Individual wrote:A master of dharma should be powerful enough to be capable of sharing his knowledge freely and compassionate enough to be willing to share his knowledge freely.
Individual wrote:It's because of this sort of quackery that I think not only is it foolish to pay for dharma, it is unethical to sell it.
A master of dharma should be powerful enough to be capable of sharing his knowledge freely and compassionate enough to be willing to share his knowledge freely.
Jikan wrote:Individual wrote:It's because of this sort of quackery that I think not only is it foolish to pay for dharma, it is unethical to sell it.
A master of dharma should be powerful enough to be capable of sharing his knowledge freely and compassionate enough to be willing to share his knowledge freely.
Absolutely. Really, this is my gripe with Ken Wilber generally: he's attempting to profit on the labors of the Siddhas of the past (the Christian mystics, Tantrikas, German philosophers, Buddhists, the whole lot). His spirituality is consumer capitalism. And it's no accident he's marketing the hell out of this stuff right now, it's Christmas shopping time.
What sucks is that Wilber's in a position where he could do a lot of good in the world. Many still regard him as a respected voice on any number of issues, even after his bizarre meltdowns of 2006 (google the term "wyatt earpy" if you're curious). Instead he's cashing in and building up a cult around himself. Sad spectacle, wasted opportunity, &c.
Individual wrote:It's because of this sort of quackery that I think not only is it foolish to pay for dharma, it is unethical to sell it.
A master of dharma should be powerful enough to be capable of sharing his knowledge freely and compassionate enough to be willing to share his knowledge freely.
Tilopa wrote:Individual wrote:It's because of this sort of quackery that I think not only is it foolish to pay for dharma, it is unethical to sell it.
A master of dharma should be powerful enough to be capable of sharing his knowledge freely and compassionate enough to be willing to share his knowledge freely.
Well yes but this isn't being marketed as 'dharma' in the way we might understand the word and is using an understanding of the human condition derived in part from Buddhas teaching so bad if it helps people get their lives more together? I think not.
Made from 100% recycled karmaIndividual wrote:If you are waiting for "version 2.0", as you put it, you may end up waiting a very, very long time -- perhaps even long than your own lifetime. And when version 2.0 comes along, you may not have the capacity to recognize it.


Tilopa wrote:Individual wrote:It's because of this sort of quackery that I think not only is it foolish to pay for dharma, it is unethical to sell it.
A master of dharma should be powerful enough to be capable of sharing his knowledge freely and compassionate enough to be willing to share his knowledge freely.
Well yes but this isn't being marketed as 'dharma' in the way we might understand the word and is using an understanding of the human condition derived in part from Buddhas teaching so bad if it helps people get their lives more together? I think not.
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