No this is false, the main thing is to realize emptiness. — praxis
Buddhist teachers are not psychoanalysts — praxis
psychotherapy similar to modern CBT. This is not the same as phsychoanalysis. — praxis
This is just a weird and confused way of saying that religious life is spiritual and secular life is materialistic. There is no difference between East and West in this regard — praxis
I guess you've never heard of the 'hell realms' or being reborn as a scarabaeinae (dung beetle). — praxis
To sum, your heart appears to have been pierced by the seductive arrow of Eastern Mysticism, a rather common affliction in the West. — praxis
No this is false, the main thing is to realize emptiness.
— praxis
Which is what happens in the effort of trying to understand how your mind works — khaled
It is a way of saying that fundamentally Eastern “religions” and western religions are different in how they present “salvation”. Eastern religions try to fix your attitude towards life while western religions claim that there is a fixed version of life that you can go into if you pass this “test” that is this current life. — khaled
there are other schools of Buddhism that say that reincarnation isn’t a literal reincarnation after death but more like a metaphor for change. — khaled
I don’t know if you can really count meditation as “mysticism” though. I don’t buy incarnation or reading the stars if that’s what you’re alluding to. — khaled
Both promises fixed salvation. — praxis
You don't seriously think that Buddhism only promises an attitude adjustment, do you? — praxis
It must be noted that there is today a common kind of Buddhist modernism in which the fruition of Zen is conceived to be a primarily psychological revolution. According to this view, the intent of Zen practice is attainment of a kind of acceptance of samsaric existence — a short-term (that is, for the duration of on’s life span) psychological resilience in the face of life’s inevitable suffering — rather than liberation from samsaric existence as classically understood in Buddhism; the dispelling of delusion and the final dissolving of the body-mind karmic obstructions (jikke) with which we have been entwined for endless lives and eons.
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… a purely psychological realization is mostly conceptual and so inevitably shallow. It is a mirage, lacking sufficient power to cut the roots of ignorance in a lasting manner. More bluntly: it is not the awakening of Zen and is unworthy of comparison with the profound attainment for which the great Zen masters labored so exhaustively. — Meido Moore, in Hidden Zen
a system of recommended practices which is, at its core, an answer to the question that greek philosophers were grappling with, to wit, how to live well? — TheMadFool
Why can’t we say this about any religion? — praxis
What is the logic applied to impermanence that answers the question of how to live well? And, btw, the question is ‘how to end suffering?’ and not ‘how to live well?’ — praxis
That life is suffering is plain to see. That craving is, if not the primary cause, at least a major contributor to suffering. That to end suffering, craving has to be ended follows from these premises. Whether the 8-fold path is the correct method to end craving is, unfortunately, debatable. — TheMadFool
Ergo, it must be that, on average, we suffer more than enjoy in life. At the very least, a great deal of energy must be expended to maintain order, our preferred state, and that's exhausting work. — TheMadFool
If I'm not mistaken, these scriptures, although memorized and chanted like prayers, actually contain logical arguments aimed at proving Buddhist doctrines — TheMadFool
I'm not denying that Buddhism has features like praying, rituals, gods, views on moral matters, etc., practices, that lend it a religious character but all these are extraneous to its core doctrines and have come about through its interactions with other religions, mainly Hinduism as far as I can tell. — TheMadFool
If I'm not mistaken, these scriptures, although memorized and chanted like prayers, actually contain logical arguments aimed at proving Buddhist doctrines — TheMadFool
In psychoanalytics, people are treated like animals and are trained like them using positive and negative reinforcement and other tricks of the trade. In Buddhism a person's higher faculty - reason - is engaged, arguments are presented for examination, and people are encouraged to think and decide how to behave rather than practise a particular behavior until it becomes a habit like in psychoanalytics. — TheMadFool
By my reckoning, the west got it right. We can tinker around, add/delete features of our world to suit our needs. — TheMadFool
