
gregkavarnos wrote:I really don't know if there is a different teaching aimed at lay people
PS I am not assuming that for householders the Buddha prescribed vegetarianism.
PPS I was a vegetarian well before I became a Buddhist, I did not need a Budhist justification then, nor do I need one now.

mindyourmind wrote:What I never understood, and have no real hope of ever understanding, is why these enlightened practitioners must actually participate in killing a sentient being to improve its lot.
mindyourmind wrote:What I never understood, and have no real hope of ever understanding, is why these enlightened practitioners must actually participate in killing a sentient being to improve its lot. Surely such a practitioner can benefit such a being by simply saying mantras, or another practice - other than participating in killing it.
In other words, a human that is so advanced that he or she can actually directly choose to benefit another being should be able to do so through other means than participating in the killing of that being.
...but let's just be very honest about this popular "defense" of eating meat.
gregkavarnos wrote:I really don't know if there is a different teaching aimed at lay people, but the specific teaching was directed at Devadatta who was, at the time, a member of the monastic community.
PS I am not assuming that for householders the Buddha prescribed vegetarianism.
PPS I was a vegetarian well before I became a Buddhist, I did not need a Buddhist justification then, nor do I need one now.
Namdrol wrote:I no longer believe that plants are insentient because I beleive the distinction between sentient and insentient is a false distinction....Therefore we must respect all life, not just the life that is convientient for us to respect. Even though we must respect all life, life must be taken for other life to flourish. This is simply how samsara is.
kirtu wrote:Namdrol wrote:I no longer believe that plants are insentient because I beleive the distinction between sentient and insentient is a false distinction....Therefore we must respect all life, not just the life that is convientient for us to respect. Even though we must respect all life, life must be taken for other life to flourish. This is simply how samsara is.
Approaching the Tendai, Shingon and Zen position via Dzogchen ...
Kirt
mindyourmind wrote:There is a qualitative difference then, even on this argument, between plant sentience and animal sentience.
Namdrol wrote:mindyourmind wrote:There is a qualitative difference then, even on this argument, between plant sentience and animal sentience.
Really, what is the difference? Visible sense organs? A so called "nervous system"?
It simply won't do to call something an "obsfucation" merely because you disagree with someone's opinion.
You are a lawyer, be precise.
N
David N. Snyder wrote:In the Theravada Canon, which is generally considered to more conservative and more in favor of omnivore diets, there are references which suggest that meat eating is not acceptable for lay people. For example:
“Monks, one possessed of three qualities is put into Purgatory according to his actions. What three? One is himself a taker of life, encourages another to do the same and approves thereof. Monks, one possessed of three qualities is put into heaven according to his actions. What three? He himself abstains from taking life, encourages another to so abstain, and approves of such abstention.” Anguttara Nikaya, 3.16
". . . he abstains from killing living beings, exhorts others to abstain from killing living beings, and speaks in praise of the abstention from killing living beings." Samyutta Nikaya 55.7
"He should not kill a living being, nor cause it to be killed, nor should he incite another to kill. Do not injure any being, either strong or weak, in the world.” Dhammika Sutta, Sutta Nipata, Khuddaka Nikaya
"Monks, possessing forty qualities one is cast into purgatory . . . he takes life himself, encourages another to do so, approves of taking life, and speaks in praise of thereof . . ." Anguttara Nikaya 10. 213
The above quotes show that is not just okay to not do the killing yourself, it is also unacceptable to encourage another, approve of another's killing, or speak in praise of it.
mindyourmind wrote:I meant it is an obfuscation in a general sense, it is an excuse used often, not just by you.
And yes, I believe that there is a great, real and rather obvious difference. For starters we can start with the amount of suffering involved. If someone is going to, with a straight face, try to convince me that the "suffering" undergone by a truckful of cabbage is anything approximating that undergone by say a truckload of pigs,
This whole argument equating animal sentience with plant "sentience" is simply a last-ditch, desperate and rather unbecoming argument, designed to defend our choices as meat-eaters.
I accept without any reservation that a vegetarian meal involves death and suffering, but not more so, or even equal, than the death and suffering involved in eating meat.
Why is it that in these discussions people always forget that the majority of murdered animals are currently grain or feed (clover, hay, etc...) fed, that means you have the killing involved in the harvesting of the grain and feed PLUS the killing of the animal being slaughtered for its flesh.mindyourmind wrote:I am aware of some of the tests and treatises that have seen the light recently, mostly as far as I can tell designed by theists to show that the problem of suffering can be discounted. There are none that convinced me that the patently obvious should be discarded. Raising, killing and eating an animal is just simply involving more suffering than even the worst case scenario of the amount of bugs we kill in producing a non-meat meal. Remember also that some of those same bugs are also killed in the process of slaughtering an animal.

