What you are saying is: If Jesus was a magical person as stated in the Bible, then all miscreants go to hell. — Olivier5
Indeed, there have been Buddhist missionaries. But on the whole, they seem to function as a defense of Buddhism against the expansion of other religions; or they focus on spreading Buddhism for lay people (and monasticism only as an adjacent or auxiliary option); ie. the aims for such missionary work are worldly. (And some Buddhist missionary organizations seem to be intent primarily on making money ...)
As to your first question, the concepts of rebirth/reincarnation and karma play a central role in Dharmic religions. With them, among many other things, also the person's religious/spiritual status is explained, and their religious/spiritual prospects. With an outlook like that, there's not much that an outsider could see themselves do for another person.
The other factor is that in Dharmic religions, there is no threat of eternal damnation, there is no urgency of "get it right this time around or suffer forever, no second chances", so there is no metaphysical impetus to get people to convert, unlike in Abrahamic religions. — baker
Nagarjuna's Tetralemma
— TheMadFool
We've been over this. — baker
there being no concept of orthodoxa (right view), — TheMadFool
The first article on the 'eightfold path' is samma ditthi, generally translated as 'right view'. I think the proper translation of ‘orthodoxa’ is ‘right belief’ or ‘right worship’. — Wayfarer
Does This definition help? — Wheatley
My point, (which was clear and is really unnecessary in this otherwise interesting discussion) is that if Jesus was not real then Christianity, as is practiced by 2.5 billion people, is false. — Tom Storm
But I can't accept the historical narrative of Christianity, the belief in the second coming, and other fundamental elements of Christian dogma. That's where Buddhism has won out in my view, but I'm open to persuasion. — Wayfarer
I suppose there are California Buddhists who believe such a thing (a "California Buddhist" is a person with some interest in Buddhism, but who believes Buddhism is, basically, whatever you want it to be (as long as it's something politically correct)).It could also be that buddhists are ok with coexisting other religions because they view them as simply alternative routes to the same destination - there being no concept of orthodoxa (right view), just various means to one ultimate end which is nirvana aka salvation. — TheMadFool
I'm quite sure I've already given you links. The key is in understanding why the terms "exist", "not exist", "neither exist nor not exist" don't apply to the Tathagata.I haven't been able to get my hands on a good explanation of Nagarjuna's tetralemma on the www. Do you know of any online resources I can bite into? — TheMadFool
It could also be that buddhists are ok with coexisting other religions because they view them as simply alternative routes to the same destination - there being no concept of orthodoxa (right view), just various means to one ultimate end which is nirvana aka salvation.
— TheMadFool
I suppose there are California Buddhists who believe such a thing (a "California Buddhist" is a person with some interest in Buddhism, but who believes Buddhism is, basically, whatever you want it to be (as long as it's something politically correct)).
Otherwise, Buddhists believe there is Right View, and they don't believe that "all paths lead to the top of the mountain". — baker
You'll need to unpack this, spell out the assumptions you're working with.This wouldn't have been the case if buddhism considers itself orthodoxa as that would entail a religious responsibility to convert people. — TheMadFool
Why should orthodoxy entail a religious responsibility to convert people? — baker
Not at all.If a certain group is under the impression that its belief system is the right one (orthodoxa = right belief), that group will also consider it a duty/responsibility to edify others of it. — TheMadFool
If a certain group is under the impression that its belief system is the right one (orthodoxa = right belief), that group will also consider it a duty/responsibility to edify others of it.
— TheMadFool
Not at all.
Rather, my intuition is that such an individual or group who is certain to have found The Truth will protect it, seek to keep it for themselves, and share it only with those who prove themselves worthy of it. — baker
Are you saying some people are unworthy of the truth, orthodoxa (right belief), which is just another way of saying some people should suffer? Whatever belief system tells you that is surely not the right one. — TheMadFool
A belief system that tells you that everyone is equally qualified for the highest attainments is surely not the right one.
Buddhism has no "no child left behind" policy. — baker
Inform yourself better. They're actually perfectly ready to leave you behind.One word, bodhisattva. I'm told their primary goal is the liberation of all sentient beings. — TheMadFool
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Child_Left_Behind_ActAs for "no child left behind" policy, never heard of it though it squares with the bodhisattva's mission.
Inform yourself better. They're actually perfectly ready to leave you behind. — baker
no child left behind
A bodhisattva cannot leave samsara; a bodhisattva is a samsaric being. "Bodhisattva" literally means 'buddha to be', or 'future buddha'. Ie. not a buddha yet.Inform yourself better. They're actually perfectly ready to leave you behind.
— baker
A bodhisattva who leaves (samsara) is not a bodhisattva. — TheMadFool
You keep talking about how religious people have the obligation to help others, e.g.no child left behind
I fail to see the relevance.
If a certain group is under the impression that its belief system is the right one (orthodoxa = right belief), that group will also consider it a duty/responsibility to edify others of it. — TheMadFool
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