Think about it this way, if everyone in the world mastered their desires and practiced Buddhist asceticism, then we wouldn't have made it very far as a species. — Wallows
so it wasn't a lie, but some crazy neurological thing.... — hillsofgold
I replied to your post and it was deleted or removed by glitch or something — hillsofgold
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? — hillsofgold
Spam filter false positive. Now released. — Baden
You might have to allow for the fact that science is not all-knowing, either. — Wayfarer
For all of the Buddha's megalomania — hillsofgold
Buddhism is deep and profound and I've always held way for the possibility that it's the only route to enlightenment that takes you all the way there... — hillsofgold
Not just distracting, but I find I really consider something if it is presented as simply the case. In contrast with another type of presentatino where the person introduces other possible interpretations and explantions. It becomes more of an encounter. I am really hit by this view, test it out. I suppose this could be merely personal.I suppose I understand where you're coming from in that presentations with too many qualifiers are distracting, if that's what you mean — hillsofgold
it sounds like you haven't read many of the sutras — hillsofgold
Perhaps Buddha recognized the same thing, and then relaxed. — tim wood
I agree there does seem to be a psychology to how we tend to pay more attention if some one sounds confident or presents something as indisputable, as fact. I just try to be careful not to let that psychology kind of carry me off such that I get lost in some one else's imperfect world view. — hillsofgold
Yes, and there is a difference, I think, between a lecture and a one on one discussion, especially one carried out over time.Like you said, those kind of presentations can be good some times but if you had to regularly spend time around some one like that, it would seem more like a character flaw — hillsofgold
That's certainly possible. In the case of Buddhism, I think the Buddha came up with an answer. It may or may not have led to a perfect unwavering state without suffering, but still was complete, for humans. The problem I have with it could be summed up concisely as 'he severed off parts of being human, he made himself less, and I find people who have repeated what he did to be unpleasant to be around, because on some level they hate the emotional body.'Frankly I think the Buddha had a character flaw, but I'm not sure he could have gotten rid of it and still retained the state of mind, or non-state-of-mind or what-have-you, that he was in. — hillsofgold
So it's a difficult issue to interpret, but I'm inclined to think that most 'common-sense' analyses are going to miss the mark.
— Wayfarer
So, commonsense analyses "miss the mark" and obfuscation doesn't? Where would that leave us, philosophically speaking? — Janus
One could be a Buddhist and not end up as a hermit. Most don't.There's a different lifestyle choice being made between those who spend time around other people, and those who choose to be hermits, or who choose to learn the buddhist way which if followed through leads towards being a hermit — hillsofgold
I don't think so. And further if you are in contact with a lot of media and read, you've probably come in contact with a great many ideas, and they also run underground in anything from Star Wars, to mindfulness workshops as team building, to novels...and so on. It might be better for those of us already exposed to actually face head on consciously what is in the muck of everyday semi-conscious modern life and see if we actually want it. And no I don't think that a discussion or a lecture stains us. We can process ideas. Consciously we can do this and we do this in dreams. Further, there is no untainted life, unless you want to make yourself a hermit. All your social relations and professional relations, especially ongoing ones, are dipping you repeatedly in paradigm and judgments and beliefs and attitudes (about morals, ontology, epistemology, what the self is and more) so trying to stay clean really would require the hermit option.One of them says that living in society is like being in a cloth dying vat and that if you stay in too long you'll never come out clean. Isn't that essentially what happens every time we "try on" some one else's ideas? — hillsofgold
Very true. True hermits in buddhism are very few and far between and more often than not their hermitages are only "retreats" of a few weeks, months, at most a year. It's just important to remember that traditionally, as far as the Buddha's teachings in the sutras are concerned, seclusion is the goal, a vital part of the journey, and should be done by monks more and more often until the final retreat during which one attains enlightenment. One who can remain secluded in pursuit of enlightenment and no longer needs a master is known in the sutras as having "stood on his own in the Teaching." -Advice to Venerable Punna SutraOne could be a Buddhist and not end up as a hermit. Most don't. — Coben
Good point. I'd surmise that (see there's my qualifier) pretending we're thinking only our own thoughts at the same time as we're reading, attending lectures, speaking with friends etc is an exercise in arrogance. So long as that stuff is getting in, better to keep letting more stuff in and grow that way. I would also say that some people need outside information coming in slower, and in smaller doses. They shouldn't be recluses, but they might not be ready to be full on socialites.It might be better for those of us already exposed to actually face head on consciously what is in the muck of everyday semi-conscious modern life and see if we actually want it. — Coben
Agreed - any encounters with the world, be it with people, with nature, let us work with our problems in a tangible, real way. But they also carry us away from wherever we were and it's good to recognize that. That going with the flow in life and doing your best to manage it CAN work, but it's not your flow, it's not necessarily going to take you right where you need to go, and if you need to go somewhere different from most people, it'll be hard to find a flow that works, however diligently you try to navigate it. You might wind up more lost than you started out.And it is often easier to chew on these things when they show up on the outside. — Coben
If it were commonsense we wouldn’t need a religious authority to obfuscate it for us. In other words, religious authority is based on access to uncommon knowledge, therefore there must always be uncommon knowledge. It seems to be an essential aspect of religiosity. — praxis
there must be an illusion of uncommon knowledge. — Janus
The thought I’ve recently arrived at and found disturbing is that spiritual tradition may have an implicit, and explicit in some cases, disposition to obfuscate. Unfortunately, the true spiritual teacher is almost vanishingly rare. — praxis
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