What really bugs me is when they claim that they do not believe anything and that it is all "really" a matter of actual experience; I think that is delusory nonsense if it claims anything beyond the ability to know whether one is in a relaxed and happy state of mind or the opposite. — Janus
Of the buddhists I've spoken with, there seems to be something peculiar - fishy - about the way they talk about causality. Karma. — creativesoul
I agree - whenever karma is used to rationalise misfortune or blame, it's superstitious fatalism. The only beneficial aspect of believing in karma is as a positive corrective, i.e. the realisation that whatever you do will come back to you. — Wayfarer
But then even that means that if you are raped, then you raped before. — Coben
instead of promoting resigned powerlessness, the early Buddhist notion of karma focused on the liberating potential of what the mind is doing with every moment. Who you are — what you come from — is not anywhere near as important as the mind's motives for what it is doing right now. Even though the past may account for many of the inequalities we see in life, our measure as human beings is not the hand we've been dealt, for that hand can change at any moment. We take our own measure by how well we play the hand we've got. If you're suffering, you try not to continue the unskillful mental habits that would keep that particular karmic feedback going. If you see that other people are suffering, and you're in a position to help, you focus not on their karmic past but your karmic opportunity in the present: Someday you may find yourself in the same predicament that they're in now, so here's your opportunity to act in the way you'd like them to act toward you when that day comes.
This belief that one's dignity is measured, not by one's past, but by one's present actions, flew right in the face of the Indian traditions of caste-based hierarchies, and explains why early Buddhists had such a field day poking fun at the pretensions and mythology of the brahmans. As the Buddha pointed out, a brahman could be a superior person not because he came out of a brahman womb, but only if he acted with truly skillful [i.e. virtuous] intentions. — Thanissaro Bikhu
I understand 'philosophy' in the broad sense of meaning 'love~wisdom' - the aim of it is a practical discipline in pursuit of a state of being which encompasses these qualities. Buddhism, and some schools of ancient Greek philosophy, both support that kind of approach (eudomonia and virtue ethics, in particular.) — Wayfarer
But I still think that left to our own devices, we won't necessarily follow the path of 'love~wisdom', which is a demanding path to follow. — Wayfarer
As far the experiential claims of Buddhism are concerned, these can be and have been validated by many Buddhist practitioners. Certainly faith is necessary in some respects, especially for the times when you loose sight of the goal, which does happen. But there is a kind of 'inner evidence' that becomes apparent from the practice meditation and the disciplines which support it, even if we're not all 'remote mountain hermits' the Fields of Gold think we must be. — Wayfarer
You experience that yourself and you don't need any "authority" to "validate" it for you. If you do...well...I would question the authenticity of your purported self-knowledge. — Janus
I often reflect that the aim of secular culture is to provide a safe space for us to do what we like. — Wayfarer
the thing with religious or spiritual practice is that you have to believe something or there is no incentive or direction to your practice. — Janus
Loy goes on to argue that the view that suffering such as that undergone by Holocaust victims could be attributed in part to the karmic ripenings of those victims is "fundamentalism, which blames the victims and rationalizes their horrific fate," and that this is "something no longer to be tolerated quietly. It is time for modern Buddhists and modern Buddhism to outgrow it" by revising or discarding the teachings on karma.[133]
Join a philosophy forum? — Wayfarer
I find the idea of rebirth utterly irrelevant, unless you were to place your faith in an Atman which persists and aspires to become one with Brahmin (from which it was never separate in the first place). In that sense I think the Vedanta is actually more coherent philosophically than Buddhism. — Janus
Of the buddhists I've spoken with, there seems to be something peculiar - fishy - about the way they talk about causality. Karma.
— creativesoul
I agree - whenever karma is used to rationalise misfortune or blame, it's superstitious fatalism. The only beneficial aspect of believing in karma is as a positive corrective, i.e. the realisation that whatever you do will come back to you. Beyond that it easily morphs into fatalism. — Wayfarer
The idea conflicts with everyday events/facts/happenings/actuality. Good things happen to bad people and bad things happen to good people. — creativesoul
It begins and ends at the uncharted territory of marks on paper/screen. — creativesoul
The idea conflicts with everyday events/facts/happenings/actuality. Good things happen to bad people and bad things happen to good people.
— creativesoul
things often don't turn out in ways that seem right. — Wayfarer
It begins and ends at the uncharted territory of marks on paper/screen.
— creativesoul
Also, the Buddha's day, nothing was written down, so it couldn't have begun there..... — Wayfarer
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