LastLegend wrote:Well if you are not too angry now comparing to before you practice. If you experience peace now more so than before you practice...I certainly believe this is what you get.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:LastLegend wrote:Well if you are not too angry now comparing to before you practice. If you experience peace now more so than before you practice...I certainly believe this is what you get.
Oh, I believe so too. My question is, if I am a deluded and confused (Shinran says 'foolish' ) person, and I 'experience peace', how can I be certain that this is the experience I am really having? In other words, I believe I am experiencing peace, but everything I believe is in the mind of a "foolish" person.
So, is a person's observation of their own mind's activity accurate?
Astus wrote:All our observations are delusions because we maintain a subject-object duality, this is our fundamental ignorance. Shinran's deluded person is prthagjana in sanskrit, that is an ordinary being without insight into the true nature of reality. Since it is practically impossible to attain enlightenment in the Dharma-ending age, says Shinran, the only realistic option is to rely on Amida's vow. That is a religious-soteriological statement. It doesn't mean if you see a cat it is not a cat.
Astus wrote:All our observations are delusions because we maintain a subject-object duality, this is our fundamental ignorance. Shinran's deluded person is prthagjana in sanskrit, that is an ordinary being without insight into the true nature of reality. Since it is practically impossible to attain enlightenment in the Dharma-ending age, says Shinran, the only realistic option is to rely on Amida's vow. That is a religious-soteriological statement. It doesn't mean if you see a cat it is not a cat.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:Astus wrote:All our observations are delusions because we maintain a subject-object duality, this is our fundamental ignorance. Shinran's deluded person is prthagjana in sanskrit, that is an ordinary being without insight into the true nature of reality. Since it is practically impossible to attain enlightenment in the Dharma-ending age, says Shinran, the only realistic option is to rely on Amida's vow. That is a religious-soteriological statement. It doesn't mean if you see a cat it is not a cat.
If all of our observations are delusions, then how do we know we are deluded? Wouldn't that observation be a delusion?
PadmaVonSamba wrote:Astus wrote:All our observations are delusions because we maintain a subject-object duality, this is our fundamental ignorance. Shinran's deluded person is prthagjana in sanskrit, that is an ordinary being without insight into the true nature of reality. Since it is practically impossible to attain enlightenment in the Dharma-ending age, says Shinran, the only realistic option is to rely on Amida's vow. That is a religious-soteriological statement. It doesn't mean if you see a cat it is not a cat.
If all of our observations are delusions, then how do we know we are deluded? Wouldn't that observation be a delusion?
PadmaVonSamba wrote:If all of our observations are delusions, then how do we know we are deluded? Wouldn't that observation be a delusion?
Astus wrote:PadmaVonSamba wrote:If all of our observations are delusions, then how do we know we are deluded? Wouldn't that observation be a delusion?
Delusion means that in our experience we imagine into an inherent self and we reify concepts.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:But that's what I am talking about. "we imagine into an inherent self and we reify concepts" is the setting in which we experience the senses, suffering, pleasure, etc. and the means by which we establish for ourselves the validity of the Buddha's teachings. But because "we imagine into an inherent self and we reify concepts" doesn't that make what we experience also a delusion? And if we observe thay they are delusions, then isn't that observation a delusion as well?
PadmaVonSamba wrote:Astus wrote:PadmaVonSamba wrote:If all of our observations are delusions, then how do we know we are deluded? Wouldn't that observation be a delusion?
Delusion means that in our experience we imagine into an inherent self and we reify concepts.
But that's what I am talking about. "we imagine into an inherent self and we reify concepts" is the setting in which we experience the senses, suffering, pleasure, etc. and the means by which we establish for ourselves the validity of the Buddha's teachings. But because "we imagine into an inherent self and we reify concepts" doesn't that make what we experience also a delusion? And if we observe thay they are delusions, then isn't that observation a delusion as well?
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