What does Nagarjuna's tetralemma have to do with ethics? — Agent Smith
Well, how are they - Nagarjuna's tetralemma & ethics - connected? — Agent Smith
Yeah, 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.
On the flip side, the highest good, in these very same ideologies again, is to expect no reward for one's good thoughts/words/deeds. — Agent Smith
So you mean to say that the Buddha "deceives" people into being ethical by dangling the false gift of nirvana before their eyes? Most interesting! Nevertheless, there is a reward, even if only an illusion of one and that brings us back to what I referred to in my posts - ethics as a means to...happiness. — Agent Smith
Mahayana — baker
"expecting no reward for one's good thoughts/words/deeds." — baker
What does Nagarjuna's tetralemma have to do with the Noble Eightfold Path? — baker
Who says they are?? — baker
The truth, if it could be called that, lies somewhere between p and ~p (the madhyamaka aka the middle path) for any proposition p. — Agent Smith
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