gregkavarnos wrote:
pretty much a word game A pretty pointless and ridiculous word game as basically you are saying that "Self" is anatman (ie you say that Atman is anatman). At the same time others are saying that "Self" (Atman) is atman. So when you all can come up with a coherent and unfied designation of what this "Self" is then please come back so we can seriously discuss the issue.
PS Realistically though, the whole thing smacks of (non-dual) Advaita Vedanta, all you need to do is replace the term "Self" with Brahman. Replacing it with Buddha is just an extraordinarily transparent disguise.

gregkavarnos wrote:From the past 14 pages of discussion?
gregkavarnos wrote:I got more important things to do right now, like vacuuming and mopping.
gregkavarnos wrote:Well... I must admit that it wasn't exactly crystal clear to me. But what it left me with was a sense that it verified my claim, some 8 pages back, that the true self is no-self. That's what I go out of it anyway.Lotus_Bitch wrote:What do you guys think?

Son of Buddha wrote:Not self is a skillfull means to get too True self
not self tells us what is not enlightenment and leads us to what is.
Son of Buddha wrote:
The True self is (((not))) no-self or not self
Not self is a list of things that are not enlightenment,
defilements,impermenance,suffering,conditioned,attachment to the "i"(false self) all these things are not my self,not our self,(not self)
Not self isnt Enlightenment not self is everything that is NOT enlightenment
True Self IS Enlightenent
Not self is a skillfull means to get too True self
not self tells us what is not enlightenment and leads us to what is.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:That's the difference between Buddhist and non-Buddhist assertions.

Son of Buddha wrote:gregkavarnos wrote:Well... I must admit that it wasn't exactly crystal clear to me. But what it left me with was a sense that it verified my claim, some 8 pages back, that the true self is no-self. That's what I go out of it anyway.Lotus_Bitch wrote:What do you guys think?
The True self is (((not))) no-self or not self
Not self is a list of things that are not enlightenment,
defilements,impermenance,suffering,conditioned,attachment to the "i"(false self) all these things are not my self,not our self,(not self)
Not self isnt Enlightenment not self is everything that is NOT enlightenment
True Self IS Enlightenment
Not self is a skillfull means to get too True self
not self tells us what is not enlightenment and leads us to what is.
"Radha, you should abandon desire for whatever is nonself [anattâ]" (S.iv.49, brackets are mine).
“Bhikkhu, you should abandon desire for whatever does not belong to the self” (S.iii.78).

Astus wrote:Son of Buddha wrote:Not self is a skillfull means to get too True self
not self tells us what is not enlightenment and leads us to what is.
If the teaching of no-self tells us what is not enlightenment, then the true self should tell what enlightenment is. However, I am still looking for a clear description of what that actually is. Yes, it is said that it is "permanent, joy, self and purity", but those are just qualities without telling the thing that has those qualities.
Just to give an example of what I'm looking for from those emphasising "true self", here is an explanation from Sallie B. King's book "Buddha Nature" that is a study of the Buddha Nature Treatise (Foxinglun):
"The essential point here is that the new teaching of atmaparamita is not in conflict with the old anatman teaching, but on the contrary is the fulfillment of it. The very anatman itself, when taken to its extreme (i.e., when perfected) is the atmaparamita. This teaching is logically parallel to the sunyavada teaching that emptiness or sunya is the characteristic or the own-being (svabhava) of all things. ... Though the language is new, the content of this message is not. What we have here is a variation on the theme enunciated previously, "Buddha nature is the Thusness revealed by the dual emptiness of person and things ... If one does not speak of Buddha nature, then one does not understand emptiness'' (787b ). Non-Buddhists are as wrong as ever in seeing a self in the changing phenomena of worldly flux." (p. 89)
PadmaVonSamba wrote:
The true nature of mind may be without defilements,
but it is not a "self".
songhill wrote:Looking for the self using the nets of the five aggregates is an impossible task. It isn't a particular shape or a pleasant feeling. It isn't a percept. It isn't a formation or consciousness. In addition, the five aggregates are produced by worldlings (S. iii. 152). The aggregates also belong to Mara the Buddhist devil (S.iii.189). From passage after passage, for example in the Khandhavagga of the Samyutta-Nikaya we learn that aggregates are not the self or not my self (na meso attâ). From this we can surmise that the self is most intrinsic. It doesn't have to be made or produced. In a manner of speaking it finds itself by putting away desire for what is not itself (S.iii.78). But as we know, worldlings produce and crave the five aggregates which are suffering; which are not the self.
And looking for the "True Self" is also an impossible task given that, right now, we only have the five aggregates to look for it. Oh wait on, but it's our true nature right now isn't it. So we have it now, but we can't see it? We can't see it via the five aggregates although it constitutes "us" and "we" are the five aggregates right now. It is our essence yet we cannot see our essence with our essence? It is our essence but it is beyond our current form of existence?songhill wrote:Looking for the self using the nets of the five aggregates is an impossible task.
Yup, this is certainly the case. But your logic leap in the next statement:From passage after passage, for example in the Khandhavagga of the Samyutta-Nikaya we learn that aggregates are not the self or not my self (na meso attâ).
Is a massive leap backwards.From this we can surmise that the self is most intrinsic.

Most definitely. Without a doubt.oushi wrote:Buddhahood as a matter of choice

gregkavarnos wrote:
Why, because the Buddha does not say that the aggregates are the problem, he says that clinging to the aggregates as if there was something permanent there is the problem.
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