Why Dharma is Different?
Dharma, however is different. It is different because it unites. There can never be divisions in dharma. Every interpretation is valid and welcome. No authority is too great to be questioned, too sacred to be touched. Unlimited interpretative freedom through free will is the quintessence of Dharma, for Dharma is as limitless as truth itself. No one can ever be its sole mouthpiece.
Can a religion be used as a scientific method in terms of at least only accepting things that can be proven through our senses? Or is the methods of actual scientists superior in that arena? — TiredThinker
It's not uncommon for religious/spiritual people to claim that theirs is "not a religion" but that it "is the truth".I was talking to a member of the Shaolin and they told me that Buddhism at least as practiced by the Shaolin is not so much a religion as a method of discovering the true nature of the world. — TiredThinker
Some proselytizers try to appeal to Western secular people, so they introduce some pseudoscientific vocabulary. I've seen Christians, Hare Krishnas, Buddhists, and Bahais do it.I generally think of Buddhism as focused on reincarnation and karma which presumes things about life after death, but his definition made it sound more scientific.
Presuming that science and religion have different goals, the question becomes moot.Can a religion be used as a scientific method in terms of at least only accepting things that can be proven through our senses?
Or is the methods of actual scientists superior in that arena?
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