The four-valued logic is called in Sanskrit a Catuṣkoṭi. Compare it to the Greek tetralemma and the Aristotelian Square of Oppositions.
Namaste.
Search found 517 matches
- Wed Jan 21, 2015 1:23 am
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Either/Or <---> And
- Replies: 25
- Views: 5368
- Fri Jun 14, 2013 9:38 pm
- Forum: Lounge
- Topic: Let's Send Greg To His Retreat This Year
- Replies: 53
- Views: 14412
Re: Let's Send Greg To His Retreat This Year
Sorry to be dense, but I still can't figure out how to contribute. Can some one give instructions a 4 year old could follow, please?
- Thu May 16, 2013 2:46 am
- Forum: Lounge
- Topic: Terminal Treatment
- Replies: 19
- Views: 3739
Re: Terminal Treatment
Buddha never said one should have nor show no emotions, only that our emotions should not rule our responses to others and our lives. If you are hiding or suppressing your emotions about your father, you will have to deal with them eventually. You will probably get a handle on where your self-cheris...
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:51 pm
- Forum: Lounge
- Topic: What if they're right?
- Replies: 5
- Views: 2231
Re: What if they're right?
Nice metaphor, but not an actual 'mind', is it?zenkarma wrote:The internet is the new communal mind...
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:50 pm
- Forum: Lounge
- Topic: What if they're right?
- Replies: 5
- Views: 2231
Re: What if they're right?
The "New Age" vision of some sort of utopia with no antagonisms - that a person can somehow be "whole" and that society too can be healed of its rifts once and for all is in many ways naive and dangerous, and many commentators have shown that such absolutist thinking may easily ...
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:25 pm
- Forum: Lounge
- Topic: What if they're right?
- Replies: 5
- Views: 2231
What if they're right?
There is a lot of derision of "New Agers" on this forum, often with good reason, but I started thinking this weekend: What if they're right? Not about what they think is "Buddhist" or the way Buddhism should be practiced, but about being on the precipice of a new era of human thi...
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 5:57 pm
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
- Replies: 77
- Views: 16988
Re: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
Sometimes we speak of Buddhism in terms of conduct and view. Yes, where conduct = śīla and view = prajñā . Citta , then, is seen to maintain the first two. See here . Back to catmoon's point, anything that is "commonsesnse" is "morality", i.e., it is derived from the mores of th...
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 5:43 pm
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
- Replies: 77
- Views: 16988
Re: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
That POV rates some respect for sure. But panna means wisdom. I would not classify not killing or stealing or bonking the neighbour's wife as wisdom, its pretty commonsense really. So I would think that right aspiration, speech and action refer to simple morality, and the wisdom comes later in the ...
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:57 am
- Forum: Media
- Topic: Request for assistance
- Replies: 3
- Views: 1881
Re: Request for assistance
Thanks, Kirt!
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:37 am
- Forum: Media
- Topic: Request for assistance
- Replies: 3
- Views: 1881
Request for assistance
Could someone who knows how to embed a video on this PPhb BBC please post example code?
Thanks in advance.
Thanks in advance.
- Sun Dec 23, 2012 6:35 am
- Forum: Media
- Topic: Hans Rosling: New Insights On Poverty
- Replies: 2
- Views: 1384
Re: Hans Rosling: New Insights On Poverty
Here's an update with the fully animated version:
Unfortunately, he still doesn't address the fact that we now know the development model and the Kuznet's Curve are wrong...
Unfortunately, he still doesn't address the fact that we now know the development model and the Kuznet's Curve are wrong...
- Fri Dec 21, 2012 8:34 am
- Forum: Games & Humour
- Topic: Buddhist Photo Albums
- Replies: 20
- Views: 9325
- Thu Dec 20, 2012 1:07 am
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
- Replies: 77
- Views: 16988
Re: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
Silakhanda relates to right speech, right action, and right livelihood, so it can't only be considered to apply to an isolated individual, as Greg quoted earlier, "no man is an island", and most of this thread seems to be considering external standards of morality. While I tend more towar...
- Thu Dec 20, 2012 12:17 am
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
- Replies: 77
- Views: 16988
Re: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
Could you expand, please, on the "certain issues"?futerko wrote:... this does seems to pose certain issues at a social level to which I have no simple answer.
- Wed Dec 19, 2012 11:30 pm
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
- Replies: 77
- Views: 16988
Re: Moral discipline is the central practical teaching..?
"Harmony" would be saṃjñā , which is typically used in reference to vinaya and sangha. Rather than continue to play on words, why not establish the semantics for clarity? Both the Latin moralis and the Greek ethikos originally had more to do with "humors" or personality "dis...
- Wed Dec 19, 2012 4:33 pm
- Forum: Dharma in Everyday Life
- Topic: Karma and rebirth
- Replies: 18
- Views: 4160
- Wed Dec 19, 2012 4:05 pm
- Forum: Meditation
- Topic: stopping thought completely
- Replies: 101
- Views: 23135
Re: stopping thought completely
What is visualization if not thought? A thought can be an "object" of one-pointed meditation.lowlydog wrote:you can't stop thinking by engaging in thinking
Indeed. One would be fortunate to have Daniel Ingram as a teacher.Queequeg wrote:relevant?
- Wed Dec 19, 2012 4:46 am
- Forum: Meditation
- Topic: stopping thought completely
- Replies: 101
- Views: 23135
Re: stopping thought completely
...awareness is never lost. IMHO the whole trick is to maintain awareness very steadily, as Jinzang says, between dullness and agitation, as the whole thought aggregate calms down. It's totally, totally possible to do this. The result is a profound (and profoundly odd) experience of groundlessness....
- Wed Dec 19, 2012 4:32 am
- Forum: Meditation
- Topic: stopping thought completely
- Replies: 101
- Views: 23135
Re: stopping thought completely
I would be interesting in seeing that instruction. It could be some time before I can retrieve it, if I can retrieve it. As I understand it, when the subject and object (observer/observed, thinker/thought) unite and dissolve, everything goes bye-bye. Then it comes back. When it first happened to me...
- Wed Dec 19, 2012 3:47 am
- Forum: Meditation
- Topic: stopping thought completely
- Replies: 101
- Views: 23135
Re: stopping thought completely
For the sake of argument, how would you classify non-conceptual thought? The moment you "recognize" the gap, the gap itself is lost (as if something was actually there). I'm not interested in argument, but Azidonis has a point. I'm not sure I can give a good answer, I don't even try to ke...