Bonsai Doug wrote:The Heart Sutra may be short, but it's a tough one to understand. For example, in all the things that are
negated in that sutra, it seems to me that it also negates the Four Noble Truths and the Eight-fold Path.
This line is giving me problems:
There is no suffering, no cause of suffering,
no end to suffering, no path to follow.
Can someone either explain how this is not negating the 4 Truths and The Path,
Bonsai Doug wrote:or perhaps point me to some reading material explaining this sutra?
Bonsai Doug wrote:My readings/study are primarily Theravada. But I try not to limit myself, and appreciate other traditions.
Bonsai Doug wrote:There is no suffering, no cause of suffering,
no end to suffering, no path to follow.
TIA

Jnana wrote:.... by realizing emptiness in meditative equipoise one abandons the recognition of arising, duration, and dissolution (utpādasthitibhaṅga). ....
DarwidHalim wrote:What do you mean by abandon?
DarwidHalim wrote:WHat is the difference between abandoning such things in the dream, abandoning such things in the meditative state, and abandoning such things in the post-meditative state?
It's not that plain. It's not saying the Four Truths don't exist (they do) but that they don't exist in the way you think. As Nagarjuna would put it: they both exist and do not exist at the same time. They (like everything else) are projections of the mind applied to phenomena in dependence on their parts.Bonsai Doug wrote:My readings/study are primarily Theravada. But I try not to limit myself, and appreciate other traditions.
The Heart Sutra may be short, but it's a tough one to understand. For example, in all the things that are
negated in that sutra, it seems to me that it also negates the Four Noble Truths and the Eight-fold Path.
This line is giving me problems:
There is no suffering, no cause of suffering,
no end to suffering, no path to follow.
Can someone either explain how this is not negating the 4 Truths and The Path, or perhaps point me to
some reading material explaining this sutra?
TIA
Jnana:
You said cease to perceive.
Jnana:
The direct realization of emptiness requires non-conceptual jñāna.
DarwidHalim wrote:What is the difference between the person in jhana state with the piece of wood then?
A piece of wood certainly doesn't perceive arising, duration, and cessation.
DarwidHalim wrote:What do you mean by non-conceptual Jnana?
DarwidHalim wrote:If you can say non-conceptual Jnana, why there is the act of abandon?
Bonsai Doug wrote:My readings/study are primarily Theravada. But I try not to limit myself, and appreciate other traditions.
The Heart Sutra may be short, but it's a tough one to understand. For example, in all the things that are
negated in that sutra, it seems to me that it also negates the Four Noble Truths and the Eight-fold Path.
This line is giving me problems:
There is no suffering, no cause of suffering,
no end to suffering, no path to follow.
Can someone either explain how this is not negating the 4 Truths and The Path, or perhaps point me to
some reading material explaining this sutra?
TIA
DarwidHalim wrote: In Sunyata, there is no abandon.
If you abandon, you just dont get what sunyata is.
Sankhata Sutta: Fabricated
"Monks, these three are fabricated characteristics of what is fabricated. Which three? Arising is discernible, passing away is discernible, alteration (literally, other-ness) while staying is discernible.
Sankhata Sutta: Fabricated
"Now these three are unfabricated characteristics of what is unfabricated. Which three? No arising is discernible, no passing away is discernible, no alteration of what stays is discernible.
Jnana wrote:Sorry peeps, but this isn't the pseudo-zen bullshit forum.
Jnana wrote:DarwidHalim wrote: In Sunyata, there is no abandon.
If you abandon, you just dont get what sunyata is.
A good prescription for rebirth in the lower realms.
Bonsai Doug wrote:This line is giving me problems:
There is no suffering, no cause of suffering,
no end to suffering, no path to follow.
Can someone either explain how this is not negating the 4 Truths and The Path, or perhaps point me to
some reading material explaining this sutra?
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