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That's one way of approaching it. Another is to deconstruct the assumptions inherent in the question. When asked where people go when they die, Shakyamuni responded with a question: where does a fire go when it goes out? In that case the problem isn't the lack of knowledge of where it goes, but rather the assumptions at work in the first place—i.e. that there is something that should go somewhere.The only way to know for sure what happens when you die, is to die, the rest is just speculation.
That would be a true ah! ha! moment to bring that about.How would a suitable teacher of the Dhamma help someone who has no interest in teachers of the Dhamma?
That I definitly agree, but it seems once dead, everything resets to 0. Dead people I think, cannot think so as to even know for sure!The only way to know for sure what happens when you die, is to die, the rest is just speculation.
As for karmic retribution, on the one hand it is a Buddhist teaching, but on the other hand it's not meant to be generalized beyond one's own experience. Based on what I've learned from our teacher, viewing the hardships of one's own life as the results of causes and conditions that were laid down in prior times is a useful practice. It's actually meant to lessen one's self-attachment, since it means that the limited view of self that most people carry around with them is not the agent of all the things that happen in their life. On the other hand, we were warned never to regard other people's hardships in terms of karmic retribution, as that way lies the erosion of compassion. In short, like all things related to Buddhadharma, this view of karma is a technique for practice, not a statement about the objective nature of the universe.
What you call "mind" is not a thing to be reified; it is a set of phenomena that are perpetually in flux from moment to moment, based on the causes and conditions of each previous moment. Apart from a purely subjective experience, individual identity has nothing to do with that.
If you come to Buddhist thought with the assumption that the individual is ultimately real, none of it will make any sense, since the entire point of Buddhadharma is that individual identity is a conceptual fiction that we impose on our initially non-conceptual awareness of reality.
As for the idea that people's individual identities must survive death and reincarnate in order for things like justice and good and evil to make sense, that's also not a Buddhist view.
Lyndon said:The only way to know for sure what happens when you die, is to die; the rest is just speculation.
Nowhere Man said:... it seems once dead, everything resets to 0. Dead people, I think, cannot think, so as to even know for sure!
That’s where the prince might have a run-in with Rivers’ former nemesis, the late Mrs. Spencer, who was J.P. Morgan’s niece and the original resident.
In a 2009 episode of the TV show “Celebrity Ghost Stories,” Rivers said the pesky spirit was less than welcoming when she moved in 25 years ago and started renovating. “It was just very strange,” Rivers said on the show. “The apartment was cold. I could never get any of my electrical things to work correctly.” Even Rivers’ dog was spooked. “I guess Mrs. Spencer is back,” the doorman told Rivers.
...
The ghost was finally appeased when the comedienne hung a portrait of Mrs. Spencer in the building lobby and left flowers for her in the home’s ballroom.
The only way to know for sure what happens when you die, is to die, the rest is just speculation.
Your opinion or misinterpretation of the Buddha's sayings doesn't mean much to me.
It isn't extinguished, it travels from one candle to the next candle, that's what the Buddha said, evidently you have another interpretation.
One seeks liberation from vexations, which are a problem in the present. Karma is relevant in that in order to believe that the cessation of vexations is possible, you need to view them as arising naturally from certain causes and conditions. Reincarnation isn't actually part of the equation. The Buddhist notion of rebirth serves a different function. A lot of books about Buddhism by non-Buddhists get this wrong, but Buddhadharma is categorically not about escaping a cycle of reincarnation. That's a misconception that people arrive at by applying Jain/Hindu concepts to the language of Buddhist teachings, which uses similar terms and concepts but often means radically different things by them.A traditional Buddhist usually "believes" in Re-incarnation and Karma because without them why seek Liberation?
The irony is that the Buddhist concept of rebirth is almost the opposite of the typical Hindu one, in that it only works because there is no essential self that is being passed from life to life. When you stop seeing the self as a persistent, self-existent entity, then the boundaries of what constitutes "you" are blown wide open. There is no ultimate distinction between "you" and "not you." You can also say that "you" are every sentient being who came before and prepared the way for you, regardless of whether they were related to you in a literal sense.I liken rebirth being like a string of pearls, where each pearl connotes a previous life, but the one constant is the string. It is that string which differentiates Vedanta from Buddhism, with Vedanta saying that the "soul" has always existed and will always exist (at least until such time as one becomes Enlightened and decides not to be re-born) and Buddhism saying that there is no-soul. But even Buddha, upon his Enlightenment said that looking back he saw at least 500 of his previous lives. The consciousness in each previous life is not the same in each sub-sequent life, but there may be Consciousness which one may call a soul.
Ideally it is realized through meditation. That's where the realization first came from, and each student is invited to experience it directly. Simply hearing another person say it can be useful but is not the same things as knowing it. In any case, I don't know how conclusions that one arrives at through a mixture of direct experience and logical inference can be called dogmatic. Dogma is more like the stuff people believe without having a good reason to do so, just because it's traditional.That sounds awfully dogmatic... Is it something one accepts by faith or has one realised it through meditation?
