Where are the Gods?

General discussion, particularly exploring the Dharma in the modern world.
Pema Rigdzin
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Pema Rigdzin »

Serenity509 wrote:
Kyosan wrote:
Serenity509 wrote:Do you ever wonder what the mystical is for the mystic?
"Mystical" can mean several things. Buddhism is a mystical religion in the sense that the Buddhadharma is difficult to comprehend, and ordinary people who don't put much effort into practicing most likely won't comprehend it.
When a person has a mystical experience, what aspect of reality is the person experiencing?
According to Buddhism, he or she is experiencing his/her mind.
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Serenity509
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Serenity509 »

Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.
deff
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by deff »

which would be the nature of their own mind, no? you can't experience something outside your mind, that's an oxymoron as far as i can tell :shrug:
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Pema Rigdzin »

Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.
And where do you suppose this "eternal Buddha" is found?
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Grigoris
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Grigoris »

Kyosan wrote:
Serenity509 wrote:Do you ever wonder what the mystical is for the mystic?
"Mystical" can mean several things. Buddhism is a mystical religion in the sense that the Buddhadharma is difficult to comprehend, and ordinary people who don't put much effort into practicing most likely won't comprehend it.
I disagree, the buddhadharma
Is incredibly simple and logical if one leaves their ideological-religios baggage at home. It is true that we don't practice enough in order to REALISE this knowledge. :namaste:
"My religion is not deceiving myself."
Jetsun Milarepa 1052-1135 CE

"Butchers, prostitutes, those guilty of the five most heinous crimes, outcasts, the underprivileged: all are utterly the substance of existence and nothing other than total bliss."
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Grigoris
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Grigoris »

Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.
Yup, of course they would say this. And what exactly is Samantabhadra? The true nature of mind, the Dharmakaya.
"My religion is not deceiving myself."
Jetsun Milarepa 1052-1135 CE

"Butchers, prostitutes, those guilty of the five most heinous crimes, outcasts, the underprivileged: all are utterly the substance of existence and nothing other than total bliss."
The Supreme Source - The Kunjed Gyalpo
The Fundamental Tantra of Dzogchen Semde
Malcolm
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Malcolm »

Serenity509 wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
Serenity509 wrote: but I am partial to the idea of a first cause.
The logic of dependent origination rejects first causes. This is the principle reason your view is not compatible with Buddhadharma. Buddha rejected first causes.
What is the universe dependent on for its origination?
I already explained this, the collective karma (actions) of the sentient beings from the previous universe, ad infinitum. This is all very clearly and consistently explained in Buddha' teachings. We can understand that this really is the teaching of the Buddha because Hindus used to argue against dependent origination and so on, trying to prove that Ishvara creates the universe.
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ronnewmexico
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by ronnewmexico »

Ser...anyway you split parse or parcel it you will find this is not buddhist thought.

You certainly may find some buddhists such as hindu/buddhists that hold that and those similiar views. You exemplify the potential of that.
That such is present and that some consider that buddhism be philosophy as you contend does not mean it is that for the majority nor for those that hold lineage or consider buddhism in a religious context.

To deny that people may consider buddhism as a philosophy is the same error as denying that buddhism may be not considered as religion.
Both may be effective personal spiritual paths. But to deny one or the other because of personally held beliefs lead to error.

Buddhism as religion has as the scholors attest...no such componants.There are deviations such as I mention hindu buddhists and other sorts but those are generally not recognized as forms of buddhism. Buddhist first, many religions abscribe to the buddha as saint or some equilivence. But they are not...buddhist religions.There is a very strict qualification on that.
No school identifies as theistic. That is the bottom line.

YOu may then extend your view to anything supernatural and any other things of inconcievable sort(they are myriad)...all have been tried and refuted.
Buddhism developed in the mileau of very sophisticated theisms, way beyond the simplistic western inventions that now present.
All.... each and every one is refuted, by the scriptures and by the teachings of those that hold lineage.

Educate yourself to it..study it.
You I expect will persist. And if any does present a successful argument you will not be convinced but go away mad to my experience(all seem to).
Nothing will be served. You will remain with your opinion on how thing are, to naught.
So I say don' t waste time...study it first.

