You do realise this is clearly false - so in a society where everyone believed in God/gods you're saying that the Buddha thought that other things would be more believable? Like usual, you're taking the Buddha out of his context and bringing him in a modern context.He probably thought that people needed some form of moral guidance, and that Karma and rebirth were more believable than an all-powerful being that never communicates with us. — CasKev
Dharma - Buddha-nature - Nirvana -> they are not impermanent (annica). Dharma is often translated as the Tao in Chinese, and the Tao is translated as Logos in Europe, meaning the Word. I think Buddha did reveal - or at least he invited people to see for themselves.1. He found God but didn't want to reveal it — TheMadFool
Buddhism is quite different from other religions — TheMadFool
With this simple omission, the Buddha provides a good explanation of the fact of suffering (Karma) and also doesn't have to deal with the problem of evil that troubles God-basef religions. In short, Buddha's world is coherent - a very important characteristic of a good hypothesis. — TheMadFool
Like usual, you're taking the Buddha out of his context and bringing him in a modern context. — Agustino
Dharma - Buddha-nature - Nirvana -> they are not impermanent (annica). Dharma is often translated as the Tao in Chinese, and the Tao is translated as Logos in Europe, meaning the Word. I think Buddha did reveal - or at least he invited people to see for themselves. — Agustino
Karma is virtually identical with sin in Christianity. There is no sin that will go unpunished in Buddhism (whether in this life or in the next), that's what Karma means. — Agustino
Even having sex with your own wife during the day - for example - is a sin according to the Dalai Lama, which will be punished. — Agustino
The fact that pink-flying pony Buddhists in the West believe otherwise doesn't change the roots of the religion. — Agustino
It then follows that knowledge of God's existence/nonexistence must be harmful in some way. Did the Buddha anticipate crusades/jihad and the nihilism of atheism? — TheMadFool
God wasn't used to justify any atrocity in the name of religion back in Buddha's day, so how do you suppose that he would have come to believe that?With no God to justify atrocious acts in the name of religion — CasKev
Who told you that? That's what some sects of Mahayana Buddhism (especially those Western ones) believe, but the oldest version of Buddhism, the Theravada absolutely don't believe that, and it would most likely count as wrong-belief. Why? Because Samsara is dukkha & annica - Nirvana is not. Hence this difference prevents them from being the same.With this I would agree, with the additional side comment that it is taught that Nirvana and Samsara are ultimately not separated. — 0 thru 9
One second ago you were telling me that Samsara and Nirvana are not ultimately separate, so how is it possible to avoid re-birth? And what is it that avoids re-birth? The salvation from maya is achieved via asceticism and morality, certainly not by immoral practices, regardless of how much you meditate. That's part of the 8-Fold Path.The mind-blowing kicker here is that the goal is to move beyond the whole realm of karma entirely, avoiding earthly re-birth. — 0 thru 9
Many sources. Buddhism isn't what people in the West generally think it is. It's very very conservative in Asia. They adopted liberal stands in the West just to gain followers ;)Not disagreeing, just had not heard this before. Do you have a source for it? Even if so, it would seem to be in the realm of Tibetan Buddhism belief only. — 0 thru 9
think, like us, he could neither prove nor disprove God — CasKev
I think Buddha did reveal - or at least he invited people to see for themselves. — Agustino
Thus, talking about Buddha's motives and omissions gets kind of tricky and extremely speculative and ultimately just another branch of Buddhist philosophy/religion — Rich
Daniel Quinn's idea about the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in the book of Genesis may be relevant — 0 thru 9
Because he wanted people to see for themselves.Then why did the Buddha remain silent on the matter? — TheMadFool
Yes, but it's not like we've to navigate a complex array of possibilities here. There are only 3 possibilities:
1. He found god
2. He didn't find god
3. He didn't know — TheMadFool
He could have said that. I don't see any clear and present danger in admitting agnosticism. Yet, he didn't. Why? — TheMadFool
Many sources. Buddhism isn't what people in the West generally think it is. It's very very conservative in Asia. — Agustino
Who told you that? That's what some sects of Mahayana Buddhism (especially those Western ones) believe, but the oldest version of Buddhism, the Theravada absolutely don't believe that, and it would most likely count as wrong-belief. Why? Because Samsara is dukkha & annica - Nirvana is not. Hence this difference prevents them from being the same. — Agustino
One second ago you were telling me that Samsara and Nirvana are not ultimately separate, so how is it possible to avoid re-birth? And what is it that avoids re-birth? — Agustino
Then why did the Buddha remain silent on the matter?
— TheMadFool
Because he wanted people to see for themselves. — Agustino
The salvation from maya is achieved via asceticism and morality, certainly not by immoral practices, regardless of how much you meditate. That's part of the 8-Fold Path. — Agustino
It gives you all the sources in the video. They are written out for you with the respective dates! The assertion I referred to is from here.The video you posted is humorous, but i am still cannot find the sources of these supposed strict doctrines from the Dalai Lama. But again, this is somewhat of a side issue, imho. — 0 thru 9
Daniel Quinn's idea about the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in the book of Genesis may be relevant
— 0 thru 9
Thanks for pointing that out. So, Christianity also has something similar. In God's eyes, knowledge of good and evil is harmful. Why else would he forbid Adam and Eve from eating from the tree.
What exactly is the problem here? Buddha remains silent on God. God refuses to give Adam and Eve knowledge of good and evil — TheMadFool
Because he wanted people to see for themselves. — Agustino
One can speculate — Rich
'No comment' — CasKev
No problem whatsoever. — 0 thru 9
One can speculate
— Rich
What do you think — TheMadFool
Because the truth of God cannot be adequately conveyed through language.An acceptable answer but why? — TheMadFool
No problem whatsoever.
— 0 thru 9
How so? The Buddha is censoring vital information. — TheMadFool
What were the findings of this meditations? Did he discover God or did he come up empty handed? Was he unable to settle the matter? — TheMadFool
in this world with its devas, Maras, & Brahmas, in this generation with its brahmans and contemplatives, its royalty and common-folk, I do not see another brahman or contemplative more consummate in virtue than I, on whom I could dwell in dependence, honoring and respecting him.
Whilst reason dictates against discussing such a recondite question with a person whose forum name is 'Mad Fool', I will hazard a reply. — Wayfarer
About God? Who knows? There are endless possibilities to choose from. — Rich
Because the truth of God cannot be adequately conveyed through language — Agustino
I think that all that is really important to note, is that every religious tradition agrees about one thing, and that is that morality is paramount — Wosret
Let's begin here. We can assume Buddha had the best interests of mankind in mind, morally. So, it follows that knowledge of God is harmful. Why else would he remain silent? Can you pick up the thread from there... — TheMadFool
As I attempted to explain, knowledge of God is not harmful, but an empty image of God is. Isn't that also something western religions agree about? No idols, and even the name of God being something that can't even be pronounced. Literally unspeakable without misunderstanding — Wosret
No it doesn't. It may be very beneficial, but impossible to communicate through words.A) knowledge of God's existence is bad — TheMadFool
Because it's meaningless to answer questions of existence with regards to an X that people don't understand the meaning of.I understand describing God is not easy. However, Buddha simply had to answer a yes/no question: Does God exist?. What's so difficult about that? People, presumably not half as wise as thr Buddha, do it all the time. — TheMadFool
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