| Hare Krishna The Hare Krishna movement, ISKCON, and Swami Prabhupada |
07-17-2005, 06:22 AM
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#121 (permalink)
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General Member
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
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Originally Posted by jaxree
Each time they refine their metaphor, they believe they actually understand God better. There's a lot of idolatry out there.
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Not sure what you mean here. How do you understand God better, if not by refining your way of describing him and his relationship to you?
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And that's where I get uncomfortable with the word "prove." Once you think you have "proved" God's existence, then its a short distance to becoming convinced that your image of God is the "true" God. Then you believe that everyone else's image of God is wrong. And the jump from there to flying planes into buildings isn't as far as you might think.
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We agree on this, for sure.
peace,
press
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07-18-2005, 05:48 AM
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#122 (permalink)
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
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Originally Posted by presser_kun
Not sure what you mean here. How do you understand God better, if not by refining your way of describing him and his relationship to you?
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Hey, I just figured out how this quote thing works! It's a breakthrough for me.
What I meant was this: One of the ways God has been defined in the Christian tradition is that he is a supreme being, infinite and ineffable. Based on that definition, I would argue that you can never understand God better. The chasm between a finite being and an infinite being is too great.
It's like the difference between buying one lottery ticket and 10 lottery tickets. If you buy one, then you have a 1-in-50 million chance of winning. If you buy 10, you have a 10-in-50 million chance of winning. Mathmatically, those odds are almost identical.
When you refine your metaphor, you aren't coming closer to understanding the true nature of God. By Christian tradition, he is a mystery that cannot be understood. Rather, you are simply examining your own faith.
In the end, you want a metaphor that makes sense to you. You want one that helps you connect with a transcendant reality. If the intellectual exercise of discussing God's attributes helps you, that's great. But in humility, you must always remember that those aren't really God's attributes. They are metaphors which help you make sense of something that cannot be understood.
So I'm not arguing that theological discussions are pointless. They can indeed be enriching to a religious person's spiritual quest. It just gets dodgy if people start thinking that they are talking about more than a metaphor, if they think they are talking about God's true nature. That's all I meant.
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07-18-2005, 09:56 AM
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#123 (permalink)
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
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Originally Posted by jaxree
Hey, I just figured out how this quote thing works! It's a breakthrough for me.
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^___^
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What I meant was this: One of the ways God has been defined in the Christian tradition is that he is a supreme being, infinite and ineffable. Based on that definition, I would argue that you can never understand God better. The chasm between a finite being and an infinite being is too great.
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Point taken.
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It's like the difference between buying one lottery ticket and 10 lottery tickets. If you buy one, then you have a 1-in-50 million chance of winning. If you buy 10, you have a 10-in-50 million chance of winning. Mathmatically, those odds are almost identical.
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True, but for the ticket holder, the difference between 1 and 10 is significant.
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When you refine your metaphor, you aren't coming closer to understanding the true nature of God. By Christian tradition, he is a mystery that cannot be understood. Rather, you are simply examining your own faith.
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In the end, you want a metaphor that makes sense to you. <snip>But . . . you must always remember that those aren't really God's attributes.
So I'm not arguing that theological discussions are pointless. They can indeed be enriching to a religious person's spiritual quest. It just gets dodgy if people start thinking that they are talking about more than a metaphor, if they think they are talking about God's true nature. That's all I meant.
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I think we see things the same way, jaxree.
Do you know The Cloud of Unknowing? it's written by an anonymous 14th century English mystic, a handbook on prayer. The subtitle says:
A book of contemplation the which is called the
cloud of unknowing, in the which a soul is oned with God.
The idea is that we can never know God, but should work to reach him. There's a line from the book I love that expresses your thought quite well:
Shall I, a gnat which dances in Thy ray,
Dare to be reverent.
I think grappling with the proof/faith dicotomy is one way of reaching out to God, albeit in a fumbling, bumbling way.
peace,
press
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07-18-2005, 06:48 PM
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#124 (permalink)
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One of Many
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Namaste Devadatta,
thank you for the post.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Well, here's where I find a kind of oddity if not lack in the tradition. The tradition asserts non-self ad nauseum - while being the most self-reliant practice imaginable.