gregkavarnos wrote:Why is it that in these discussions people always forget that the majority of murdered animals are currently grain or feed (clover, hay, etc...) fed, that means you have the killing involved in the harvesting of the grain and feed PLUS the killing of the animal being slaughtered for its flesh.mindyourmind wrote:I am aware of some of the tests and treatises that have seen the light recently, mostly as far as I can tell designed by theists to show that the problem of suffering can be discounted. There are none that convinced me that the patently obvious should be discarded. Raising, killing and eating an animal is just simply involving more suffering than even the worst case scenario of the amount of bugs we kill in producing a non-meat meal. Remember also that some of those same bugs are also killed in the process of slaughtering an animal.
mindyourmind wrote:
And yes, I believe that there is a great, real and rather obvious difference. For starters we can start with the amount of suffering involved. If someone is going to, with a straight face, try to convince me that the "suffering" undergone by a truckful of cabbage is anything approximating that undergone by say a truckload of pigs, well then I have very little else to say, and it would be best for at least the rules of this forum if we leave the debate just there.
Raising, killing and eating an animal is just simply involving more suffering than even the worst case scenario of the amount of bugs we kill in producing a non-meat meal.
Remember also that some of those same bugs are also killed in the process of slaughtering an animal.
Part of that precise answer would, in addition to suffering, most definitely deal with the presence or absence of a central nervous system, although if you will that could be a duplication of the suffering argument.
This whole argument equating animal sentience with plant "sentience" is simply a last-ditch, desperate and rather unbecoming argument, designed to defend our choices as meat-eaters.
I accept without any reservation that a vegetarian meal involves death and suffering, but not more so, or even equal, than the death and suffering involved in eating meat.
Again, I respect everyone's choice in what they eat and do not eat, and what you eat or not will not liberate you, but let's not make stuff up to make us feel better.
C'mon Mr. G, don't be silly, extraordinarily few of the animal carcasses sold for consumption die by natural means. That means somebody has to be encouraged (normally via financial incentives) to kill them. Through the purchasing of the flesh, a portion of the money of which is paid for the flesh goes to the slaughterer, thus the slaughterer receives approval for their task. But I am sure you are well aware of this.Mr. G wrote:I don't see how any of these quotes posits a stance against meat eating. Seems a bit of a stretch. These passages could also be applied to the death of insects and applied to farming.

Where do plants fit into the schema of the realms of samsaric existence? What is the mental poison that causes one to reborn as a plant? Why are there no references to birth as a plant in any of the Sutta and Sutra (and even the exceedingly few Tantra I have read) given that plants are also sentient? etc... According to that logic we should all be breatharians if we wish to be compassionate at a relative level. Seems to be a form of Jainism to the nth degree, only you do a clever intellectual backflip and use it to justify eating meat rather than avoiding eating all sentient (into which class you include plants) beings.namdrol wrote:I did not equate the two. I merely pointed out that I no longer believe that anything imbued with prāṇa can possibly be non-sentient. Plants possess prāṇa, therefore, they are alive, therefore, after some fashion, I must accept that they too are sentient. Not only to plants possess prāṇa, but they also possess ojas, mdangs, they also possess the seven phase digestive process that we humans and all animals do. They take food, they break it down, is it conducted by fluid within plant membranes where it builds their flesh, their soft tissue, hard tissues and finally in the end they produce sap, flowers, seeds, etc.

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