I would like to know what are your views on: |
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I would like to know what are your views on: |
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I like Taosim and Buddhism. In fact I would say Buddhism has helped me immensely. I don't know a ton about confucius except some of his axioms. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
I agree with many aspects of Buddhism. |
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Mostly harmless. |
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I only have a view on Buddhism. And it is a good one. |
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Eh, doesn't Buddhism have it's super-natural stuff? I'd think Pantheism would be much more helpful to humanity. |
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No, it doesn't. It's just that it sort of merged with other culture's religions. |
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Some of the main ideas are cool, but it just seems like a big mess after all these generations. I think it would be better if they made reverence for nature and the scientific method more of a priority. |
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Buddhism deserves to be picked on just as much as all the other religions. |
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Moved to Inner Sanctum. |
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I like Budd - It's a good beer. |
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Every religious and spiritual scripture/book/text I've read from Taoism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity bible, Celestine Prophecy, Osho Quotes, Way of the Peaceful Warrior, Wisdom of the Peaceful Warrior, Carlos Castaneda, Eckhart Tolle, Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol, every experience I've had, every psychedelic drug experience I've read.... all of it points back to living deeply in the present moment. I don't think it gets any more simpler than present moment awareness. |
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Last edited by Majestic; 12-06-2011 at 11:11 AM.
<Link Removed> - My website/tumblelog
“The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.” - Albert Einstein
I'm a little at odds with Buddhism because I can't accept the first premise that life is suffering (someone please educate me if I'm missing some point...), I simply don't operate under this perspective. But Buddhists have essentially reverse-engineered the human mind, which is cool. |
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Life isn't suffering, life is... I dunno. But desire causes suffering. Desire is the birth of samsara or suffering through infinite potential desiring manifestation. Form is born of desire for form. Suffering is born from impermanence. All structures are finite and eventually cause suffering. If you don't get what you want, you suffer. If you get what you don't want, you suffer. If you get what you want, you suffer when it's gone. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
That makes sense as one way of framing the problem of suffering, I just don't find it the way most harmonious with my own perspective. But to the extent that my singular perspective can be narrow and confining, I can relate and appreciate it. I just don't have much use for it as a practical, everyday guiding principle. |
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The moment is the doorway to face the fear that desire creates. In that way, they still have the same solution to the problem. |
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Everything works out in the end, sometimes even badly.
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