That is why, in the case of Buddhism, I feel more inclined to view it as a philosophy, because, in studying Buddhism, I could never detect anything supernatural in it, especially if one goes back to its original ideas in Theravada which is most probably the closest you can get to the Buddha's teachings. — Daniel C
The Buddhist attitude of ‘take it or leave it’ leaves no room for questioning, critique, or least of all, reform.
— praxis
Buddhism has been in a continuous state of evolution and reform since its inception. — Wayfarer
If you read the Buddhist suttas, many are in question-and-answer format. — Wayfarer
you've also got those people in old Greek temples reciting prayers to the Form of the Good, doing ritual shadow puppet shows to reenact the Allegory of the Cave, and listening to sermons that recite passages from the Republic... in that world, is Platonism a philosophy or a religion? — Pfhorrest
. I, therefore, have to change my position as far as Buddhism is concerned and view it as a religion. But, we are still in the process of seeking criteria which can be used to distinguish a philosophy from a religion. Perhaps you have more ideas in this regard which you want to share. — Daniel C
Another point about Buddhism, is that its model is one of 'imparting an understanding' rather than 'laying down the law'. The first element in the Buddhist eightfold path is 'samma ditthi' meaning 'right view' or 'right understanding'. That is subtly different to the Christian 'orthodoxy' which means 'right belief' or 'right worship'. This is because it contains a cognitive element, i.e. the aspirant needs to arrive at a correct understanding, not simply recite articles of faith and believe in them (although in practice there are many convergences). — Wayfarer
some factions of philosophy have a somewhat religious devotion to denying any resemblance to a religion. — unenlightened
For some time now I've been thinking about whether it is possible to indicate specific criteria to be used in determining if a "coherent set of ideas" is to be classified as a philosophy or a religion. — Daniel C
What brought me to this is the case of Buddhism. — Daniel C
For some time now I've been thinking about whether it is possible to indicate specific criteria to be used in determining if a "coherent set of ideas" is to be classified as a philosophy or a religion. What brought me to this is the case of Buddhism. When you start doing only a little research on this matter, the division in opinion regarding Buddhism is immediately apparent. Even among scholars of philosophy and religion there is no consensus as far as Buddhism's position is concerned. This leads me inevitably to ask about the possibility of distinguishing such criteria and to what extend consensus on their validity is possible. — Daniel C
What is religion? What is philosophy? — TheMadFool
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