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clearly, this being would disagree with your formalization here.
whilst it is true enough that the Hinyana view seems to be geared in this manner, this is more of a matter of Upaya than anything else. the Bodhisattva ideal is found throughout the Buddhist canons, which clearly teach the difference in the various conceptions of self that were prominent during this cultural millieu.
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My point is that the Abdhidhamma/dharma commitment to this sort of analysis leaves the true instrumentality of the self in sort of limbo.
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what is the "true" instrumentality of the self?
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I understand the soteriological reasoning here - we must deny any shred of concept of self to cling to - but the intent is not to deny self, which is listed among the wrong views, but to help effect a turning in the mind, to reorient the mind to the true state of affairs, as repeated in the Lankavatara. Now, we can scholastically list "self" under the heading of the skanda of mental formations - that may satisfy our fear of clinging - but it only takes us so far... But as you suggest somewhere above, this problem can lead us to all sorts of convolutions maybe better left to another thread. In the end, I don't think we disagree.
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we may or may not. it doesn't really impact our discussion all that much either way, in my view.
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Perhaps my difference is that I think that we needn't be too afraid of ideas like "process self" and "interbeing" and a greater emphasis on "interdependence" as ways of smuggling selfhood in through the back door.
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seeing how pervasive the idea of an eternal self is colors my veiw. ideas which seem to support an "eternal" anything are ideas which, from a religious perspective, cannot find support in my view.
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Every culture that has adopted Buddhism has brought in new perspectives and new gifts. My hunch is that Western Buddhism will bring in new and fruitful correctives to the self/non-self dichotomy.
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"correctives"?
of course, there is no doubt that Buddha Dharma changes... it, too, is impermenant and empty of any self-nature.
metta,
~v
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07-18-2005, 07:20 PM
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#125 (permalink)
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
whilst it is true enough that the Hinyana view seems to be geared in this manner, this is more of a matter of Upaya than anything else. the Bodhisattva ideal is found throughout the Buddhist canons, which clearly teach the difference in the various conceptions of self that were prominent during this cultural millieu.
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Well, I guess I would point out that in Mahayana iteration of non-self is replaced by iteration of emptiness, which as you know is merely the more thorough elaboration of the same core strategy. What I'm putting into question a little is the relative emphasis on this strategy, and the danger of a too-literal reading of it.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
what is the "true" instrumentality of the self?
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Here I'm not trying to establish a metaphysical self, but only looking at it from a phenomenological point of view - which is probably too pretentious a way of putting it on my part - but I'm only pointing to the usefulness of certain descriptors. The aggregates are useful for the specific purposes for which they were designed, but not for what they weren't designed, that is as descriptors for the unique combinatory effect that accounts for distinctly different personalities. Along with the metaphysical soul, you won't find Shakespeare, Gandhi or Hitler in the aggregates. Yet these folks "exist" for all of that. But again, rather than continue here, I plan when I have a little more time to start a thread in the Buddhism forum for everyone to have a shot at.
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07-18-2005, 07:53 PM
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#126 (permalink)
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One of Many
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Namaste Devadatta,
thank you for the post.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Speaking of tailoring a message to any audience, this is not the way the Buddha - from what I've read in the Pali Canon - would answer a question like this.
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i've not claimed to be a Buddha, thus, i'm not really following your objection.
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The Buddha was careful never to tell anyone who believed in a self in this sense that this self "dies"; that as you know is a wrong view. Wrong in several ways, but first of all wrong in sowing confusion and misconception.
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actually, it would depend on the beliefs that they held concerning the nature of the self. as you know, a feature of Buddhas is that they are clarivoyant and know what the relative level of understanding of the being they are addressing is and they can speak in a manner which that being can directly understand.
thus, the answer that the Buddha would give is predicated on the being whom is asking the question.
