Which you nevertheless manage not to see, somehow. — Wayfarer
Anyway, I regret to inform you that it isn't clear, still, as to how Nagarjuna's tetralemma is related to ethics — Agent Smith
Buddhists lost the debate against the Hindus, thus explaining the decline of Buddhism in India. — Agent Smith
Most interesting. — Ms. Marple
1. p Nyet!
2. ~p Nyet!
3. p & ~p Nyet!
4. ~(p v ~p) Nyet!
The Buddhist Denial = Nyet! — Agent Smith
Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must remain silent. — Wittgenstein
Śāriputra abandons speech too quickly, after all. He has been asked a question in a particular context [...] to refuse to speak at such a point is neither an indication of wisdom, nor a means of imparting wisdom, but at best a refusal to make progress [...] Śāriputra's failed silence is but a contrastive prelude to Vimalakīrti's far more articulate silence.
that aphorism is regularly used as a cudgel on this forum. — Wayfarer
True, and I had drafted a reply along the lines of "Advice more often given than taken" but I thought it sounded more sour than the kindly Agent Smith deserved, who I don't think was cudgelling on this occasion..... — Cuthbert
peddle virtue as a means to paradise, — Agent Smith
I get that virtue is a reward in itself but all religions, without exception I'd say, peddle virtue as a means to paradise, attaining nirvana, achieving moksha and so on — Agent Smith
The 'parable of the burning house' is about the fact that the father (Buddha) has to entice the children (sentient beings) from the burning house (regular existence, sickness, old age and death) by enticing them with gifts ('attaining Nirvāṇa'). But when they have escaped from the burning house, then they realise that they had been in terrible danger. So the reward is not dying in the burning house - which is not really a reward at all, except in comparison to the alternative. — Wayfarer
More like he has to appeal to their self-interest but it culminates with the realisation that there is no self whose interests need to be served. In Mahāyāna Buddhism, that is called ‘upaya’, ‘skilful means’ (sometimes paraphrased as ‘holy cunning’, i.e. ‘cunning as serpents, wise as doves’.) — Wayfarer
I was told the middle path doesn't take sides. — Agent Smith
A cornerstone idea of Buddhism is that all propsitions are undecidable and hence epoché (suspension of judgment)
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.