Seasons

This is a forum or general chit-chat, small talk, a "hey, how ya doing?" and such. Or hell, get crazy deep on something. Whatever you like.

Posts 5,560 - 5,571 of 6,170

16 years ago #5560
Bev: I agree -- Buddhism without the reincarnation doctrine would be easier to sympathize with.

16 years ago #5561
I started going to church. Don't tell anyone.

16 years ago #5562
Isn't Buddhism without reincarnation atheism with chants?

16 years ago #5563
Buddhists act like atheists with rites to me.

I will just go find Brother Jerome. He's a little Zen-y, though, isn't he? The fat and the faithful. Two of the few groups of people left for us to mock.

Don't worry. I offend everybody, like Henry Higgins.

16 years ago #5564
Clerk you may go to any church you like.

At it's heart, Buddhism is founded on the 4 noble truths and does not need a personal god or gods though often deities and other entities play a role in local versions (especially in Tibet). My simplified version (that may not be official wording) is (1) life is suffering (to live means there is sometimes mental and physical pain directly or indirectly through others and there is not a sentient being known of who has not felt some sort of mental anguish at some times); (2) Suffering comes from attachment (physical pain passes or can be endured in some way, but the mental aspect of suffering is caused by how we perceive things and by grasping for somethings and not letting go of others); (3)there is a way to stop suffering (release attachment); (4) that path is a middle way (often called the 8 fold path) which evolves gradual self improvement but is really too complex for me to sum up neatly here. You can see the goal as to end the cycle of rebirth and transcend this plane (or join god) or you can see it as a state of mind one may achieve in one life time (or that the seeking to achieve such a state of mind may transform and enrich this life). Throw in the concept that the sense of self and separation is an illusion and therefore to end suffering is to try to end suffering for all sentient beings and you are starting to see why we need big long books to explain and debate the details.

Going off on my own path, I could argue that in a sense "reincarnation" can be seen as a metaphor if my sense of being "me" is only an illusion created by this physical body/brain and I, being part of a greater whole, truly exists as the whole like a water drop in the ocean, but the "me" I think of as me is tried to this body and life. My illusion of self, created by the awareness phenomenon project by the body, is then essentially just a variation on a theme, as are all illusions of self and illusions of separate awareness and personality. Therefore I may be "reincarnated" in the sense that with every seeming separated sentient being, this illusion is reborn. I have been everybody in the sense we are all one, so in another life I was my mother, your father, Hitler and Gandhi. This is similar to seeing the god in everyone, only you see you. You can also see Buddha or Jesus in everyone--if we are all one I|Buddha|Jesus|you|the whole is in all people. It's all tied up in us being one essentially the same at the base of things. Others may take reincarnation much more literally than I do and see it as a linear (or at least traceable) progression of a given soul.

None of that debate is essential to Buddhism. At it's core, like all regions, it is a path to transformation and transcendence. All the rest is just dogma. I will just say that belief in god(s), angels, divas and dakini may be very important to some, but at this time I don't know about any of that and it does not change my path a bit.

16 years ago #5565
PS Clerk, I applaud your choice of BJ as spiritual guide. Apparently he is the preferred teacher of bad -a punk rockers and vampires with attitude problems:

Sid Vicious: I like Brother Jerome.
Spikebot: So. Why are you scared of Brother Jerome? Time was, you'd have taken Brother Jerome out in a heartbeat. Now look at you. I bet this, uh, tortured thing is an act, right? You're not...housebroken?
Sid Vicious: Brother Jerome told me he's but a humble servant of the Lord.
Spikebot: I am Brother Jerome's bitch, but I'm man enough to admit it.
Sid Vicious: I like Brother Jerome.
Spikebot: I like Brother Jerome.
Sid Vicious: I like Brother Jerome.