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What "self" are we talking about that "dies" here?
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that is a very salient question. Presser seems to indicate that his belife is that his "self" is the sum of his total experience. what do you think your "self" is?
however... please understand.. that i did not assert the existence of a self that dies (no self means no self death), i was contrasting the explanation of the Christian view of the self dying with the idea of non-self in the Buddha Dharma.
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I must be honest here, and I don't claim to be an enlightened master in any sense, but I think you've slipped past your expertise here.
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perhaps. i am quite ignorant of many things and, of course, you are entitled to your view.
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When there is a danger of misleading, I would suggest noble silence.
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a fine suggestion to make and adhere to.
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This is again what I see as being tangled up in mere words. The aim is not to make distinctions between traditions which use words like "eternal" or "non-eternal" or any other wrong view; but in effectively arriving at the reality that all these traditions point to.
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that would certainly depend on the context of the discussion, don't you think? of course, using human language to denote aspects of reality is always somewhat problematic, however, we don't have any other means at our disposal at this time.
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I'm not actually following this religious/philosophical distinction you're making here.
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how can i clarify it for you?
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As well, the Buddha taught no ontology.
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i wholeheartedly disagree. more to the point, without a solid grasp of the Buddhist ontological view, it would seem to be quite difficult to come to an accurate understanding of the Buddha Dharma.
of course, you are free to hold this view.
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Even the abhidhamma - which was not likely formulated by the Buddha in any case - is a phenomenological excercise, and certainly Nagarjuna established no position, let alone an ontology.
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i'm not sure what works you've read from Arya Nagarjuna, however, have you read his The Jeweled Garland? in particular the pratitya-samutpada.
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Look, I hope you can find it in your heart not to be offended by my rather stiff response above. I was speaking honestly and from the heart. But if you think I was off-base, don't hesitate to tell me so.
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what is there to be offended by?
clearly, your view and my view on these matters is different. no worries there
heck.. there are Buddhists that don't believe in karma or rebirth, yet, Buddhists they remain. whilst i certainly don't agree with those rejections, i understand them and support them.
metta,
~v
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07-18-2005, 08:27 PM
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#127 (permalink)
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One of Many
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Namaste Devadatta,
thank you for the post.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Well, I guess I would point out that in Mahayana iteration of non-self is replaced by iteration of emptiness, which as you know is merely the more thorough elaboration of the same core strategy. What I'm putting into question a little is the relative emphasis on this strategy, and the danger of a too-literal reading of it.
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i disagree. sunyata has, from the beginning, been a part of the Buddha Dharma. it is true enough that, for most practiconers, the Sotapana and so forth, the teaching of sunyata focused on the individual being. however, this is, as well, a matter of Upaya and does not remove the teachings from the tradition.
it is quite a correct caution.. even the doctrine of "emptiness" and "no-self" when clung to, become obstacles.
this is, primarily, why the Buddha teaches using Buddha Dharmas and not normal dharmas.
ultimately, even the Buddha Dharmas must be let go for they are temporary expedient means.
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Here I'm not trying to establish a metaphysical self, but only looking at it from a phenomenological point of view - which is probably too pretentious a way of putting it on my part - but I'm only pointing to the usefulness of certain descriptors.
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on a relative level, descriptions are accurate enough. that does not mean, however, that what those words describe is actually real. for instance the old phrase " a barren womans daughter".
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The aggregates are useful for the specific purposes for which they were designed, but not for what they weren't designed, that is as descriptors for the unique combinatory effect that accounts for distinctly different personalities.
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for what purpose do you think that the concept of skanda is used?
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Along with the metaphysical soul, you won't find Shakespeare, Gandhi or Hitler in the aggregates. Yet these folks "exist" for all of that.
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in what way do these beings exist?
do they exist in any more substantial way than the Chesire Cat from Alice in Wonderland?
metta,
~v
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07-19-2005, 12:54 AM
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#128 (permalink)
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Senior Member
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
i disagree. sunyata has, from the beginning, been a part of the Buddha Dharma. it is true enough that, for most practiconers, the Sotapana and so forth, the teaching of sunyata focused on the individual being. however, this is, as well, a matter of Upaya and does not remove the teachings from the tradition.
