So you have thoroughly studied and realized paṭiccasamuppāda and found it lacking?
Do tell us how you improved on it! — baker
Before doing so, it seems it would behoove to first look into what ancient philosophy actually said, so that we know what exactly it is that we're updating/improving. — baker
But I can't accept the historical narrative of Christianity, the belief in the second coming, and other fundamental elements of Christian dogma. That's where Buddhism has won out in my view, but I'm open to persuasion. — Wayfarer
I mean the attitude of scientists. As if they address the one and inly reality. — VincePee
He is very critical on science insofar it makes claims of possessing an ultimate truth — VincePee
Is western philosophy simply based on scientific knowledge? Is is only about scientific or Academia knowledge? Why is it called western? Because it has its roots in ancient Greece where western democracy has its roots?
Is western philosophy more abstract? Trying to catch life in scientific terms? — VincePee
How is it that so many people feel no qualms about ascribing words to the Buddha for which they have no textual basis to assume he actually said those things or something like them? — baker
Oh dear. This is the standard problem with Buddhism: the pitifully low standard of quotation — baker
They are just some quotes that someone attributed to the Buddha. — baker
I asked you for a canonical reference, ie. an actual Buddhist source. — baker
You need to be more precise here and source your claims about Buddhism. — baker
The Buddha's happiness couldn't be further away from what psychologists consider happiness. — baker
As for the link between Buddhism and psychology, all I can say is the latter reduces humans to things, objectifies them, — TheMadFool
If you want to come at the issue that way, you'll have to admit/concede/accept that the Buddha was clinically depressed and obsessed as it were with suffering i.e. the Buddha was non compos mentis. Wisdom of Buddhism should be the — TheMadFool
It is Christianity itself that led to nihilism according to Nietzsche. — Fooloso4
We do not know what Jesus taught — Fooloso4
buddha and his long line of erudite disciples would be dead against. Buddhism is more than that. It's not just about making yourself feel better about yourself; it's a serious attempt to solve a real-world problem, that of suffering. — TheMadFool
the notions of heaven & hell are just another way of saying what goes around comes around, you reap what you sow, aka karma. You couldn't possibly have missed that! — TheMadFool
Do good and the pearly gates await you; do bad and off to the fiery pits of hell. — TheMadFool
What the Church prohibited was not philosophy itself but the teaching of it as a non-Christian tradition (or as an alternative to Christianity). Philosophy in Greece has been taught without interruption from Plato and Aristotle down to the present! — Apollodorus
. I don't see this as being connected with any particular philosophical or religious system. — Apollodorus
Correct. However, the concept of ethical conduct as conducive to happiness both in the individual and in society, was already central to Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, and subsequently passed into the Christian tradition along with other elements of Hellenistic philosophy.
So, it does not seem to be exclusively a feature of Buddhism. — Apollodorus
I think the Buddhists meant only human beings in relation to Metta — Ross
It is debatable how to best apply this in practice, though. For example, when coming across a tiger in the forest. I think the idea is that when practiced properly, the object of your metta, in this case the tiger, will be moved to respond in kind and be nice to you instead of having you for breakfast or lunch. But I don't know how many Buddhists have developed their metta to the degree that it would work out as intended. — Apollodorus
The Church is far from faultless, even in the case of Northern Ireland. The idea that religion is ‘used and abused’ or a tool to be wielded is the same argument the gun lobby employs. — Possibility
The ideal catholic community is one in which there is an acceptance that pretty much ‘everyone does this — Possibility
the teachers had us believing that all our religious practices at least were ‘normal’ — Possibility
That should be hedonistic by Nighthedonistic by day" — Ross
We were taught to believe that by obeying our Catholic parents, teachers and clergy, who taught us how to think and what to do, we were obeying God — Possibility
most are obscured by the teachings of the church - especially the Catholic Church, which assumes its own authority. Read and think for yourself — Possibility