What can you tell us of Tomseltje? What is his geography and time? — Athena
said the brahmin.I have heard, good Gotama, that the recluse Gotama does not greet brahmins who are worn, old, stricken in years, who have lived their span and are at the close of their life; nor does he stand up or ask them to sit down. Likewise, good Gotama, that the revered Gotama does not greet brahmins who are worn, old, stricken in years, who have lived their span and are at the close of their life; nor does he greet them or stand up or ask them to sit down. Now this, good Gotama, this is not respectful,
said Gotama.Brahmin, I do not see him in the world of devas including the Maras, including the Brahmas, including recluses and brahmins, of creatures including devas and mankind, whom I should greet or rise up for or to whom I should offer a seat. For, brahmin, whom a tathagata should greet or rise up for or offer a seat to, his head would split asunder,
he (the brahmin) said.The revered Gotama is without the quality of taste,
he (Gotama) said.There is indeed, brahmin, a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama is without the quality of taste. For, brahmin, tastes for forms, tastes for sounds, tastes for scents, tastes for savours, tastes for tangible objects — these have been destroyed by the tathagata, cut off at the root like a palm-tree, they are so utterly done away with that they are not able to come into future existence. This, brahmin, is a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama is without the quality of taste. But surely you did not mean that,
he (the brahmin) said.The revered Gotama is without enjoyment,
he (Gotama) said.There is indeed, brahmin, a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama is without enjoyment. For, brahmin, enjoyments of forms, enjoyments of sounds, enjoyments of scents, enjoyments of savours, enjoyments of tangible objects — these have been destroyed by the tathagata, cut off at the root like a palm-tree, they are so utterly done away with that they are not able to come into future existence. This, brahmin, is a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama is without enjoyment. But surely you did not mean that,
he (the brahmin) said.The revered Gotama professes the doctrine of non-action,
he (Gotama) said.There is indeed, brahmin, a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama professes the doctrine of non-action. For I, brahmin, teach the non-doing of offences of body, speech and thought. I teach the non-doing of manifold evil and wrong states. This indeed, brahmin, is a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama professes the doctrine of non-action. But surely you did not mean that,
he (the brahmin) said.The revered Gotama professes the doctrine of annihilation,
There is indeed, brahmin, a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama professes the doctrine of annihilation. For I, brahmin, speak of the annihilation of passion, of hatred and of confusion; I speak of the annihilation of manifold evil and wrong states. This indeed, brahmin, is a way in which one speaking truly of me could say: The recluse Gotama professes the doctrine of annihilation. But surely you did not mean that.
If there's such a thing as human nature then we all know how forceful we are. We want to achieve, we want to succeed, we want to win, etc. It's likely that the Tao cautions against such extremes. — TheMadFool
Yet, couldn't we ask that the Tao itself, if it is the source of all things, made us to be so and wouldn't it be against the Tao if we were to do anything different? — TheMadFool
The truth that makes most sense considering it's context. Words by themselves are meaningless, words get their meaning by the context they are placed in.
Hence to understand the word, one must read the sentence.
To understand the sentence one must read the paragraph.
To understand the paragraph one must read the chapter.
To understand the chapter one must read the book.
To understand the book, one must know the society/culture it was written in.
To understand the society/culture one must know it's circumstances like:
existence in time, geographical location and (pre)history.
All those are minimum requirements in order to understand them in an even greater context like the devine. — Tomseltje
Passiveness is foundational to the Tao. I don't know why though. — TheMadFool
(From the Bhagavad Gita.)3:21. - What the best one is doing, the others are doing as well: people follow such an example.
3:22. - There is nothing, O Partha, in the three worlds that I am required to do or that I have not achieved! Yet, I am constantly engaged in action.
3:23. - For, if I had not been always acting, O Partha, then people everywhere would follow My example!
3:24. - The world would be destroyed if I had ceased to act!
(From the Bhagavad Gita.)3:26. The wise one should not confuse unwise people attached to earthly activity! The wise one should try to bring such activity into harmony with Me.
