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It looks like he's trying to identify atman with nibbana.Instead of just parroting, why don't you tell us what you think those words actually mean, practically speaking?
Are you trying to prove that Nibbana is really Brahman? What is your agenda here?
Disagree. I don't identify self with any one state of mind or experience, or lack thereof. (Your mileage may vary)
No.Is Brahman same as Buddhist void(sunyata)
Instead of just parroting, why don't you tell us what you think those words actually mean, practically speaking?
Are you trying to prove that Nibbana is really Brahman? What is your agenda here?
[satire] Fortune cookie wisdom--"Man who says it cannot be done should not interrupt woman doing it." [/satire]I do not understand you here.
I said that with a vijnana that is created, formed, and born, it is not possible to discern that which is unborn, uncreated, and unformed.
'Vijnana', not necessarily science. 'Jnana' (knowledge). 'Vi' is only an addition. Yes, it can be discerned by broadening one's view. The problem is that we look at its small parts separately. With negation, it cannot be discerned. We tried 'Neti, neti'. Did not get us anywhere.I said that with a vijnana that is created, formed, and born, it is not possible to discern that which is unborn, uncreated, and unformed.
I do not understand you here.
I said that with a vijnana that is created, formed, and born, it is not possible to discern that which is unborn, uncreated, and unformed.
Question: would you say that jhana might be equated with "I AM THAT" in the context of consciousness landing on a particular ayatana and being "reborn?"[satire] Fortune cookie wisdom--"Man who says it cannot be done should not interrupt woman doing it." [/satire]
It is discerned via negation of the form and formless ayatanas, not via affirmation. (discerned via neti-neti)
I am trying to make a point that it is not possible to discern nibbana that is unborn and unformed with a vijnana apparatus that is born and created of aggregates.
This nibbana state has no jhana associated with it.
What exactly do you mean by non-duality in this respect? (Coming from a Zen background, I understand non-dual as being free from preference-aversion bias. {Dispassion})Thinking of the Bahiya Sutta and MN1, it seems that non-duality is an aspect of Nibbana.
What exactly do you mean by non-duality in this respect? (Coming from a Zen background, I understand non-dual as being free from preference-aversion bias.)
It looks like he's trying to identify atman with nibbana.
Agreed.Thinking of the Bahiya Sutta and MN1 and the fetters, it seems that the cessation of self-view is integral to the experience of Nibbana.
Why not? I still think you are trying to view this through a Hindu lens.
In any case it's about wisdom or discernment. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prajñā_(Buddhism)
[satire] Fortune cookie wisdom--"Man who says it cannot be done should not interrupt woman doing it." [/satire]
It is discerned via negation of the form and formless ayatanas, not via affirmation. (discerned via neti-neti)
Or there has to be an atman to experience Nibbana? I don't know enough about Hinduism to understand the way that the questions are being framed.
'Vijnana', not necessarily science. 'Jnana' (knowledge). 'Vi' is only an addition.
Yes, it can be discerned by broadening one's view. The problem is that we look at its small parts separately. With negation, it cannot be discerned. We tried 'Neti, neti'. Did not get us anywhere.
Question: would you say that jhana might be equated with "I AM THAT" in the context of consciousness landing on a particular ayatana and being "reborn?"
This nibbana state has no jhana associated with it.
Still sounds like much adieu about nothing to me.There is no That apart from I. "I am That" is an instrument, albeit, an instrument that is considered to be a precursor to "neti neti", which gurus say leads to 'seer-seen-seeing' merging in non dual experience.
In the view of myself and atanu (right, atanu?) the atman and sukriya are one, they're the same thing. At the core of our being, the only thing which we actually are is that infinite indescribable, which we can call sukriya or Brahman or whatever you prefer.
So it isn't that 'an' atman is needed to experience nibbana/moksha, but that the atman is sukriya and realising that is what we might call nibbana. So realising that the atman as an individual entity doesn't exist, that the atman is simply that beyond existence (or whatever you want to call it), which some have approached as saying there is no atman and that all we are is that beyond existence. I don't see these as being in conflict, personally.
In my reading, I have been told that the 'vi' is an intensifier. So vijnana is deeper than jnana.