So, what beliefs exactly do you think are indispensable for one to hold in order to qualify as a Christian? — Janus
It's so easy to talk about non-attachment when your life situation is such that you're in a flow of new things coming to you, with no end in sight. It's easy to detach yourself from this piece of cake when you see the next piece coming, or have so far had no trouble obtaining one. — baker
Ah yes, turning Buddhism against itself. As if the Buddha ever said, “Believe nothing, no matter where you read it, no matter if I have said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and common sense.” — baker
My point was not that belief in rebirth or karma would stand in the way of practice, but that it is not essential to practice. If you can find any text from the Pali Canon that says it is necessary, then present them. — Janus
But don't you think people are free to define themselves in ways differently than you would? — Janus
This makes belief in Karma and rebirth difficult or even impossible. I see no reason to believe that would preclude people form effective practice. — Janus
I have no problem with that, but are they philosophers? — Tom Storm
Gotama accepted the general opinion of his time and place which was belief in karma and rebirth. These beliefs are common to Hinduism, Brahmanism and Jainism. They are simply culturally entrenched beliefs. — Janus
Then where's the problem?
You are you, you believe what you believe, you find possible what you find possible.
Others are others, they believe what they believe, they find possible what they find possible.
What do you want? Respect from the traditionalists?
A recognition that your ideas about what the Buddha really taught are supreme? — baker
If someone follows Christian morals then I would say they are Christians. — Janus
If they think philosophically I would say they are philosophers. — Janus
A big if. Janus we just disagree on this. No point in going on. Take care. — Tom Storm
Batchelor's approach lends itself to many of those who otherwise would be driven away by the implications of belief in saṃsāra and rebirth and the other supposedly supernatural aspects of Buddhism.
— Wayfarer
Do you know if any of those people later move on to the more traditional forms of Buddhism? — baker
whatever feel-good-feelings these secularists have in their "spiritual practice" come from their relatively good socioeconomic status, not from their "spiritual practice", and if anything, they have those feel-good-feelings _despite_ their "spiritual practice". — baker
Would you contend that Buddhism has incorporated this ongoing dialectic or evolution in its approach? Do you have a view about phenomenology and how it might resonate with Buddhism? — Tom Storm
Since I see no way for myself to be a Buddhist without being a Buddhist modernist, and Buddhist modernism is philosophically unsound, I see no way for myself to be a Buddhist without acting in bad faith. That is why I’m not a Buddhist.
Since I see no way for myself to be a Buddhist without being a Buddhist modernist, and Buddhist modernism is philosophically unsound, I see no way for myself to be a Buddhist without acting in bad faith. That is why I’m not a Buddhist.
Is Buddhism philosophically sound? — praxis
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