It's a primative, savage religion that says that a child can be born for the purpose of digging through raw sewage. Yes, I'm referring to the untouchables. |
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It's a primative, savage religion that says that a child can be born for the purpose of digging through raw sewage. Yes, I'm referring to the untouchables. |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
Because it's very cool and cosmopolitan to learn about and embrace the new and contrary cultures of foreign people, who after all are just like us. |
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I'm a hippie and I don't have any strong feelings about Hinduism, nor do I pretend to know anything about it. I do like the pretty pictures and cosmic adventures, though. |
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Its simple |
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@juroara, But the caste system isn't "religious dogma", it's fundamental to Hindu Cosmology. So brushing it under the rug of that label doesn't really address my point that it's a savage religion. Is having a religion that endorses sex really worth glorifying the treatment of sentient beings in such a manner? |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
I like Buddhism, but I believe in God. I don't know a lot about Hinduism. |
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Out of curiosity, what do you like about Buddhism? |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
I think the sexuality of some flavors of Hinduism and the indifferent abuse of other human beings are not entirely unrelated. Free love seems great in concept as long as you ignore all the messy details. |
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Very good point. |
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Last edited by PhilosopherStoned; 09-28-2012 at 12:03 AM.
Previously PhilosopherStoned
It seems that in economics, consumer confidence is sometimes treated as equivalent to economic health. Of course lack of confidence does cause economic trouble, but its not as if we can solve all or economic troubles by pursuing monetary policies that stimulate confidence. I think stupidity is like this also. It causes us suffering, but if we were somehow less stupid, without changing anything else, we would get ourselves into even more trouble. It has a context. It makes no sense to be annoyed at a cat for being stupid. I think that we also have far less freedom in this regard than is sometimes assumed. I also think that our philosophical views and practices make a lot less difference than is commonly assumed. These things do matter, they are a critically important part of the process. But if we could somehow force everyone to read our very favorite books and try to follow them, it would actually make things worse. Its not the right time and place, for that, we've fallen too far. When there is a demand for better books, people will create better books. Of course doing that involves work, I don't mean that we should just roll over and let the con artists dominate discourse. What I mean is a thought like "if people would just do or think X, things would be much better", is itself a kind of stupidity, it doesn't see the whole picture. I don't mean that as a criticism of anything you said, I'm just saying some of what I think that seems relevant to the topic of stupidity. |
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How would we become less stupid without changing anything else? Changing our ability to think clearly about reality would change everything else. It's not thinking clearly that gets one in trouble. If one thinks clearly, then ones thoughts do a sufficiently adequate job of moving in parallel with reality to allow one to see trouble coming. |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
What's really wrong with picking and choosing? I hear that complaint a lot- 'oh this guy's just picking and choosing what he likes about his religion and ignoring the rest'. Fine, but what's so bad about that? I for one am a voracious picker and chooser. I can understand the problem if it's unprincipled. But principled picking and choosing seems ok to me. A religion may have 2 elements for example, x and y. I may find out that element x came about by a process very specific to the context that it was formed in, and that it has nothing to do with my situation. At the same time, element y came about by contextual processes that are more far-reaching in their applicability, such that it has relevance to my life now. As long as the two aren't tightly married (as is sometimes be the case with religious elements), I should be free to accept y and reject x. |
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Hinduism is prominent in New Age circles because the movement substantially owes its existence to an influx of Indian pseudo-gurus and proselytizing sects into the West in the mid to late 20th century. 'Foreign' religions often appeal to people who are apostates of their 'native' faith precisely because the new religion isn't associated with local injustices and personal trauma. The new faith is often also received from a more expert source than the often garbled absurdities passed from parent to child (and often enough, preacher to congregation) among the laity of any religion. |
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If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficulties and problems. With this strength, your own problems will seem less significant and bothersome to you. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm.Dalai Lama
So if a religion says that I'm not supposed to kill people or that I'm supposed to have compassion for people suffering from misfortune, then that's religious dogma? |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
I'm a hippie... and the only thing I know about hinduism, is a lot of their gods are on my lsd blotters |
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I would say because of the attraction of raja yoga. |
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Please click on the links below, more techniques under investigation to come soon...
If you feel a calling to follow something in a religion, then by all means go for it. Dont let anything I say stop you. |
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"Be impeccable with your word," right? |
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I think they just like Indian things and associate everything Indian with Hinduism. That and the cosmic images. |
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157 is a prime number. The next prime is 163 and the previous prime is 151, which with 157 form a sexy prime triplet. Taking the arithmetic mean of those primes yields 157, thus it is a balanced prime.
Women and rhythm section first - Jaco Pastorious
Ghandi was a traditional Hindu and refused to support the untouchables and thought that it was as it should be. He was much more impassioned about political independence from Britain. |
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Previously PhilosopherStoned
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