It's an idealistic idea, but hard to implement in the real world. Jains have been known to sweep the road ahead of their feet to avoid crushing the souls of ants. They also wear masks to avoid inhaling mosquitoes. But what about the souls of those innocent plants they rip from Mother Earth, boil to death, and gnash with their teeth?Despite this downside, Jainism is all about ahimsa (non-violence) and by making this their primary cause they effectively thwart any possibility of real-world violence between people - hell is for the after life and not this one. — TheMadFool
Unfortunately because having a place of torture (hell) as part of your religion amounts to condoning and accepting extreme forms of violence. — TheMadFool
Give it time. If it ever becomes popular enough. — Outlander
It's an idealistic idea, but hard to implement in the real world. — Gnomon
For example, a surgeon has to do harm in order to do good. — Gnomon
I think for serious consideration, if violence is the aspect of Jainism in view, then a somewhat careful and considered laying out of just what violence means to a Jain is a necessary preliminary step. The link helps, but unless all Jains die shortly after birth of starvation, there seem some contradictory elements. — tim wood
Not necessarily; if they believe that this is simply the nature of reality, then there is no question of condoning or not condoning, but the injunction would just be to accept what must be accepted. — Janus
Ancient arguments in favor of slavery were mostly fatalistic : "that's just the way it is". But modern abolition movements were successful in changing traditional social systems, not so much due to philosophical arguments, but to concurrent technological substitutes for slaves (machines). Even though most tech-advanced nations today have officially abolished slavery, those with sluggish economies and low technology are still unofficially dealing with black-market slavery.granted that this dark chapter in human history lasted so long for the same reason you think Jain ahimsa won't work (too idealistic) but don't forget that slavery has been abolished (at least on paper). — TheMadFool
But modern abolition movements were successful in changing traditional social systems, not so much due to philosophical arguments, but to concurrent technological substitutes for slaves (machines). — Gnomon
Idealistic proposals are fine, as long as they are followed by Pragmatic implementation. The Quakers are also a non-violent people. They were involved in the anti-slavery movement and Amnesty International. Their practical theology got results in social improvements. But their inwardly-focused religion has lost ground to more heavenly-focused and openly-evangelical Protestant fundamentalists.I take that as a good refutation of the argument that's predicated on some proposal being too idealistic. — TheMadFool
I take that as a good refutation of the argument that's predicated on some proposal beingtoo idealistic. — TheMadFool — TheMadFool
Accepting reality is one thing and inventing one is a different thing. — TheMadFool
Sure, we might say they were inventing reality, but that doesn't have any impact upon the fact that they believed they were realizing and accepting reality — Janus
You mean a perceptual part? — Janus
However, imagining a world of eternal torment (hell), in my humble opinion, while possibly indicating our utter dread of suffering, also, quite unfortunately, reveals that each and everyone of us has, within us, the seed of extreme violence. — TheMadFool
"It is not considered as a suicide by Jain scholars because it is not an act of passion..." — Wikipedia: Skallekhana
I didn't say that, I said the Jains (like the Buddhists) thought that hell or the hells are part of reality that must be accepted. — Janus
If hell is real, then the religions might believe that they have a duty to inform. You may not believe it, but their warning of it is not in the least an act of violence. They would ask that if someone heeded the warning and thereby avoided hell, then how could that be an act of violence? — Wayfarer
I think ‘violence’ is the wrong term here. Imagine you eat something poisonous and become violently ill. Are you ‘the victim of violence’ in that case? — Wayfarer
As far as I know Jains and Buddhists don't generally think that what exists on the earth, or the earthly plane, exhausts the totality of reality. — Janus
Unfortunately because having a place of torture (hell) as part of your religion amounts to condoning and accepting extreme forms of violence. This makes it possible for people to turn violent in the name of religion - as a form of (divine) justice for instance. — TheMadFool
I think ‘violence’ is the wrong term here. Imagine you eat something poisonous and become violently ill. Are you ‘the victim of violence’ in that case?
— Wayfarer
What would be the correct term then? Ahimsa = non-violence.
Also, as a matter of clarification, harming oneself is a different kettle of fish. Don't criticize the rule by stressing on the exceptions. — TheMadFool
Maybe it just siphons that potentiality of violence because retribution happens afterlife. The judgement is outsourced so Jains can keep the faith and perform ahimsa here and now. The belief in hell might counteract a natural propensity for retributive acts (an eye for an eye). — Nils Loc
In Jain and Buddhist religion, there is no judging God who punishes evil-doers, so the bad karma that leads them to hell is solely their own doing.
I think your conception that the idea of hell is 'violent' is mistaken.
If the worst of mankind - mass murderers, genocidal dictators - go to the same fate as the best, then where is the logic in that? You're perfectly entitled to believe that life is a purely physical phenomenon and that when the body dies there is no further consequence of action. But the religious traditions don't see it that way.
I've noticed this book on the subject. — Wayfarer
In Western Christian theology, grace is "the love and mercy given to us by God because God desires us to have it, not necessarily because of anything we have done to earn it". — Wikipedia
You are still failing to try to put yourself in their mindset. From their point of view they were not inventing anything, but accepting what they believed had been revealed to them by sages. — Janus
So you're saying hell contributes to the practice of ahimsa by appeasing people's desire for justice for the wrongs that are done to them with the promise of divine retribution? — TheMadFool
In Jain and Buddhist religion, there is no judging God who punishes evil-doers, so the bad karma that leads them to hell is solely their own doing. — Wayfarer
To wit, I eat the flesh of innocent animals that have been harmed without their consent. But their protein eventually becomes an integral component of my own body. — Gnomon
No, I don't feel the fear of slaughtered animals, not because I'm immoral, but because I am not very Empathic. As an ethical philosophical position, like most humans, I don't consider food animals to be Moral Agents or Moral Subjects. Of course, in our industrialized society, I have the luxury of leaving the messy killing & cleaning to specialists.As does the fear they experienced, the chemicals pumped in to them by industrial farming and so on. Not trying to lecture you about what you eat, but just a reminder, the protein comes with a price tag. — Hippyhead
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