Are there any Christians and believers here who could speak up?The OP is about how Christians and other believers view the commandments mentioned. — Apollodorus
In Communist countries like Soviet Russia and the Communist Bloc, a country would have an official legal code, but the ruling Communist Party would take the law into its own hands as it pleased, for example, by ordering courts to sentence people to death without due process or simply arresting, jailing or executing them without any trial.
In other words, the law was there but wasn't applied. The state was "above the law".
— Apollodorus
Of course, they are dictatorships. That's how they do things. — Tom Storm
Source?Buddha, once, was recorded for saying - "Even in Hell, I'll be well" — Anand-Haqq
A recipe for wasting time, and for confusion.Eh, you're probably just bored. — frank
I think looking for evidence of rebirth/reincarnation or that consciousness can operate outside of and independently from the physical body is a dead end (and bound to be a dead end, as long as one insists on being Humpty Dumpty).Well, one thing doesn't necessarily exclude the other. If consciousness can operate outside of and independently from the physical body, then both scenarios are (theoretically) possible. — Apollodorus
As far as people are concerned who proclaim to be members of a particular religion, the above can be ascertained, by checking in what way their testimonies of their betterment/improvement are aligned with the doctrines of the religion they profess to be members of.How can we tell when someone has experienced personal growth and greater freedom, I wonder? — Tom Storm
Anyone who has committed to some goal can be described with such words. For example, a highly successful businessman can be seen by others as shrinking away from life and palpably decreasing in liberty. Such is the nature of pursuing goals: one's options in life shrink.It seems to me that sometimes this is said to be experienced when what is seen by others is a shrinking away from life and a palpable decrease in liberty.
Experience is not enough, though. It takes a certain self-confidence, a "big ego", if you will, to trust one's experience over and above the comments, instructions, and criticisms of others (in this case, esp. Buddhists).This is entirely right in my opinion; your experience is indeed a good reason for you to believe! — Janus
Absolutely. It's peculiar how otherwise intelligent people can turn into morons once the topic is reincarnation/rebirth.It is true that belief in reincarnation is a cultural taboo, One of Stevenson’s many critics said he was a deadly threat to everything Western culture holds dear. — Wayfarer
I am very disappointed in you. I thought you better than you've shown yourself here.Interesting, isn't it, that folk suppose that because "I am convinced", it follows that "Hence, you ought be convinced". Going both ways. "I am not convinced, hence, you ought not be convinced". — Banno
You apparently believe terms can be understood on their own somehow, completely apart from the context of theories.You're a semantic atomist.
— baker
You're a fool. — Banno
Read with more precision.What do you expect me to do? — TheMadFool
Now, did Thanissaro Bhikkhu actually say "life is not suffering", or did you perhaps miss out on a word?Clearly, Thanissaro is way off mark, at least in a Buddhist sense, in saying "life is not suffering", the title of his short, interesting but completely wrong exposition of the place of suffering in Buddhist philosophy. — TheMadFool
Or a sitting one.Man, if my practice in pursuit of liberation of Nirvana is a self-fulfilling prophecy, I'm a lucky duck! — TLCD1996
What do you intend to do about it in the next 24 hours?I fully second that motion. — TheMadFool
Unlike some, I have not fallen asleep at the wheel.That, acceptable though it is, is, right or wrong, the easy way out. Let's engage in some role play. Suppose I'm your teacher. Your assignment is to solve the paradox as outlined above, keeping in mind "life is suffering" is to be understood as it is with no provisos/caveats/conditions as those that appear in your ingenious solution. Can you?
Perpetrated by scientists who want to rule over other people.So bad physics is a result of contempt for science. — Banno
Thanks for the find!"There are six kinds of people who recollect these past lives. They are: other sectarians, ordinary disciples ..." - Visuddhimagga XIII 15 — Apollodorus
You're a semantic atomist.The evidence is insufficient. — Banno
I answered your question. Why did you ignore it?Here's the question again: what is it that is reincarnated? — Banno
But you're like someone who claims to want to learn and talk about "gravity", and then insists on categorically ignoring all physics books about gravity.I'm interested in the philosophical implications, and that means sorting out the conceptual stuff. — Banno
It makes for standard Hare Krishna doctrine:The soul is a form of intelligent energy. An immaterial substance that has the power of knowledge and action, of being aware of itself and of other things and of acting upon or interacting with itself and other things.
