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Is Buddhism atheistic?
Atheist"ic" like, is it a religion that doesn't believe in deities or is a religion which primary focus is not on deities?
What do you mean by atheistic?
I provided links to both "Buddhism" and "atheism."
My impression is deity is largely irrelevant in most forms of Buddhism. The core would stay the same with or without gods.
My impression is deity is largely irrelevant in most forms of Buddhism. The core would stay the same with or without gods.
I went with 'No' as my answer. To me it seems to want to bypass the question in favor of what is practical, the end of suffering.
The "Eternal Buddha" smacks of divinity.
The "Eternal Buddha" smacks of divinity.
Buddha taught that eternalism vs annihilationism is a logical fallacy of false dilemma (among many others) that distracts you from what actually matters.The "Eternal Buddha" smacks of divinity.
Buddhism largely does not care to give the idea of deity too much importance. One may and probably should take it and leave it as the whim of the moment dictates.
Mahayana Buddhism is not only intellectual, but it is also devotional... in Mahayana, Buddha was taken as God, as Supreme Reality itself that descended on the earth in human form for the good of mankind. The concept of Buddha (as equal to God in theistic systems) was never as a creator but as Divine Love that out of compassion (karuna) embodied itself in human form to uplift suffering humanity. He was worshipped with fervent devotion... He represents the Absolute (paramartha satya), devoid of all plurality (sarva-prapancanta-vinirmukta) and has no beginning, middle and end... Buddha... is eternal, immutable... As such He represents Dharmakaya. - Professor C. D. Sebastian[38] (source: Wikipedia: God in Buddhism)
Mahayana is not one single entity. It has wide variations. I'm sure those who adapted Buddha as an avatar of Vishnu had influence in the spreading of some Mahayana schools.Buddha is worshipped as the supreme reality (a.k.a. the dharamkaya) in Mahayana Buddhism.