The loss of a family member is an event, and an event cannot be overcome, only accepted. But I am assuming you meant to ask "how to overcome the grief of loosing your family in an earthquake?", which I will simplify to "how to overcome the grief of losing a loved one?" — Tzeentch
I'd like to add that we are now talking about natural events, like earthquakes and death, which cannot be considering evil, which was the original topic. I don't mind the detour but I still wanted to acknowledge that. — Tzeentch
Not necessarily. Some methods of ‘stopping evil’ contribute greatly to suffering. War, for instance, does not ‘emit a good’. — Possibility
If the Great Nintendo exists and is good, why did he create Bowser, and why did he put those stars in such hard to reach places? — Mario
But that still means the grief exists. It's real. We wouldn't talk about "overcoming" a mere fiction. — Echarmion
Why aren't people born perfect Buddhists? — Echarmion
From the perspective of an omniscient and omnipotent God, there are no natural events. Every event, and every consequence of every event, is intentional. — Echarmion
What the story about the child is supposed to illustrate is that grief and suffering are illusory in nature. When one stops thinking about them, they stop to exist. — Tzeentch
Who says they aren't? — Tzeentch
Terms like "omniscient", "omnibenevolent", "omnipotent", they are paradoxical in nature and make little sense to me. Though, I don't believe a "creator" necessarily needs to be any of those three things. — Tzeentch
Not necessarily. Some methods of ‘stopping evil’ contribute greatly to suffering. War, for instance, does not ‘emit a good’.
— Possibility
That's begging the question though. If war contributes greatly to suffering, is it "stopping evil"? — Echarmion
A Christian might argue that suffering is sometimes beneficial but why would God not turn off the capacity to suffer in cases when it is clearly not beneficial. — TheHedoMinimalist
1- mans evil is caused by his freedom not by god
2- natures evil is necessary for creation or part of gods higher plan
3- god helps stop evil sometimes if you pray.
4- god gives justice in the afterlife — OmniscientNihilist
To briefly summarize this argument I will use an example my teacher gave me: would you rathe have a rock as a pet, who cannot move or sin, or a horse that can or will run away as a pet. The answer seems to be the horse, despite it's ability to sin, appears to be inherently more valuable because it has the free will to act, unlike the immobile rock. This is how humankind is, free to sin and yet more valuable due to said ability. Thus God allows us to have free will, knowing evil will happen as a result, because we are more valuable creatures for such a trait. — robbiefrost
Whether there can be love without attachment is a valid question, to which a Buddhist would answer in the affirmative. To explain how and why is perhaps better left to actual Buddhist teachers and not me.
To the question of how to deal with destructive forces, I would tend towards a "turn the other cheek" approach. The assumption is that all men are Good in essence, but are corrupted by their material existence. By giving the right example one may cause them to see the error of their ways. An "eye for an eye" or "fight fire with fire" approach are fundamentally flawed as solutions, though.
However, understanding attachment and the cause of suffering doesn't mean one may never act to preserve something, like in the act of self-defense. One would simply have to accept the suffering that may come along with such an act.
Lastly, I would disagree that loss or separation is the root cause of suffering, since without attachment there is no sense of loss or separation. — Tzeentch
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