Dinesh

Dinesh club

Posted: 11 Apr 2022


Taken: 10 Apr 2022

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Gauthama
Quotes
The Cult of Nothingness
Buddha
Hegel on Buddhism
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Buddha (Quotes, Links)

Buddha (Quotes, Links)

8 comments - The latest ones
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
“When we attain the release called the Beautiful, at such a time he knows in truth what Beauty is ~ Gauthama Buddha

Victory breeds hatred; for the conquered is unhappy ~ Gauthama Buddha
23 months ago. Edited 23 months ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
. . . The relative thematic continuity of the deferent versions, principally formed by the question of nothingness, did not prevent some curious notations. Thus the Buddha, who marked a relative progress in the interiority of the spirit, was represented in an exemplary manner, for Hegel, by the “pensive attitude” in which “the feet and arms are placed upon one another in such a way that one toe enters the mouth,” which represented perfectly “the return to oneself, the suction on oneself.” ~ Page 61

. . . . The fundamental determination in both the thought and behavior of the Buddhists was their conviction, so to speak, that “from nothing everything comes, to nothing everything returns.” In accord with the principle thus attributed to Buddhists, Hegel considered their religious practices to be return to their inherent and immutable “nothing,” supposed to form the only an ultimate reality in their eyes. Their spiritual discipline tended therefore toward the systematic destruction of the self, toward the obliteration of consciousness, toward the annihilation of thought itself . . . Page 61 (Excerpt: "The Cult of Nothingness" Author : Roger/Pol Droit)
23 months ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
The Truth of Suffering (dukkha)
What, O Monks, is the Noble Truth of Suffering? Birth is suffering, sickness is suffering, old age is suffering, death is suffering. Pain, grief, sorrow, lamentation, and despair are suffering. Association with what is unpleasant is suffering, disassociation from what is pleasant is suffering. Not to get what one wants is suffering. In short the five factors of individuality are suffering.~ Page 50 “Buddhism” Author: Damien Keown
23 months ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
The content of the Truth of Suffering is supplied in part from the Buddha’s vision of the first three of the four signs -- the old man, the sick man, and the corpse -- and his realization that life is short through with suffering and unhappiness of all kinds. Many who encounter Buddhism find this assessment of the human condition pessimistic. To this, Buddhists tend to reply that their religion is neither pessimistic nor optimistic, but realistic, and that the Truth of Suffering simply presents the facts of life in an objective way. If the presentation seems pessimistic it is due to the inevitable human tendency to shrink from unpleasant truths and ‘look on the bright side.’ No doubt this was the reason why Buddha observed that the Truth of Suffering was extremely hard to grasp. . . . . page 52 (Excerpt: Buddhism” Author : Damien Keown
23 months ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
There are only two mistakes one can make along the road to truth; not going all the way, and not starting. ~ Buddha
23 months ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
Self-importance can be blatant or extremely subtle. In fact, most of the time, it’s not obvious to us. It doesn’t just pop out and announce itself. And even if we can see it clearly, we don’t usually find anything wrong with it. Either we don’t have the knowledge that self-importance is a problem, or we simply don’t want to see it as a problem. But according to Buddhist teachings -- . . . .all the suffering we have ever experienced, all that we experience now, and all there we will experience in the future, come from self-importance. ~ Page 3 [Excerpt “The Intelligent Heart” Author” Dzigar Kongtrul
22 months ago.