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Disagree? Why, I do not accept your disagreement!
Seriously, I may just have poorly expressed myself on this, because I don't think I'm really saying anything different here. I agree it's possible to find the roots of all apparently later formulations in the fundamental suttas. But I believe it's recognized that the early abhidhamma analysis of reality, (which is often styled a kind of "realism") arrives at a basis in dhammas that are thought of as having independent existence, including the unconditioned dhamma of nibbana. On the other hand, later schools like Madyamika hold that no dharma exists from its own side, but only interdependently, up to and including nirvana.
Now, whether the Buddha literally preached prajnaparamita, along with the Lotus on Vulture Peak, among other Mahayana sutras, or that it was rather a case of later elaborations on the original discourses, surely we're looking at a shift in emphasis if not in doctrine.
But perhaps I'm missing the point of your objection.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
on a relative level, descriptions are accurate enough. that does not mean, however, that what those words describe is actually real. for instance the old phrase " a barren womans daughter".
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The relative IS the absolute, or at least that's a common reading of Nagarjuna which, with the proper precautions, seems about right.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
for what purpose do you think that the concept of skanda is used?
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"I teach suffering, and its ending." You know the parable of the raft; you've alluded to the saying about the abandoning of all dharmas, even the best, in the end. Are you putting me through a Buddhist catechism here? Evidently the aggregates are pragmatic formulations made for the practical use of loosening our instinctual clinging to this or that aspect of existence. As well, they serve to demonstrate the fundamental nature of that existence, which is interdependence. My point is that we shouldn't mistake these traditional working categories as the last word in the phenomenological analysis of the mind. They are tools to get a job done. The Buddha referred to his dharma as "a handful of leaves". I'd say we have to use our own judgement & experience to explore the rest of the forest, and avoid a too-strict adherence to original formulations. Yes, it's incumbent on us to respect what tradition says. But the forest is infinite, and our explorations can benefit from contributions from all traditions.
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
in what way do these beings exist?
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Originally Posted by Vajradhara
do they exist in any more substantial way than the Chesire Cat from Alice in Wonderland?
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Okay, the short answer is my pragmatic mantra: what makes a difference is a difference. If visualization of the Chesire Cat has any effects in the world or on human behaviour, there you have a measure of its existence. Either/or is the trap that Nagarjuna and other interesting folk in other traditions are offering an escape from. Of course it takes some patience to observe things as they arrive and depart, each in its own unique mode of existence, while suspending judgement.
But again, I'm a little harried at the moment, but I would like to explain myself at a little greater length, when I have a chance. You may still "disagree" but at least you may have a clearer view of what I'm about here.
Cheers.
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07-19-2005, 02:49 AM
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#129 (permalink)
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General Member
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Wow. You both (Vajradhara and Devatta) are so very far advanced compared to me. I hope to understand enough about Buddhism to discourse with you one day.
My comment here, though I'm sure it must be a simple one, is this:
Vaj said:
i was contrasting the explanation of the Christian view of the self dying with the idea of non-self in the Buddha Dharma.
Buddhism maintains that there is no self? Why, then do we perceive a self within us?
Thanks in advance for a word of clarification.
peace,
press
p.s. who does believe that the sum total of his experiences are what makes up his "self." What else could there be to my "self"?
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07-19-2005, 06:17 AM
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#130 (permalink)
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Senior Member
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
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Originally Posted by presser_kun
Wow. You both (Vajradhara and Devatta) are so very far advanced compared to me. I hope to understand enough about Buddhism to discourse with you one day.
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I won't speak for Vajra, but me you vastly over-estimate.