(From The Tao Te Ching.)10. ...(The Tao) produces (all things) and nourishes them; it produces
them and does not claim them as its own; it does all, and yet does not
boast of it; it presides over all, and yet does not control them.
This is what is called 'The mysterious Quality' (of the Tao).
(From The Tao Te Ching.)34. - All-pervading is the Great Tao! It may be found on the left hand and on the right.
All things depend on it for their production, which it gives to them, not one refusing obedience to it. When its work is accomplished, it does not claim the name of having done it. It clothes all things as with a garment, and makes no assumption of being their lord;--it may be named in the smallest things. All things return (to their root and disappear), and do not know that it is IT which presides over their doing so; it may be named in the greatest things.
Hence the sage is able (in the same way) to accomplish his great achievements. It is through his not making himself great that he can accomplish them.
"Therefore the Master
can act without doing anything
and teach without saying a word."
What does it mean to act without doing anything? And how does he teach without saying a word? — Form
A Quantum is a particle or a wave? — Towers
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave–particle_dualityWave–particle duality is the concept in quantum mechanics that every particle or quantum entity may be partly described in terms not only of particles, but also of waves. It expresses the inability of the classical concepts "particle" or "wave" to fully describe the behavior of quantum-scale objects.
Well there is a bit of A is A but also B but not at the same time, I don't have the preparation to explain it better, I'm sorry, I studied it but my explanation are not exhaustive. — Towers
So you are sure that there is a material or practical level of existence?
How do you know that? — Towers
I was wondering if that logic can be doubted, if I correctly use it in syllogism for example, will I get the most correct conclusion or one of many possible and neither correct nor wrong conclusions? — Towers
You mean the laws of nature right? — Towers
Plato's ideas don't exist in a material sense — Towers
P.S. You mentioned gravity, but what if there is nothing outside thoughts and everything we experience is an illusion? What if I don't exist? — Towers
can we be certain that the laws of logic are valid? Or is logic to be taken as an absolute a priori? — Towers
The stone paradox may be considered a thought experiment. It's a rational argument against the concept of omnipotence. — TheMadFool
''God doesn't'' implies an ability to choose but the stone paradox demonstrates his inability i.e. ''God can't" — TheMadFool
In my view, atheism is mainly the rejection of superstition. — VagabondSpectre
Your talking about the different variations of atheism. — hachit
What am I missing? — Inis
Why didn't humans stop at atheism? What went wrong? — VoidDetector
Before the New Order World, we had family order, and I think the New World Order is about serving the beast, not the family. I mention this because the beast is mentioned in the Bible. We are warned against the beast and yet we seem to be supporting it 100%. — Athena
The stone paradox rests on something God cannot do viz. either his inability to lift the stone or inability to create one. — TheMadFool
What I respond to most enthusiastically when I read the Bible or other religious works (Christian or other) are general principles that I can understand and carry with me and apply according to whatever dim wisdom I have. — Bitter Crank
By truth I mean the factual. Factual claims. — Andrew4Handel
What do you think is true in the bible. It seems like you are prevaricating. And if something is true in the bible what is it and why is it true? — Andrew4Handel
You opened the door for that comment by inferring a goal should be to develop our own faith. — Athena
What is your idea of how to judge truth? — Athena
I am afraid those who think they can know absolute truth are absolutely dangerous. — Athena
Contradictory claims abut the same topic leading to confusion. — Andrew4Handel
My primary question is how truth can exist with contradictions. — Andrew4Handel
Contradictions are most problematic for people who believe in Biblical infallibility. — Andrew4Handel
But then they claim their interpretation is true — Andrew4Handel
What do you mean by "interpret"? And what, exactly, are you interpreting? — tim wood
sorry - got my threads mixed up - mea culpa and I slink back into my hole — Rank Amateur
Where do you want to go from there ? — Rank Amateur
There are many reasons why statements from different people would be contradicting, the better question would be, are their teachings in contrast? — Queen Cleopatra
It seems the reality the priest is faced with is that this is what most of us want to do most of the time, and if the priest rocks that boat too much he won't have a congregation. — Jake
And then the priest has to get another job, cause there's little market for getting down to business. — Jake