I might have a better idea of where to begin if you explained more, if only a little. — praxis
Because the underlying metaphysics include concepts like the twelve link chain of dependent origination, etc etc. — praxis
When people only do good for some future reward, not for 'good in itself'. — Amity
Apparently, it is when you make karmic deposits and withdrawals.
The goal is to make as many deposits as possible and as few withdrawals as needed.
How does that work?
And some are judged as deserving of their illness or misfortune because they must have been bad in a previous life. 'What goes around comes around'. — Amity
So if true, what does this matter? Any unfortunate ripening seems to be predestined, right? — Tom Storm
Apparently, it is when you make karmic deposits and withdrawals.
The goal is to make as many deposits as possible and as few withdrawals as needed.
How does that work?
It's like putting a spoonful of salt into a cup of water, as opposed to putting a spoonful of salt into a great river. Putting it into a cup of water makes the water undrinkable; putting it into a great river makes no discernable difference to the taste of the water. The salt here is standing for bad deeds, and the amount of water for good deeds. — baker
If you've ever apologized for something wrong that you did, or ever tried to make amends, then you were in fact relying on the workings of karma. — baker
My impression of Indian culture before it underwent westernisation, is that it's belief in reincarnation encouraged slower and more sustainable lifestyles,
but that it's belief in karmic justice encouraged social neglect of the downtrodden. — sime
For example, if modern society is to survive then it needs to adopt environmentally sustainable lifestyles together with long-term ecological investments that will benefit future generations more than today's. Does this necessity imply that society's environmentally unsustainable belief that "You only live once" will mutate towards a belief in reincarnation that encourages people to work for tomorrows generations rather than today's ?
If karma has to be taken seriously, then it is to sensible to identify Karma with causality and then recall the practical impossibility of knowing causal relations with any certainty. — sime
Good question. What are the practical needs of society? The basics as per Maslow?
If they are not met, then how would that affect any metaphysical beliefs?
Why metaphysical and not personal, economic or political beliefs...? — Amity
The difference is that I interpret "karma" without the non-pragmatic bits. — 180 Proof
It's as if your objection is that the underlying concepts of Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5-6 don't fit with with the underlying concepts of Buddhist doctrine. Are you unaware that the Upanishads have been around much longer? So the pertinent question is how did Buddhist doctrine make that leap rather than how did I make that leap. Once again you have things backward. — ThinkOfOne
↪180 Proof
How are the underlying concepts of Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5-6 not "pragmatic"? It incorporates how you interpret karma. Plus is much deeper and profound. — ThinkOfOne
↪ThinkOfOne The difference is that I interpret "karma" without the non-pragmatic bits. — 180 Proof
That doesn't address the question. Tell you what, I'll rephrase:
Which of the underlying concepts of Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5-6 are not "pragmatic"? — ThinkOfOne
Reread my first post ↪180 Proof. Whatever you find missing from my conception answers your quesrion. — 180 Proof
My mistake, I only glanced at the quotation in the OP, not that that’s a good excuse. Nevertheless my point remains, there’s underlying metaphysics that you appear to be dismissing. — praxis
so make of my idea of "karma" what you will or dismiss it. :roll:Btw, I wasn't proposing an exegesis of any particular sacred scripture when I summarized my understanding of the concept, so your question is besides the point I made. — 180 Proof
My mistake, I only glanced at the quotation in the OP, not that that’s a good excuse. Nevertheless my point remains, there’s underlying metaphysics that you appear to be dismissing.
— praxis
Wouldn't that be the "underlying metaphysics" according to Buddhist doctrine? — ThinkOfOne
Seems likely that the underlying concepts of karma, as it's commonly understood today, are rooted in a fear of living in an "unjust" world.
Seems likely that the underlying concepts of reincarnation are rooted in the fear of death.
Neither hold up to scrutiny. They are the products of irrational thought as a way to alleviate the anxieties of those fears. Many believe them today for those very reasons. — ThinkOfOne
My mistake, I only glanced at the quotation in the OP, not that that’s a good excuse. Nevertheless my point remains, there’s underlying metaphysics that you appear to be dismissing.
— praxis
Wouldn't that be the "underlying metaphysics" according to Buddhist doctrine?
— ThinkOfOne
No, you pointed that out yourself. — praxis
How isn't the "twelve link chain of of dependent origination, etc etc." referring to Buddhist doctrineBecause the underlying metaphysics include concepts like the twelve link chain of dependent origination, etc etc. — praxis
↪ThinkOfOne I see. You're concerned with scriptural dogma and I'm concern with conceptual analysis. My mistake for attempting to draw you (& others) out of a mythological cul de sac and into an open philosophical discussion. Pax. :victory: — 180 Proof
Parallel to that, the refusal to believe that the consequences of one's actions will come back to haunt one is what makes people refuse to even consider karma and reincarnation/rebirth.
If you believe that if you lie, someone will lie to you, would you still lie?
If you believe that if you steal, someone will steal from you, would you still steal? — baker
You appear to be dismissing pre-Buddhist metaphysics. — praxis
Scriptural dogma. :sweat:Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5-6 — ThinkOfOne
Deliberately training yourself in some way or, as you say, self-conditioning your unconscious, is one thing and karma is another.
In the last paragraph of the OP you seem to suggest that your conception of karma is the pure original and what exist today is a corrupted version. That’s a remarkable claim, if that is your meaning. — praxis
Seems likely that the underlying concepts of karma, as it's commonly understood today, are rooted in a fear of living in an "unjust" world.
Seems likely that the underlying concepts of reincarnation are rooted in the fear of death.
Neither hold up to scrutiny. They are the products of irrational thought as a way to alleviate the anxieties of those fears. Many believe them today for those very reasons.
On the other hand, the original underlying concepts of karma, as given in the OP, are reasonably sound. — ThinkOfOne
↪ThinkOfOne You're the one in denial. :point:
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5-6
— ThinkOfOne
Scriptural dogma. :sweat: — 180 Proof
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