Cheers,
Devadatta, Certified Fool
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07-19-2005, 02:53 PM
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#131 (permalink)
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One of Many
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
i am but a bug, knowing nothing.
any benefit a being derives from reading my words is due to their own good karma ripening.
i should like to respond more thoroughly to the posts thus far... however, i won't have the chance to do so until later today or, perhaps, tomorrow.
thanks for your patience.
metta,
~v
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07-19-2005, 09:07 PM
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#132 (permalink)
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New Member
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Impressive...impressive..I'm glad I got into the forum like that because I definitely have something to say.
As I understand, folks here speak about whether God exists or not.Buut - it doesn't seem that everybody clearly realizes where to go first to find proofs. Christians who believe in the Bible and who live according to It know that the Bible contains all that people are supposed to know and God never revealed to people more than He wanted - as we see in the Bible that not every event was written by scribes. In the very beginning, the verse - "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth". Surely the heavens and the earth are the BIGGEST proofs for existence of God. Our huge earth, the whole beautiful nature, animals, all living beings show the amazing hand of our Creator. Isn't that wonderful?
Why scientists fail in proving God's existence scientifically? Because they don't know where to look for the truth. They dig deeper, they try to prove what they cannot prove by any means creating all kinds of theories,etc. Evolution theory..it's a big mistake in the human history. Many people forget that spiritual things exist on this planet. And they have to mean a lot to us. Faith - spiritual faith that comes from one's heart, NOT from one's mind - because there is no physical faith - was given to us by God. Not everyone has this kind of faith, only those who devote their hearts to God and truly believe that God is alive - He is God of all gods indeed - He keeps everything in His hands - it's His planet, not ours - People decided to go their own way, that means they rebelled against God - as a result: sin - that's what separates people from God, that's why they seek for the most truth and still remain with lots of questions. That's why people don't have faith that comes from heart, faith that can give a true understanding of existence of God. I want to underline, people have faith in mind, but no faith in heart. Is that a problem? Of course, it is.
I think people should start to work spiritually in their hearts. That should be on the first place. That's the key to find a real God's existence and persue even more than that. I got it on my own experience and am really happy about that.
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07-19-2005, 10:27 PM
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#133 (permalink)
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One of Many
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Namaste Amelialee,
thank you for the post and welcome to the forum. enjoy your stay.
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Originally Posted by Amelialee
As I understand, folks here speak about whether God exists or not.Buut - it doesn't seem that everybody clearly realizes where to go first to find proofs.
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proof, as has been mentioned, is a property of alcohol and formal systems, such as logic and maths. what most beings are actually seeking is evidence, which is a different thing than proofs.
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Surely the heavens and the earth are the BIGGEST proofs for existence of God.
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what does this mean? "surely"? this is, it would seem, an appeal to incredulity.
is actually quite tiny and small in a galactic sort of way.
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Why scientists fail in proving God's existence scientifically? Because they don't know where to look for the truth.
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nah.. mostly God cannot be tested, measured and experimented with, thus, there is no foundation for the scientific method to postulate such an entity. in point of fact, science and religion are rather complementary to each other... one of them is seeking the "how" and the other is seeking the "why".
the only conflict is the mind of individual beings.
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They dig deeper, they try to prove what they cannot prove by any means creating all kinds of theories,etc. Evolution theory..it's a big mistake in the human history.
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i suspect that you are not understanding how science uses the word "theory" all science deals with are theories... the Theory of Gravity, for instance.. Germ Theory, et al. it is a common enough misconception.
as Dr. Gould explaines:
In the American vernacular, "theory" often means "imperfect fact"—part of a hierarchy of confidence running downhill from fact to theory to hypothesis to guess. Thus creationists can (and do) argue: evolution is "only" a theory, and intense debate now rages about many aspects of the theory. If evolution is less than a fact, and scientists can't even make up their minds about the theory, then what confidence can we have in it? Indeed, President Reagan echoed this argument before an evangelical group in Dallas when he said (in what I devoutly hope was campaign rhetoric): "Well, it is a theory. It is a scientific theory only, and it has in recent years been challenged in the world of science—that is, not believed in the scientific community to be as infallible as it once was."