Meditation, to my reckoning, only serves to calm our minds to the point where it becomes possible to reflect deeply about the nature of reality, a prerequisite if one is to gain any degree of understanding on the matter. It's quite different from giving a dog a treat everytime it does what you want it to. If a dog starts meditating it would be the first step it takes to an understanding of its behavior - what role the dog-treat has in shaping its habits and so on. — TheMadFool
In Buddhism, the method of overcoming fears, phobias included, is not by "getting used to it" but by coming to an understanding on why we fear anything at all. — TheMadFool
2) Thought is a required mechanical function of the body, like eating and sleeping. — Hippyhead
However, I've had the good fortune of meeting some Buddhist practitioners and get acquainted, albeit only superficially, with their holy scriptures. If I'm not mistaken, these scriptures, although memorized and chanted like prayers, actually contain logical arguments aimed at proving Buddhist doctrines. — TheMadFool
And on that note, thought is not treated as a required mechanical process. It is treated as a tool for well-being, and it is also a tool which can be put down when it is no longer needed. — TLCD1996
We associate 'religion' with all kinds of pre-enlightenment mentalities - supersition, dogma, mind control and the like. — Wayfarer
I think from the Buddhist perspective, the question of "philosophy or religion" isn't really all that important. As evidenced here, it leads to a lot of debate (one could say that the conclusions aren't necessarily worthy of attachment). But I think it wouldn't be wrong to say that it incorporates both, if we see philosophy as being oriented around an application of reason, and religion as a utilization of faith. As Ajahn Geoff often suggests, these and other things (e.g. morality) are used for the sole purpose of realizing freedom from suffering. — TLCD1996
Assuming you haven’t fully realized freedom from suffering, are you not utilizing faith that full liberation is possible? — praxis
Any way, I think from the Buddhist perspective, the question of "philosophy or religion" isn't really all that important. As evidenced here, it leads to a lot of debate (one could say that the conclusions aren't necessarily worthy of attachment). But I think it wouldn't be wrong to say that it incorporates both, if we see philosophy as being oriented around an application of reason, and religion as a utilization of faith. — TLCD1996
As Ajahn Geoff often suggests, these and other things (e.g. morality) are used for the sole purpose of realizing freedom from suffering. — TLCD1996
I think it wouldn't be wrong to say that it incorporates both [application of reason and utilization of faith]
We philosopher types enjoy our grand sophisticated theories because, well, that's who we are and this is what we do. — Hippyhead
When you're horny, you do whatever it is you do. No experts required. No years of study involved — Hippyhead
Assuming you haven’t fully realized freedom from suffering, are you not utilizing faith that full liberation is possible? — praxis
While awaiting further clarification I would propose that as I understand the phrase, if I do, "freedom from suffering" is just another glamorous becoming trip like becoming wealthy, famous or popular etc.
It seems more realistic and practical to focus instead on better managing suffering, an admittedly less glamorous agenda, but one that is clearly possible and available to just about anyone who is at least a little bit serious. — Hippyhead
Even though it involves faith, it's hard to call it a religion (noting that blind attachment to precepts/practices/rites/rituals is abandoned at some point); even if it involves reasonable inference or reflection, it's hard to call it a philosophy (noting that ideas, concepts, arguments are not our refuge). — TLCD1996
You appear to believe as all religious followers believe: that their religion delivers on its promise and all others are false (no other religious practice can be abandoned because they’re all false). — praxis
a great many people who are actually religious don't consider their religion a "pre-enlightenment mentality" at all — Hippyhead
Pre- moderns had a different mindset and relationship with the world, as they intuitively felt a kinship to it — Wayfarer
But nevertheless, it is the position of some Buddhists (especially Thai Forest reformers like Ajahn Mun) that total realization is indeed possible. — TLCD1996
That suffering is best left managed isn't exactly bad, but in Buddhist thought it's quite limiting and unfortunate, and is particularly unfortunate when coming out of a teacher's mouth. — TLCD1996
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