But if you say it’s the Truth that others can share the same experience, or it’s the Truth that others will have such experience if they follow such practice, then you’re not a relativist — leo
You asked: “in order for someone to be a relativist he has to believe in some kind of objective reality?”.
I said yes, a relativist believes that other beings exist besides himself, and that these beings have their own point of view, so if you agree with the earlier definition of objective reality then you should agree that a relativist believes in some kind of objective reality.
And a relativist can believe that some other people do not believe in an objective reality, but then these other people wouldn’t be relativists they would be solipsists. The relativist himself does believe that these other people exist even when he doesn’t perceive them.
A relativist believes things exist beyond himself, but he cannot claim to know that it is True otherwise he contradicts himself. He isn’t certain that there is an objective reality but he believes in one. — leo
You can say it, you can believe it, but you cannot say that it is True beyond yourself — leo
Buddhists pretend to know something that is True beyond themselves — leo
The desire to survive even the Buddhist can't do much about. — ovdtogt
So... If I believe you will experience pain by stubbing your toe then I'm not a relativist — khaled
Agree so far
Now how does this transition to: If I believe there is a McDonald's around the corner I am not a relativist or If I believe one can experience pain by stubbing one's toes I am not a relativist — khaled
Oh ok. Now what makes you think Buddhism isn't doing just that. The Buddha made no mention of objective/subjective, he simply explained how he reached Nirvana and based on the reasonable belief that others can reach it too (since they're also humans) told people how to do so. — khaled
I think we need to flesh out the difference between "Know something is True beyond oneself" and "Believe something is True beyond oneself" — khaled
they’re not saying “maybe there are other ways to reach Nirvana” — leo
“maybe for some people nirvana cannot be reached by following these truths and this path, maybe for some people it doesn’t exist” — leo
So there is no difference between the 'desire' to smoke and the 'desire' not to smoke?
No difference between smoking and not smoking? — ovdtogt
This would more fall under the 'pop' Buddhism you are referring to. This is Buddhism for people in the West who want to be happy without sacrificing their possessions. — ovdtogt
It misses the point because the point of Buddhism is to stop seeking things, — khaled
If your desire/wish is to reduce your desire (to be rich, famous....etc) and you are indeed successful — ovdtogt
You will not stop 'seeking things' if you do not 'desire' to stop that — ovdtogt
Once you truly realize the things you desire are causing your suffering you will lose your desire for these things. — ovdtogt
Reducing your fesires does. — ovdtogt
want to reduce your desires — ovdtogt
This is the problem. That you desire to reduce your desires will guarantee you fail. — khaled
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