Well, evolution is a theory. It is also a fact. And facts and theories are different things, not rungs in a hierarchy of increasing certainty. Facts are the world's data. Theories are structures of ideas that explain and interpret facts. Facts do not go away when scientists debate rival theories to explain them. Einstein's theory of gravitation replaced Newton's, but apples did not suspend themselves in mid-air, pending the outcome. And humans evolved from apelike ancestors whether they did so by Darwin's proposed mechanism or by some other, yet to be discovered.
Moreover, "fact" does not mean "absolute certainty." The final proofs of logic and mathematics flow deductively from stated premises and achieve certainty only because they are not about the empirical world. Evolutionists make no claim for perpetual truth, though creationists often do (and then attack us for a style of argument that they themselves favor). In science, "fact" can only mean "confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional assent." I suppose that apples might start to rise tomorrow, but the possibility does not merit equal time in physics classrooms.
http://www.stephenjaygould.org/libra...nd-theory.html
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Many people forget that spiritual things exist on this planet.
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and science leaves that to religion to answer and respond to. of course, individual beings can have any combination of views, depending on their own capacity and so forth.
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And they have to mean a lot to us. Faith - spiritual faith that comes from one's heart, NOT from one's mind - because there is no physical faith - was given to us by God.
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did you know that your heart cannot think? your heart cannot actually have faith since your heart is not sentient. though you feel the experience of faith opening the heart chakra, it is not, in fact, the heart that has faith, it is the mind wherein faith resides.
metta,
~v
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07-19-2005, 11:18 PM
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#134 (permalink)
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One of Many
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Namaste Devadatta,
thank you for the post.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Disagree? Why, I do not accept your disagreement!
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it really isn't a matter of your acceptance or denial. the teachings are what they are and this concept is fully articulated in the Pali canon. i usually don't like to quote scripture and all of that, since it is my view that doing so often detracts from the conversation. however, should you desire to verify that Sunyata is a foundational teaching of Buddha Dharma, i can provide the Sutta support for you to do so.
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Seriously, I may just have poorly expressed myself on this, because I don't think I'm really saying anything different here.
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perhaps... but you expressed yourself rather clearly... at least it appears clear
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I agree it's possible to find the roots of all apparently later formulations in the fundamental suttas.
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fair enough
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But I believe it's recognized that the early abhidhamma analysis of reality, (which is often styled a kind of "realism") arrives at a basis in dhammas that are thought of as having independent existence, including the unconditioned dhamma of nibbana. On the other hand, later schools like Madyamika hold that no dharma exists from its own side, but only interdependently, up to and including nirvana.
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this is one of the main reasons why it is important to understand which philosophical school a particular Buddhist lineage upholds. we've started a bit of a discussion here: http://www.comparative-religion.com/...read.php?t=719
if you'd like to join it.
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Now, whether the Buddha literally preached prajnaparamita, along with the Lotus on Vulture Peak, among other Mahayana sutras, or that it was rather a case of later elaborations on the original discourses, surely we're looking at a shift in emphasis if not in doctrine.
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it would seem, to me at least, that this shift in emphasis is due to the Sangha. in particular, as beings become Arhants their practice shifts. nevertheless, this is a rather fine point and discussion which isn't really appropos to this thread, in my view.
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But perhaps I'm missing the point of your objection.
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re-reading the dialog, i would suppose that i'm objecting to the implication that the teaching of sunyata did not include "no self" prior to the arising of the Mahayana.
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The relative IS the absolute, or at least that's a common reading of Nagarjuna which, with the proper precautions, seems about right.
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i would whole-heartedly disagree with this view. Arya Nagarjunas oft quoted teaching is that "samsara and nirvana are one and the same." however, Nirvana/Nibbana is not The Absolute.
The Buddha Shakyamuni explains Nirvana in this manner:
'But, Venerable Gotama [the Brahman, Aggivessana Vacchagotta, is addressing the Buddha], the monk whose mind is thus released: Where does he reappear?'
'"Reappear," Vaccha, doesn't apply.'
