Yes, and if he said that, would they not lose the will to discover the truth? Of course they would! — Agustino
No it's absolutely not true for others. On the contrary, if you know that knowing an answer would deflate your will to find out, you will postpone knowing, since you'll know, that in principle, it's possible.I would not. In fact, it would encourage me to seek an answer. I think that's true for others too. — TheMadFool
You're sidestepping the obvious fact that my statement asserts. — TheMadFool
The concepts are neither true nor false, so that nothing is gained in affirming or denying them. — Wosret
You really should reflect a some more before launching a string of characters, but then you might have to change your moniker ;-) — Wayfarer
''God exists'' is not a concept. It's a proposition and therefore, has to be either true or false. Buddha refused to assign a truth value to that proposition. Why? — TheMadFool
Buddha knows God exists
2. Buddha knows God doesn't exist
3. Buddha doesn't know — TheMadFool
I personally like to try to figure out what's being talked about before I move on to propositions about them — Wosret
You're not mocking people's names? — Wosret
But it wasn't that the Buddha was unaware of a creator-god: Brahma — TheMadFool
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