There either is a Self or there is no-Self.
But the Buddha himself didn't teach non-Self. It's a Buddh-ist doctrine. The Buddha's teachings, by themselves, are totally Hindu. — Dharmi
Do not vainly lament, but do wonder at the rule of transiency and learn from it the emptiness of human life. Do not cherish to unworthy desire that the changeable might become unchanging. — Gautama Buddha
But... they are not only guilty in this problem. My governors only put investment in tourism and that’s a big fail — javi2541997
The rule of transiency, my friend, is definitely incompatible with atman. — praxis
I was only semi-serious... But Christianity has played an important role in how we got where we are now.
— ChatteringMonkey
If it wasn't Christianity, it would have been something else.
— synthesis
I don't think this is true, Christianity was historically very peculiar in many ways. — ChatteringMonkey
In the end, you can only control your own actions.
— synthesis
This seem like a part of the myth of individualism, which ironically had its roots in Christianity — ChatteringMonkey
The rule of transiency, my friend, is definitely incompatible with atman.
— praxis
No it isn't. There's a false ego and a true ego. Within the material world, all is transcient. But in the world of Forms, the spectral world, Vaikuntha, there is eternality, no transcience. No change. Maybe the perception, but not actual. — Dharmi
I actually had a conversation with someone who was "nihilistic" and they argued the exact opposite of this, and how believing we were made by an intelligent designer and not out of what they called blind evolution is delusional and ridiculous. — Albero
Yeah, Buddhism got formless realms too. But nut'n escapes the rule of transiency, not even stuff in the formless realms. Perhaps if someone thought up a changeless realm, now that would be a realm worth having around, forever! :razz:
Seriously though, perception requires change, in the material world or the spectral. — praxis
In any case, you haven't shown how the Buddha's rule of transiency is comparable with Hinduism. — praxis
Yeah, Buddhism got formless realms too. But nut'n escapes the rule of transiency, not even stuff in the formless realms. Perhaps if someone thought up a changeless realm, now that would be a realm worth having around, forever! :razz:
Seriously though, perception requires change, in the material world or the spectral.
— praxis
No, it doesn't. Parmenides went over this a long time ago. — Dharmi
Because the world of sense perception is transient... — Dharmi
certain things attributed to the Buddha are wrong ... but the Buddha was not wrong. — Dharmi
Kindly explain how then. You say yourself that "perception is indeed transient." — praxis
And all sentient beings have sense perception, right? — praxis
You mis-understand. If something bothers you, it's 99.99% not the "something" that bothers you but something inside of you. If not Christianity, then something else. The thinking world is chock-full of things that bothers us. — synthesis
It's not myth. Attempting to worry about what everybody else is doing is foolhardy. Change begins within, then if others like what they see, they may look more closely. — synthesis
Kindly explain how then. You say yourself that "perception is indeed transient."
— praxis
In Parmenides' system, change is merely illusory. In the spectral world, that's how change operates. The spectral world is non-different from God, and God does not change, he's unchanging, boundless, infinite. — Dharmi
All beings which reside in maya have sense perception. Beyond which, there's only pure consciousness, or Purusha. — Dharmi
Change is considered illusory in Buddhism as well, so what? Gods are merely considered another type of sentient being. — praxis
Gods are merely considered another type of sentient being. — praxis
I know next to nothing about Hinduism. Sentient beings reincarnated after Purusha? — praxis
Change is considered illusory in Buddhism as well, so what? Gods are merely considered another type of sentient being.
— praxis
No, change is the essential feature of Buddhism. — Dharmi
When one has reached Adi-Purusha, that is to say, Vishnu, then one has reached eternity. There is no change that occurs. It only occurs in an illusory state, like in a dream. But everything is eternal, no true change happens. No death, no rebirth. No Karma or reincarnation. — Dharmi
Don't know what you're trying to say but I think it would be better to say that emptiness is the essential feature of Buddhism. — praxis
Significantly, you didn't answer my question about sentient beings in Adi-Purusha.
God is sentient — Dharmi
certain things attributed to the Buddha are wrong — Dharmi
If mistakes like this happen in Buddhism then it's reasonable to assume that such mistakes happen in other religions. I guess we'll just have to have faith in religious authorities. :starstruck: — praxis
If mistakes like this happen in Buddhism then it's reasonable to assume that such mistakes happen in other religions. I guess we'll just have to have faith in religious authorities. :starstruck:
— praxis
That's certainly not what we say. Religious authorities, especially in Hinduism, are typically frauds and liars. We go by the Vedic method of knowing God, yogic meditation. — Dharmi
"Within" is not causally disconnected from the rest of the world...
Think about the ramifications of that for a second, instead of trying to read things into my comments that aren't there. — ChatteringMonkey
No, even secular scholarship will admit that the Buddha's original teaching was not emptiness or non-Self. I don't need yoga to figure that out. — Dharmi
His teaching on impermanence and the Four Noble Truths is totally accurate. — Dharmi
Gotta love the "I refute you by challenging you to teach me something.". It works! For teaching you something. :lol: — frank
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