'In that case, Venerable Gotama, he does not reappear.'
'"Does not reappear," Vaccha, doesn't apply.'
'...both does & does not reappear.' Vaccha, doesn't apply.'
'...neither does nor does not reappear.’ Vaccha, doesn't apply.'...
'At this point, Venerable Gotama, I am befuddled; at this point, confused. The modicum of clarity coming to me from your earlier conversation is now obscured.'
'Of course you're befuddled, Vaccha. Of course you're confused. Deep, Vaccha, is this phenomenon, hard to see, hard to realize, tranquil, refined, beyond the scope of conjecture, subtle, to-be-experienced by the wise. For those with other views, other practices, other satisfactions, other aims, other teachers, it is difficult to know. That being the case, I will now put some questions to you. Answer as you see fit. What do you think, Vaccha: If a fire were burning in front of you, would you know that, "This fire is burning in front of me"?'
'...yes...'
'And suppose someone were to ask you, Vaccha, "This fire burning in front of you, dependent on what is it burning?" Thus asked, how would you reply?'
'...I would reply, "This fire burning in front of me is burning dependent on grass & timber as its sustenance."'
'If the fire burning in front of you were to go out, would you know that "This fire burning in front of me has gone out"?'
'...yes...'
'And suppose someone were to ask you, "This fire that has gone out in front of you, in which direction from here has it gone? East? West? North? Or south?" Thus asked, how would you reply?'
'That doesn't apply, Venerable Gotama. Any fire burning dependent on a sustenance of grass & timber, being unnourished -- from having consumed that sustenance and not being offered any other -- is classified simply as "out" (nibbuto).'
'Even so, Vaccha, any physical form by which one describing the Tathagata would describe him: That the Tathagata has abandoned, its root destroyed, like an uprooted palm tree, deprived of the conditions of existence, not destined for future arising. Freed from the classification of form, Vaccha, the Tathagata is deep, boundless, hard-to-fathom, like the sea. "Reappears" doesn't apply. "Does not reappear" doesn't apply. "Both does & does not reappear" doesn't apply. "Neither reappears nor does not reappear" doesn't apply.
'Any feeling... Any perception... Any mental process...
'Any act of consciousness by which one describing the Tathagata would describe him: That the Tathagata has abandoned... Freed from the classification of consciousness, Vaccha, the Tathagata is deep, boundless, hard-to-fathom, like the sea.'
this is not, however, how the Buddha Shakyamuni engages beings with regards to the Absolute.
suffice it to say that, for the majority of beings, Nirvana/Nibbana is postulated as the 'destination'. once a being has entered extinction, there is something else, if it can be called that in any meaningful sense.
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"I teach suffering, and its ending." You know the parable of the raft; you've alluded to the saying about the abandoning of all dharmas, even the best, in the end. Are you putting me through a Buddhist catechism here?
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me?
the difficult part is that some beings feel as if they should abandon the various Dharmas well prior to reaching the Other Shore. they are not likely to make progress on this path without utlizing, to the full extent, the tools that have been provided.
as the famous Zen saying goes... when you first start the practice, mountains are mountains. after some attainment, mountains are not mountains and when a being has full attainment, mountains are mountains once again.
however... it is a vital step, in my view, to go through the second phase of this in an experential manner, if not, the first view and the concluding view may seem to be one and the same, when they are qualitively different.
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Evidently the aggregates are pragmatic formulations made for the practical use of loosening our instinctual clinging to this or that aspect of existence. As well, they serve to demonstrate the fundamental nature of that existence, which is interdependence. My point is that we shouldn't mistake these traditional working categories as the last word in the phenomenological analysis of the mind. They are tools to get a job done.
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i agree with what you are saying here.
i suppose that my point is, essentially, that whilst these tools must be put down at the correct time, we must use these tools before we can put them down.
i've read a text wherein the arising of each moment of consciousness is broken into 99 discrete elements... these are Buddhists with some time on their hands!
