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Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
DaGip wrote:I know I try not to open any if at all possible.
khazalid wrote:wikipedia or cc forum
wikipedia or cc forum
hmm
khazalid wrote:wikipedia or cc forum
wikipedia or cc forum
hmm
mrswdk wrote:Anyone here know much about Buddhism? Specifically the teachings about giving up attachments, but any general understanding would be interesting.
GoranZ wrote:mrswdk wrote:Anyone here know much about Buddhism? Specifically the teachings about giving up attachments, but any general understanding would be interesting.
You represent everything that Buddhism is not...
I dont think that you are proper person for explanation of the teachings of Buddhism.
mrswdk wrote:GoranZ wrote:mrswdk wrote:Anyone here know much about Buddhism? Specifically the teachings about giving up attachments, but any general understanding would be interesting.
You represent everything that Buddhism is not...
I dont think that you are proper person for explanation of the teachings of Buddhism.
What's that supposed to mean?
mrswdk wrote:I represent everything that Buddhism is not, because there are some issues between Tibet and the central government?
Round of applause for you and your brilliant mind.
GoranZ wrote:mrswdk wrote:I represent everything that Buddhism is not, because there are some issues between Tibet and the central government?
Round of applause for you and your brilliant mind.
Even in your post you treat Tibet as part of China, and you try to undermine Tibet's rights for freedom...
Have you ever wondered why China manage to take Tibet's independence so easily in 1950's? Because Buddhists are not famous for choosing military measures.
If you don't know anything about a particular topic (e.g. Buddhism) then it is perfectly acceptable to refrain from talking about it.
mrswdk wrote:I started this thread to see if anyone on here has any substantial knowledge of Buddhism, its philosophies and so on.
Based on how this thread has gone so far, I'm going to assume not.
mrswdk wrote:I started this thread to see if anyone on here has any substantial knowledge of Buddhism, its philosophies and so on.
Based on how this thread has gone so far, I'm going to assume not.
mrswdk wrote:One of the things I was reading recently was about the relationship between Buddhism and morality. Buddhism avoids making any kind of moral rules or codes, and when it talks about 'good' and 'evil' it seems to simply be talking about actions and behaviors which are or aren't conducive to enlightenment.
It also seems to say that causing suffering (in either yourself or others) is evil though. One of the five precepts says that everyone fears death and punishment, and therefore one shouldn't inflict these on other living things. What I wondered is:
a) why it matters what you do to another living being, given that that doesn't appear to have any relation to enlightenment; and
b) I thought attachment (including attachment to life) is one of the things that Buddhists are supposed to relinquish, so surely an enlightened person wouldn't care about being punished or killed anyway.
got tonkaed wrote:a) wouldn't taking action that led to others suffering push someone further from enlightenment?
b) It has never seemed like enlightenment is a thing that happens in any sort of specific timeline. I would assume most people who are attempting to attain it would understandably fear they hadn't achieved it before being killed?
Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:One of the things I was reading recently was about the relationship between Buddhism and morality. Buddhism avoids making any kind of moral rules or codes, and when it talks about 'good' and 'evil' it seems to simply be talking about actions and behaviors which are or aren't conducive to enlightenment.
It also seems to say that causing suffering (in either yourself or others) is evil though. One of the five precepts says that everyone fears death and punishment, and therefore one shouldn't inflict these on other living things. What I wondered is:
a) why it matters what you do to another living being, given that that doesn't appear to have any relation to enlightenment; and
b) I thought attachment (including attachment to life) is one of the things that Buddhists are supposed to relinquish, so surely an enlightened person wouldn't care about being punished or killed anyway.
Because Buddhism is a non-theistic religion, there is no "God" on which we can blame our suffering. All the suffering is what we (the capital "WE", meaning all conscious beings, and avoiding any arguments about which beings are conscious) have created.
Escaping from the cycle of the world through enlightenment is only the final exit strategy; it does not absolve us of the responsibility to make the world a better place while we are in it. By analogy, when I go to a restaurant for dinner I know I will be leaving before long. That doesn't make it okay to piss on the floor and make other people's experience unpleasant.
got tonkaed wrote:a) wouldn't taking action that led to others suffering push someone further from enlightenment?
b) It has never seemed like enlightenment is a thing that happens in any sort of specific timeline. I would assume most people who are attempting to attain it would understandably fear they hadn't achieved it before being killed?
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