meindzai wrote:Most Buddhists I know have gone though or are going through the "all is one" and "All religions are the same" and "we're saying the same thing just with different language," thing. I know I did, and I remember my initial disappointment when I started to realize that this was not the case at all in Buddhism. Some people still have a bit of the "fear of god" in them, so they like to keep one foot in Buddhism while keeping the other in some kind of theism. It's like an ambivelant Pascal's wager.
Actually what I pretty much believe now is that "All religions except Buddhism are pretty much the same." Most are some variation on the "all is one" or "let's all be god" themes. Buddhism is the *only* one that teaches that all of these views are still self views.
-M
Ngawang Drolma wrote:That poem is beautiful muni, thanks
Luke wrote:One of the popular phrases in the New Age books out there is "all is one."
In my opinion, this is too horribly imprecise to be considered a Buddhist statement without clarifying the terms involved. I have a friend who is interested in various New Age books and philosophies and this idea of "all is one" and "all religions are really one" seems to be the core of her spirituality, and she was quite shocked when I didn't immediately agree with her.
To me, this "all is one" concept seems to be really some generalized idea about "god" which is reexpressed as some kind of eternal essence (like the Hindu concept of "atman" which Buddhism clearly denies).
My discussion about this with my friend made me realize how truly unique Buddhism is among world religions. Most religions are theistic or at least believe in some absolute concept. Buddhism is one of the very few nontheistic religions in the world, and negating the concept of an atman using emptiness seems to be at the very heart of Buddhism.
What do you think? To what extent is the statement "all is one" true in Buddhism?
All I can think of is that we are all united by cause and effect and that the true nature of our minds is vast like space, although our mindstreams are independent. "Merging oneself with god" and "Merging oneself with the universal mind" are not Buddhist concepts as far as I know. This fact seems to shock a lot of New Age people because they have little idea what Buddhism really is.
Luke wrote:One of the popular phrases in the New Age books out there is "all is one."
In my opinion, this is too horribly imprecise to be considered a Buddhist statement without clarifying the terms involved.
catmoon wrote:All is one. Hmm.
Perhaps it is true in a sense. I have before me a blue cup. It only appears to be an object separate from all others because of a boundary created by my mind, a boundary that separates the cup from all other things. But the boundary has no real existence, it is just an imagination. So in that sense the entire universe of objects is really a single object. It's a natural consequence of applied emptiness, of the removal of imputed qualities in things.
Interdependency.Stephen wrote:The only way that "all is one" can be a truth and not delusional thinking is if taken to mean that we are all part of the ever-changing process we call reality. This universe is a process; there is no constant, except change itself.
Karma Dondrup Tashi wrote:"One" is in duality to everything that is "plurality". So "not-two" doesn't just mean "one".

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