pole destroyed,
gone to the Unformed, the mind
has come to the end of craving.
Shooting from the hip, here, until @Wayfarer checks in, I'd say that "ignorance" can refer to not knowing everything, or not knowing anything. Socrates apparently achieved what I think is the kind of knowledge in question when he finally decoded the Oracle's message to him that he was the wisest man, in understanding that he alone was the man who knew that he did not know. Perhaps Buddha recognized the same thing, and then relaxed.Removing ignorance! — hillsofgold
What if all consciousness is set up this way? To end suffering, we have to become know-it-alls? — hillsofgold
So here's what I'm getting at: Is it too outlandish to think that the pitfall of achieving enlightenment is that it requires that we become unable to ever be ignorant about ANYTHING? — hillsofgold
I wonder just what the Buddha had to do to his brain — hillsofgold
My impression for the longest time was that it was the latter - in my encounters and studies with buddhist teachers in the past, they tended to steer clear of making many science-contradicting statements and stuck with matters related to mind, suffering, etc. Even the Dalai Lama recently said that if Buddism is found to contradict science, buddhists must change their beliefs. I agree with that, but from reading the sutras, it's not clear that the Buddha would have agreed. Perhaps not for a rational reason, but again because to admit he was wrong, that there are things he does not know, is not possible for him or it would change some necessary condition in his neurology, would destroy his enlightenment. Again conjecture, but I think I've made my point based on making the premise that he did in fact end suffering...Some say that the Buddha knows everything that can be known; others that he knew everything that was conducive to the attainment of Nirvāṇa (the cessation of all suffering.) O
I found that suspicious as well, that the religion of his place and time just happened to be what he claimed to be the truth. I lend way for the possibility that some as-of-yet-not-understood scientific oddity is reincarnating us all and that attaining enlightenment involves accessing that, but I think back to that quote made by...some scientist (Neil Degrasse Tyson maybe??) asking what's more likely, that nature bent its rules for something to happen, or that some one misunderstood something. Perhaps the buddha understood his own mind so well, so perfectly, he thought to extend that confidence to the natural world at large. Or again, maybe he couldn't help it?But both Hindus and Buddhists seek the state variously known as mokṣa, vimukti, nirodha, or Nirvāṇa, signifying release or escape from the endless cycle of birth and death.
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