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The Buddha referred to his dharma as "a handful of leaves". I'd say we have to use our own judgement & experience to explore the rest of the forest, and avoid a too-strict adherence to original formulations.
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according to Buddha Shakyamuni, once we have verified a teaching for ourselves that it is condusive to the welbeing of all, we should put it into practice. as well, he instructs, we should verify our understanding of the teachings with the "wise". he explains this in the Kalama Sutta. who, precisely, are the "wise" in this case?
association with "admirable friends" is considered to be half of the holy life in Buddha dharma. "admirable friends" are, amongst other things, described as thus:
"And through this line of reasoning one may know how admirable friendship, admirable companionship, admirable camaraderie is actually the whole of the holy life: It is in dependence on me as an admirable friend that beings subject to birth have gained release from birth, that beings subject to aging have gained release from aging, that beings subject to death have gained release from death, that beings subject to sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, & despair have gained release from sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, & despair. It is through this line of reasoning that one may know how admirable friendship, admirable companionship, admirable camaraderie is actually the whole of the holy life."
http://accesstoinsight.org/canon/sut.../sn45-002.html
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Yes, it's incumbent on us to respect what tradition says. But the forest is infinite, and our explorations can benefit from contributions from all traditions.
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to a certain extent i agree. however, the Buddha Dharma is unique in this world system and, as such, the other traditions found in this world system can only help in some ways and hinder in others.
i don't advocate an Orthodox, Protestant or Messianic view of the Buddha Dharma to any being. however, it is my feeling that without understanding, correctly, the Orthodox view, ones foundation in the Protestant or Messianic view will not be very firm.
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Okay, the short answer is my pragmatic mantra: what makes a difference is a difference. If visualization of the Chesire Cat has any effects in the world or on human behaviour, there you have a measure of its existence.
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fair enough.
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But again, I'm a little harried at the moment, but I would like to explain myself at a little greater length, when I have a chance. You may still "disagree" but at least you may have a clearer view of what I'm about here.
Cheers.
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please do so  this forum is about communication and sharing our various views of our religious traditions. we do not have to agree to have a productive conversation, in my view.
take your time as well... this thread will be here for the duration, i suspect
metta,
~v
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07-19-2005, 11:27 PM
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#135 (permalink)
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One of Many
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: In the deserts of Washington being trained as a poet by Samuel L. Jackson
Posts: 3,713
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Re: Proofs for existence of God
Namaste press,
thank you for the post and the kind words.
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Originally Posted by presser_kun
My comment here, though I'm sure it must be a simple one, is this:
Vaj said:
i was contrasting the explanation of the Christian view of the self dying with the idea of non-self in the Buddha Dharma.
Buddhism maintains that there is no self? Why, then do we perceive a self within us?
Thanks in advance for a word of clarification.
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that is a great question. why is there a perception of some sort of seperate "i"? the experience of an experiencer apart from the experience, as it were.
generally speaking, the Buddha Dharma takes two views in it's explanations... explanations for non-Buddhists and explanations for Buddhists. the main difference in these two is the skillful means by which Buddha Shakyamuni explained things.
that being said... simplistically, the reason that there is this sense of a seperate "i" is due to a fundamental ignorance, an inability to recognize (if you will) the reality of suchness, as is. this is a special sort of ignorance in Buddha Dharma, not really a lack of knowledge, rather, a lack of experience is what is really being intimated. these sorts of things become a bit more clear, in my view, when we have a chance to read the Sanskrit or Pali canons.
our minds tend to think (without training otherwise) in a subject/object dichotomy.. our very language is tied to this same dichotomy, for what it is worth. Buddhism can get very detailed in its explanation of psychological phemonena, as such, i shant do so here.
along with this fundamental ignorance concerning the nature of reality and our subject/object thinking style, the other primary factor in feeling a sense of 'self' is the ego.
we could probably say something like this:
a sense of self is an imputation of the ego onto a reality which does not operate in a subject/object manner leading to an ignorance of the nature of reality.
of course.. there is nothing like summing up 2,500 years of psychological work in one sentence
metta,
~v
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