The basic answer has been provided by those of scholorship(not me)..no you are wrong.
"This order considers that progress can be achieved more rapidly during a single month of self-transformation through terrifying conditions in rough terrain and in "the abode of harmful forces" than through meditating for a period of three years in towns and monasteries"....Takpo Tashi Namgyal.
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PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by PadmaVonSamba »

Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.
Bring them here and I will beat them up.
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by deff »

:rolling:
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PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by PadmaVonSamba »

Serenity509 wrote: I don't think that God's incarnation in Christ necessarily did happen. History cannot demonstrate that Jesus actually claimed to be God.
History cannot even demonstrate that Jesus actually existed!
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PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by PadmaVonSamba »

Serenity, I am curious...
are you a vegetarian?
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catmoon
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by catmoon »

Serenity509 wrote:
catmoon wrote:
Serenity509 wrote: Have you ever had a mystical experience? Would you give a name to what you experienced?
Yes I have, several of them in fact. The name I give to what I experienced is "mystical experience".
What is it that you were experiencing? What is the mystical?
If I knew what it was, it would hardly be mystical now would it?

Perhaps they are nothing more than hallucinations induced by borderline diabetes. But there have been a few strange sights in the dark, and some completely unexplained, radically altered states of mind.
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Josef
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Josef »

catmoon wrote:
Serenity509 wrote:
catmoon wrote:
If I knew what it was, it would hardly be mystical now would it?

Perhaps they are nothing more than hallucinations induced by borderline diabetes. But there have been a few strange sights in the dark, and some completely unexplained, radically altered states of mind.
Any experience you have through dharma practice can be explained.
"All phenomena of samsara depend on the mind, so when the essence of mind is purified, samsara is purified. Since the phenomena of nirvana depend on the pristine consciousness of vidyā, because one remains in the immediacy of vidyā, buddhahood arises on its own. All critical points are summarized with those two." - Longchenpa
Malcolm
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Malcolm »

Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.

One cannot experience anything that is eternal.
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PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by PadmaVonSamba »

Namdrol wrote:
Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.

One cannot experience anything that is eternal.
what about sunlight?
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Josef
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Josef »

PadmaVonSamba wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.

One cannot experience anything that is eternal.
what about sunlight?
Definitely not eternal.
"All phenomena of samsara depend on the mind, so when the essence of mind is purified, samsara is purified. Since the phenomena of nirvana depend on the pristine consciousness of vidyā, because one remains in the immediacy of vidyā, buddhahood arises on its own. All critical points are summarized with those two." - Longchenpa
Malcolm
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by Malcolm »

PadmaVonSamba wrote:
Namdrol wrote:
Serenity509 wrote:Other Buddhists would say they are experiencing the eternal Buddha.

One cannot experience anything that is eternal.
what about sunlight?

Sunlight is not eternal since it is produced.
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PadmaVonSamba
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by PadmaVonSamba »

Namdrol wrote: Sunlight is not eternal since it is produced.
Okay, um...
so what you are saying is that
one cannot experience something which is not produced.
and I assume here that by produced you mean arising from causes
and so what you are saying is that if it is not the result of cause, it cannot be experienced.
Am I getting this right?
I think that Serenity's position (which i do not support)
is that this 'god' thing does not arise from conditions but has always been there as the great spirit of the universe or whatever, and so serenity is drawing some comparison between that and the idea of original mind, buddha nature, what remains after kleshas have been exhausted, which is being regarded as not produced by a cause.

All the same, I am one of those fools who loves to find an exception to the rule, so I will keep pondering if anything can be said to be experienced but which does not arise from causes.

What I am working on right now, is pondering at what point the non-conscious matter in the universe, of which we are composed, begins witnessing its own existence, as we do. Somehow your statement seems to fit into that. In his 17 stanzas, Nagarjuna asserts that one thought follows another, and that a thought does not spontaneously arise from no thought. So, I would like your thoughts on the arising of awareness itself.
If we refer to the 12 links of dependent arising and say that they are beginning-less, how does begingingless-ness differ from what we would refer to as being eternal?
Last edited by PadmaVonSamba on Wed Jun 29, 2011 12:10 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Where are the Gods?

Post by conebeckham »

"Experiencing" something means there is an experiencer, and an experience to be experienced. Also, there is a time prior to the experience, and a time after the experience. Because there are therefore multiple factors or conditions for this "phenomenon" of "experiencing" to occur, all experiences are dependently arisen, and therefore unreal.
དམ་པའི་དོན་ནི་ཤེས་རབ་ཆེ་བ་དང་།
རྟོག་གེའི་ཡུལ་མིན་བླ་མའི་བྱིན་རླབས་དང་།
སྐལ་ལྡན་ལས་འཕྲོ་ཅན་གྱིས་རྟོགས་པ་སྟེ།
དེ་ནི་ཤེས་རབ་ལ་ནི་ལོ་རྟོག་སེལ།།


"Absolute Truth is not an object of analytical discourse or great discriminating wisdom,
It is realized through the blessing grace of the Guru and fortunate Karmic potential.
Like this, mistaken ideas of discriminating wisdom are clarified."
- (Kyabje Bokar Rinpoche, from his summary of "The Ocean of Definitive Meaning")
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