It's an old question. Certainly there is continuity of consciousness in the sense that present thoughts are conditioned by previous ones, and ultimately by physical structures and processes, which are in turn conditioned by certain events, and so forth. Every moment is connected to the last in some way, and there are patterns to be identified.While the mind is a flux, it is also many threads of thought operating at the same time. When I looked into "my" mind I could see that my first thought in the morning was the a continuation of the last thought-fragment before entering sleep (sleep caused thought to stop in mid-sentence and upon waking the thought was completed); but beyond that I could see that the mind continues to think even in deep sleep since it is now habitual and thus deeply ingrained with the tendency to think even as background noise. The question then becomes, "Is the one who is aware of one's own thinking the "Watcher," the "Witness," undifferentiated Consciousness or Awareness, un-mirrored Consciousness?" And if so, is it this Consciousness which survives the physical death and is re-born?
It depends how literally one takes the stories of ghosts and spirits. In Buddhist teachings those are used as a way of pointing towards certain states of mind in a system that is actually entirely geared towards living humans. That isn't to say that they're not useful, or that it's a rationalization--you don't have to get deep into Buddhadharma before the distinction between "literal" and "metaphorical" breaks down entirely.Agreed. What I was/am alluding to is that something does survive, as in the case of ghosts and spirits. Who is to say that that consciousness is not not now in the ghost hell? One could say that it is a mind still attached to the physical plane (one reason why the Hindus cremated the dead, so that the dead could realise that they were dead.) The question is, if someone is dogmatic in their belief in the "theory" of no-self, is he likely to be dogmatically opposed to the idea of consciousness surviving death?
No, that's a corruption of what Nagasena said in his dialog with King Milinda. In that case the (rhetorical) question was, when you use one lamp to light another one, is the new flame the same or different from the one used to light it? The answer is that it is both the same and different, or neither, depending how you define those terms. In any case, there is a karmic relationship between the two. That is how Nagasena explains the Buddhist understanding of rebirth.It isn't extinguished, it travels from one candle to the next candle, that's what the Buddha said, evidently you have another interpretation. Its only when you reach Nibbana that the flame is extinguished.
For those of you really into Buddhism that want to read an excellent but very long and small print article about the Buddhist concepts of not self, atman, and the concepts of the Buddhist God being the Dharmakaya, a force of truth, but certainly not Biblically based like Jehovah as portrayed in the Old Testament. Check it out, this is an author that believes we do have a higher self or "soul" or atman, and that Buddhism has a Deity or God/Theism , just one nothing like the description of Jehovah in the Bible, check it out.
Buddhism and the No-soul Doctrine (v4) | BRISBANE GOODWILL unit of service.
One seeks liberation from vexations, which are a problem in the present. Karma is relevant in that in order to believe that the cessation of vexations is possible, you need to view them as arising naturally from certain causes and conditions. Reincarnation isn't actually part of the equation.
The irony is that the Buddhist concept of rebirth is almost the opposite of the typical Hindu one, in that it only works because there is no essential self that is being passed from life to life. When you stop seeing the self as a persistent, self-existent entity, then the boundaries of what constitutes "you" are blown wide open.
There is no ultimate distinction between "you" and "not you."
A lot of the difference has to do with Buddhist phenomenology, which holds that each moment is comprised of unique phenomena that are conditioned by the phenomena of the preceding moment but are not identical to them. /quote]
I tend to believe in Quantum Theory, and I say that what happened is the only thing that could have happened because if it could have happened differently then it would have happened differently. There may be infinite possibilities but the only possibility, the one at the present moment, is that one which is experienced by a consciousness.
In any case, I don't know how conclusions that one arrives at through a mixture of direct experience and logical inference can be called dogmatic. Dogma is more like the stuff people believe without having a good reason to do so, just because it's traditional.
It happens after the fact, through Rationalization. I said that you sounded Dogmatic because there was no indication that you realized it through experience. Rationalization typically tries to explain away one's experience because the experience is at odds with one's logic.
In the realm of Religion one has to have a starting place, and so one accepts it without question. It's the defense of one's beliefs which makes it Dogmatic, it has an emotional element attached to it when questioned, with that emotional element giving it a sense of authority which should not be questioned. One speaks Dogmatically to prevent the other from further questioning.
So if one "dryly" says something, something that sounds as if it came out of a book, something that seemingly has a different "flavour" or "tone" from the rest of the statement, then one may think that is is Dogmatic.
It could be that one is trying to establish a baseline for communication, hoping that the other has some pre-conception of the ideas one is trying to find common-ground with. But vast assumptions are being made, like the words "God," "Re-incarnation," "Re-birth," "Self," "self," "Silence," etc. Each word pre-supposes that it means the same thing that the other thinks it means. For most of us whose minds are always thinking, a term like "Silence" may have no meaning until we actually experience it, and 'experiencing it' means that one is conscious that one is consciously experiencing it, at the moment, not giving it a name afterwards.
... to be continued ...
Where you lose me is in the assertion that "impersonalized self" is a coherent concept. It seems to me there is no concept of selfhood that is not on some level an attempt to personalize reality, which entails conceptual divisions. After all, the concept of "self" is meaningless without the concept of "other." In any case, this line of thinking is alien to Buddhadharma, which holds that concepts are not reality and that it's impossible to arrive at direct experience thereof through conceptual means.Again, are we talking about a personalized "self" or an im-personalized and Universal "Self," the difference being the size of the "s"?