Whatever words we utter should be chosen with care for people will hear them and be influenced by them for good or ill. — 0 thru 9
Like usual, you're taking the Buddha out of his context and bringing him in a modern context — Agustino
God is beyond order and beyond chaos. — Agustino
Direct experience + faith. I do take belief in God as properly basic (as Plantinga would say) to be honest. Atheism isn't the default position for me, but quite the contrary, it's something one arrives at after effort.Then how do you know God exists? — TheMadFool
Sure, but the question we were talking about had to do with what the Buddha actually said, so in that case it's problematic to put stuff in his mouth that there's no evidence he said. At least what's in the sutras, even if not accurate is better and more likely to be true than what was added 50 years ago ;)To some extent, at least, isn't that both necessary and desirable? — Bitter Crank
Direct experience + faith. — Agustino
Sure, except maybe the knowledge that He's incomprehensible ;)Shouldn't that preclude any knowledge, including and beyond God's existence? — TheMadFool
Actually I think I have, it's you who is frustratingly ignoring it.You haven't given me a good reason why. — TheMadFool
1. He found God but didn't want to reveal it
2. He didn't find God but didn't want to reveal it
3. He could neither prove nor disprove God
Allow me the assumption that the Buddha was a good man and thus devoted to the welfare of his followers and all mankind.
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?
Which of the 3 options given above do you think best explains Buddha's cryptic silence on the matter? Why? — TheMadFool
Actually I think I have, it's you who is frustratingly ignoring it. — Agustino
Either way God isn't really relevant to salvation in Buddhism. — praxis
Sure, but the question we were talking about had to do with what the Buddha actually said, so in that case it's problematic to put stuff in his mouth that there's no evidence he said. — Agustino
(From here. Hopefully these are all accurate quotes.) — 0 thru 9
And what we know about Buddha, Abraham, Jesus, Mo, et al was not written down by secretaries while they were talking. By the time it was written down, new contexts had arisen. And since they were written down, several different contexts have come and gone. — Bitter Crank
the Buddha didn't say anything about God. Why? — TheMadFool
In the Tevijja sutta there is an account of a dispute between two young brahmins, Vasetta and Bharadvaja, over the issue of which religious practices lead most directly to union with Brahma. Brahma is typically treated in the Nikaya (i.e. Buddhist) literature as an object of brahmanical devotion who is believed by his devotees to be the master over whom no other being has mastery (abhibhu anabhibhuto), who sees everything (an˜nad-atthu-daso), the mighty one (vasavatti), who is lord, maker, designer, chief, creator, master and father of all beings that have been and of all beings that shall be. Moreover, companionship with Brahma (Brahmasahavyata) is believed to be the state of salvation, and so whatever set of practices leads most directly to companionship with Brahma may be considered the most direct path to salvation. But the Brahmin students Vasetta and Bharadvaja have heard from their respective teachers differing accounts on which practices lead to the goal that they both desire. And so they decided to approach Gotama the Buddha to see whether he can decided which party is right in this very important dispute.
On being told the nature of the dispute between Vasetta and Bharadvaja, Gotama Buddha begins by asking the disputants a few questions of his own, and the answers to the questions show that the young brahmins believe that there are many alternative paths that lead to Brahma, but the dispute is really over which path is most direct. On learning this much, Gotama Buddha then pursues the supposition that there are paths that lead men to meet Brahma face to face. What, asks the Buddha, entitles us to believe that anyone meets Brahma face to face? Prompted by Gotama’s questions, the young brahmins concede that no living brahmin teacher claims ever to have seen Brahma face to face, nor has any living brahmin teacher’s teacher, nor has any teacher in the lineage of teachers for the past seven generations. Moreover, not even the rishis, the ancient seers who made the Vedas available to man and whose words the brahmin priests learn and chant and transmit down through the generations, claim to have seen Brahma face to face. What we have, then, is the astonishing state of affairs in which the followers of the brahmanical religious tradition are striving towards a goal for the existence of which no one has any evidence. Their religious goal, says the Buddha, is laughable (hassaka), vain (rittaka) and empty (tucchaka).
….
The Buddha’s reaction to those who seek to meet the creator... is not to deny that such things exist. Rather, it is to take the epistemologically cautious stand that even though the loveliest woman in the world may exist, one might very well see the person who uniquely answers to the description of the world’s loveliest woman and yet not realize that she is the person who answers to that description. Furthermore, it is not clear how one could ever be certain that a given woman were the loveliest in the world, unless he could see every woman in the world and know that he had seen every woman. Similarly, it is not clear how a religious seeker could be sure that he had correctly identified the greatest lustre or the master over whom no other being has mastery.
But the Buddha didn't say anything about God. Why? — TheMadFool
This is one of the biggest dishonest bullshits I've heard on these forums. Yes, you are correct that a statement is true or false regardless of who said it. However, I challenged you about the authenticity of that claim being made by Buddha - not whether it's true or not. I don't care about disputing whether it's true, I care if it's what the Buddhist religion teaches. So you are being intellectually dishonest if you claim that's what the religion teaches. If you only claim that statement is true, that's not a problem to me. But don't tell me that's what Buddhism is, cause that's bullshit.Something is true no matter who said it, or where it is found. Something is false no matter who says it, or where it is found in my view. This is why I attempted to askew notions of just appealing to authority when I was challenged. — Wosret
If you only claim that statement is true, that's not a problem to me. But don't tell me that's what Buddhism is, cause that's bullshit. — Agustino
This is what happens when people claim that 1) There is truth 2) That someone lays claim to it.
Buddhism and Buddha probably initially held the vantage point that there is no immobility called truth (the concept of impermanence which also exists in Daoism at about the same time). However, over time, it appears Buddhism had morphed into thousands of goal oriented religions/philosophies which embrace truths if one sort it another and are often in conflict ft with each other. But at it's essence, I believe the philosophy embraces continuous evolution and impermanence which does not allow for truths. — Rich
Again because God isn't relevant to this system of belief. You might as well point out that Jesus didn't say anything about emptiness and ask why — praxis
Their religious goal, says the Buddha, is laughable (hassaka), vain (rittaka) and empty (tucchaka).
The question of what is Buddhism and what are it's teachings is rather fluid with thousands of variations depending upon motivations of teachers and students. In this regard, there doesn't seem to be truths, rather interpretations of what Buddha might have said (everything about Buddhism is subject to various oral and written interpretations of translations).
When attempting to understand the essence of Buddhism, I look for similarities and differences been Buddhism and other cultural spiritualities developing at the same time (e.g. Daoism, Confucianism Hinduism). As sources, I prefer more neutral sources such as Alan Watts who shares with me the general feeling that Buddhism and Daoism to have a tendency toward continue evolution as a reaction to the more hierarchical and less mobile traditions such as Hinduism and Confucianism which have more appeal to truths. Over time, certain Buddhist traditions have adopted notions of truth (which are in conflict with the notion of impermanence) for practical, economic reasons.
There is no way to point to a single source, but rather it is an image I developed after much reading on the subject and discussions with practitioners. — Rich
Basically because in Buddhism there's two possibilities: nirvana or samsara. Any God, including a supreme God, can be in either. If God is samsaric then we're with God in samsara. If God is nirvanic then we'll be with God in nirvana. Alternatively I suppose you could interpret nirvana as God, in which case God would not be samsaric.He(?) [Jesus] even downgraded the Hindu gods into the realm of Samsara. Surprisingly, he never did the reverse of floating the idea of a supreme God a la Abrahamic religions. Why? — TheMadFool
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