16 years ago #5566
Bev, I can agree completely with what you say about science. Moreover, it pretty much sums up the discussion, and my view on the whole. I can only emphasise again that in my opinion, whenever science tries to claim the authority over "why" of things, the drive and motivation behind such claims is power struggle, rather than scientists being convinced that they know/ can give answers to these questions. In fact, if one looks the arguments, they are all aimed at denying the validity of the questions/ phenomena, and discrediting those who think otherwise. There are actually no claims of having any answers, only a belief in once-to-come Theory Of Everything.

Zen is my worldview of choice. By "worldview" I mean a philosophical system rather than a religious one. In fact, I don't consider myself a religious person at all, and I'm not an atheist/ materialist neither. Philosophically, I'm agnostic, no problem here with a notion that ultimate, last answers will never come, not only from science, but also philosophy and religion may never exactly explain it all.

Personally, I find the conscious universe idea very interesting. Also, the Holographic Universe/ Mind paradigm seems intuitively more pleasing to me, and it provides one with a better, more flexible framework for thinking, than the particles and forces Nuts & Bolts Universe. People like Michael Talbot, Dean Radin, Karl Pribram, David Bohm and Roger Penrose, for example, are the ones that speak to me. Further on, books like Reality's Mirror: Exploring the Mathematics of Symmetry by Bryan Bunch, and Jeremy Narby's The Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the origins of knowledge, provide an insight into a genuine mystery that, I have no doubt, is out there.

Concepts like "soul", "reincarnation" and such are so laden with historically acquired cultural "meaning" that it's impossible to use them without implying a whole lot of things, whether one wants it, or means it, or not. Having said that, I do think that "consciousness" (whatever that means!) is a core evolving entity, at the level deeper than this 4-D reality with its inherent mind/ matter duality. Both, matter and mind, are aspects, a manifestation, of consciousness. It is entirely possible, in fact, very probable, that there are ever larger orders of symmetry at which the consciousness itself becomes an aspect of a larger whole. As I said before, I have no problem with truth being elusive.

Drugs are very interesting subject matter, as well as their relationship to perception/ consciousness... let me just say here that i don't think drugs are bad (or good) of themselves, it's all matter of a particular society's drug culture. It's a (consumer) culture that converts a plant (tobacco) into industrial product designed for mass consumption (cigarette).

Gotta go now, hope to talk to you all soon.

16 years ago #5567
Interzone wrote:

Personally, I find the conscious universe idea very interesting.

Well, the universe contains us, and we are conscious. Perhaps just as (some would say) certain brain cells make us conscious, we make the universe conscious.

16 years ago #5568
Interzone wrote:

I do think that "consciousness" (whatever that means!) is a core evolving entity, at the level deeper than this 4-D reality with its inherent mind/ matter duality.

But how then would it be that (as seems to be the case) our consciousness is tied in closely with various material, 4-D characteristics? E.g., certain brain states are associated with unconsciousness; if I go long enough without sleep, I begin to nod off, regardless of how important it is to me to stay awake. A blow on the head produces unconsciousness, as do various drugs. I cannot become conscious of an object unless I enter into one of certain material, 4-D relationships with it, e.g., looking at it under adequate light.

16 years ago #5569
Interzone, you can call your Zen practice a world view if you like. Tell me, when you have to fill out forms do you leave religion blank or cross it out and write "world view: Buddhist/new age/conscious universe"? I always hate the religion box and the race box. Hell some people I know hate picking a single gender. Those should all be essay questions and damn the demographic data!

16 years ago #5570
Irina, you remind me of a XKCD cartoon where the main man dreams of a woman pleading with him not to wake up because she does not want to stop existing. Maybe sleeping is like a rolling restart on the metaconsciousness grid and if you don't get your dream cycle in, your bits of the universe get to be laggy.

16 years ago #5571
religion box and the race box. I think that the governments, and all the agencies, that want to "box" people into nice neat categories will have to realize that those boxes are obsolete. Look at how many people are multi racial, hermaphrodite, spiritual but not religious.


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