— Apollodorus
I think you’d have a fair amount of difficulty supporting that with reference to original sources. I personally believe the notion of an ‘immaterial substance’ is incoherent, as no such ‘substance’ can be detected by means of the senses or instruments. — Wayfarer
/.../ The “soul” is defined as a non-material, eternal spiritual entity present within any living being. The symptom of the presence of the soul within a body is consciousness. The soul continues to exist after the destruction of the body and it existed prior to the creation of the body. The material body develops, changes and produces by-products [offspring] because of the presence of the soul within. The material body deteriorates in due cause of time and when it is no longer a suitable residence for the soul it is forced to leave the body. This we call death.
/.../
https://krishna.org/the-scientific-theory-of-the-soul/
Some people drink with buddies in pubs, and some discuss stuff on internetz forumz.That's a good point. Although hopefully one is getting closer to the best possible version of reality (whatever that might be), or why bother? — Tom Storm
Oh, there are things to read into this, things that drive the OP!I would have thought that for every idea proposed there is always going to be an opposite statement made by someone at some time. I don't read anything into this.
I just don't see that freedom. Where is it?Man is born unindebted, under possession or moral authority of no state, society or individual. — Tzeentch
Stop confusing yourself and go study some actual Buddhist doctrine instead of relying on popular pseudobuddhist soundbites.It's something like the Buddhist desire conundrum which defies a solution. Buddhists à la Siddhartha Gautama, believe that desire is the root of all suffering. Thus buddhists are of the view that to end suffering one must put out the fire of desire. Unfortunately or...not, to not want to desire is, salva veritate, to want to not want to desire. In other words, we can't end desire without the desire to do so. — TheMadFool
??People generally don't want trouble and they tend to shun those that are in any kind of trouble (such as being targeted by a racist; it can be anything from losing your job, to getting cancer or being robbed).
— baker
I don't think you're in trouble in this example though. Yeah, I understand that people can distance themselves from you if you lose your job or fall into financial hardship, but if someone simply says a comment to you I wouldn't classify that as a major life downfall. — BitconnectCarlos
Oh? So what are children free to do? Piss and shit their diapers? And scream?And yet he is free. In fact, children are more free than most adults. — Tzeentch
Does Analayo's book provide doctrinal evidence of the spontaneous recollection of past lives?I don't recal ever hearing in Theravada Buddhist doctrine about the spontaneous recollection of past lives. I searched ATI for it, no finds
— baker
https://www.amazon.com.au/Rebirth-Early-Buddhism-Current-Research/dp/1614294461 — Wayfarer
It's futile to talk about a topic like reincarnation/rebirth or recollection of past lives without first defining the terms, or by categorically ignoring the contexts in which those terms originate from.I've read a bit about his research. I won't reject it outright.
What I have said stands; the philosophical issue that remains is: what is reincarnated? — Banno
Children.There is copious evidence of children who remember previous lives. /.../ — Wayfarer
I wonder if pop science has something to do with this... so in presenting science without the equations, writers make it look like science does not need the equations. So folk think they are doing science when all they are doing is making shit up. — Banno
I wonder though whether Rand's individualism is actually a case of defensive individualism. Rand's individualist is coming from a position of lack, from a position of being a prospective victim due to his exploitability (due to poverty, lack of resources). It's not the spoiled upper class individualist who was born with a silver spoon, believing that the world is his oyster.In other words, "individualists" bullshit themselves with delusions like "libertinism", "social darwinism", "metaphysical libertarianism" & "Objectivism". — 180 Proof
I see two major kinds of individualism which are not to be confused:So what, then, is the problem with individualism? — NOS4A2
First answer why it would be necessary to "convincingly justify it in philosophical terms".However, supposing we accept reincarnation either as fact or as theoretical possibility, how would we convincingly justify it in philosophical terms? — Apollodorus
In Western cultures where the metaphysical norms are derived from Abrahamic religions.It's up there with astrology, ghosts and UFO research, all generally categorised under the heading woo-woo. — Wayfarer
