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Beginningless existence and liberation
Comments
Can you tell me why I don't make any logical sense?
Really though, if you are going to search through Buddhist philosophy to find something to disagree with, you will succeed. Buddhist thought is so wide and encompassing there are bound to be disagreements within it.
The important thing to remember, I believe, is that Buddhism is a practice and not a philosophy. The Buddha did not spend his time crafting philosophical arguments, he spent it teaching people how to live so that they would be free from suffering.
The only way to understand Buddhism is to live like the Buddha suggested. It won't harm you. If you live with a Buddhist practice for a while, and your suffering is not reduced, by all means give it up. Unfortunately, a practice won't work unless you commit to doing it.
Regarding the rest of your post, there is a difference between disagreement and finding an (apparent) logical inconsistency. If other people can commit themselves to their practice in spite of such things, then I am glad for them. I am just trying to find a solution to my personal problem here.
(I'm not arguing, Yishai, just trying to understand your perspective. I think this is a good question for a new thread.)
How do you know that there is a chain of rebirths? Is death and rebirth a one-to-one relationship? When life began, didn't it start with one organism? How could we go from one organism to numbers of organisms beyond imagining if there is a continual chain?
I believe that you see a logical inconsistency because your premises are wrong.
Some of the questions coming up here would be good to ask a teacher. Sometimes there do seem to be inconsistencies in Mahayana, but that may be due to an incorrect or incomplete understanding.
Maybe life started from one organism on Earth, but from a Buddhist viewpoint there are countless other worlds on which sentient beings are reborn, so no problem here.
other planets.
Let me give you an example. Here are two statements:
1)Queen Victoria was abducted by an UFO when she was ten years old.
2)2*2=5.
We probably think that both are false. Still, we cannot prove that 1 is false. For all I know, it may even be true - it would change our worldview a bit, but there would be no inherent paradox in it, no logical inconsistency.
2, on the other hand, is inherently false, and we can see it without needing any empirical evidence.
(Enjoying this conversation, by the way.)
edit: ok, I understand your view of the realms, etc.
You say you don't want to be a Buddhist, because Buddhists believe X, and you disagree with X.
I also disagree with X, but I am a Buddhist. How can I be a Buddhist, if I don't believe in X? It turns out that a lot of Buddhists don't believe X. X isn't really important to maintining a Buddhist practice.
X could be any one of a huge number of beliefs. Buddhism is a very broad umbrella. It has mixed with the native religions of China, Thailand, Tibet, Japan, and a host of other places.
There is no one person that speaks for all Buddhists. You can't quote anyone and say "That's Buddhism." A Tibetan Buddhist is a particularly poor choice, because Tibetan Buddhists have a lot of beliefs that are different from most other places. Are they any less Buddhist than anyone else? Of course not.
All I am really trying to say is that whatever you believe, you can start a Buddhist practice. You don't have to call yourself a Buddhist. You don't have to tell anyone you are a Buddhist. You don't have to accept any illogical arguments.
All you have to do is choose to follow the four noble truths and the eightfold path. And they are way too vague to corner you into a logical corner.
Also, bear in mind that not everyone is reborn at the same pace. For example, one person may have 5 past lives as a human, and all those lives may have happened in the same century. Someone else may have 5 past lives that occurred over 5 centuries. We're not all charging through eternity at the same pace. Also, how do you know this isn't your first rebirth as a human? You see, there are so many variables...
You could have had a couple of human rebirths long ago, really made a mess of them, and been reborn in the animal realm, and over time, worked your way back up to human. This is why rebirth and related questions are "imponderable". We have no way of knowing what came before, over the millenia, and eons.
So, suppose we have been rolling dice since beginningless time. We get a 6. Is it possible for this 6 to be our first 6, ever? The answer is no. It is not possible. We have already gotten 6 countless times before.
And how do you know that there aren't people around you who are Enlightened beings? People quietly living lives dedicated to ending suffering. We have no way of knowing.
Cause and result is a particularly complicated issue. I don't think I am capable of explaining the views on it in an online forum.
Maybe tomorrow I will be able to think about some answers to my problem.
So Festin, can you quote your source?
@Festin Having thought about this for a while today the only way I could think of as a possiblity for resolving this is if time isn't looked at in a linear way of some sort. Thats as much as I got, but if time isn't linear then ignorance and enlightenment would both exist at once and to say we haven't reached enlightenment yet doesn't make any sense. I don't know why some would reach enlightenment before others though. Like I said non linear time is as good a guess as I could come up with.
but we are indeed very slowly learning, and helping one another to learn,
sometimes for better, and sometimes for worse.
As I have said elsewhere on this site:
Oh yes, the tears...
the tears of all the joys and sorrows and trials of a thousand lifetimes!
when we learned to fight and kill one another
when we learned to exploit one another
when we learned to argue one another
when we learned to communicate with one another
when we learned to work with one another
when we learned to share with one another
when we learned to understand one another
when we learned to nurture and support one another
when we learned to love one another!
They were my enemies
They were my rulers
They were my slaves
They were my rivals
They were my neighbors
They were my friends
They were my parents
They were my sisters and brothers
They were my dearest loves
They were my beloved children
Where are they now?
Look, they are here, all around...
Who are they now?
See how all have changed and grown from what we once...
See how all have learned, and changed, and grown through it all!
They were once me, and so I have come to understand...
and I was once them, and so I have come to understand...
how from the swamp
blooms the lotus
Om Mani Padme Hum
-Aura Waters
Only growth is measured as a sequential event in the cosmos.
Yes, person, I've also heard that past, future and present are simultaneous.
I agree, it's complex and non-linear. The Buddha describes this as well, that progression is non-linear, so one should take advantage of the human life while one has it, as one doesn't know what sort of causes and conditions for a rebirth of lower capacity lay lurking in ones unconscious. So, it's best to illumine ones unconscious while in a physical apparatus that has that capacity, and for us on Earth, that's mostly the Human capacity.