Astus wrote:Two questions:
1. What is energy in Buddhism?
2. How could there be anything constant when all is impermanent?
catmoon wrote:Astus wrote:Two questions:
1. What is energy in Buddhism?
2. How could there be anything constant when all is impermanent?
1. I'm using the definition of energy as one-half mass times velocity squared, and it's various equivalents.
2. The energy content of the universe is constant, but note carefully that the energy content of the universe is dependent on the existence of a universe. I think the universe itself is impermanent.
catmoon wrote:1. I'm using the definition of energy as one-half mass times velocity squared, and it's various equivalents.
Beatzen wrote:catmoon wrote:Astus wrote:Two questions:
1. What is energy in Buddhism?
2. How could there be anything constant when all is impermanent?
1. I'm using the definition of energy as one-half mass times velocity squared, and it's various equivalents.
2. The energy content of the universe is constant, but note carefully that the energy content of the universe is dependent on the existence of a universe. I think the universe itself is impermanent.
How does the karmic continuum Hhdl was talking about above relate to the death of an imperiously universe. Also, if the universe is a karmic continuum of infinite causes and effects, can the universe ever exhaust it's own karma?
Astus wrote:catmoon wrote:1. I'm using the definition of energy as one-half mass times velocity squared, and it's various equivalents.
My question was: "What is energy in Buddhism?" and not in modern physics, or anything else. I think that if this turns out to be a discussion on natural science, well, it's irrelevant to Buddhism.

Beatzen wrote:I want to study the ways of the force so I can be a Jedi like my father.
DarwidHalim wrote:Is there a statement from Buddhist tantra text or cosmology that suggest the energy of a closed system is constant?
DarwidHalim wrote:Same with karma. Although we experience good karma, actually that karma cannot be exhausted or vanish. It just changes.
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