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Unless we live forever as a result, life will always go in a cycle between life and death. To beat it is to accept life on life's terms and not try to "play God" by developing ways to cheat death by living forever. Causes imbalance.What if the old-age, disease and death problems are solved by Science someday?
First, people will get scared that something bad may happen to them, they will pray for it later.What if the old-age, disease and death problems are solved by Science someday?
There will still be plenty of other human problems to address.What if the old-age, disease and death problems are solved by Science someday?
What if the old-age, disease and death problems are solved by Science someday?
You should watch the movie named The Fountain.What if the old-age, disease and death problems are solved by Science someday?
This is from Buddhanet.net:I wish this were a more open question instead of a question in the Buddhism dir. Is there a general Buddhist teaching about this or is this something that is just a question being bandied about?
I think that everyone should, but there is no real solution presented in that movie. Materialistic reincarnation is hardly satisfying.You should watch the movie named The Fountain.
I saw that, too. I think there was meaning in the end that was not materialist. He spent his 'Lives' searching for immortality as a materialist, but end the end he had to give life to himself and others by accepting his death or his cycle of suffering etc. He became the tree at the beginning of time, so while logically it didn't compute for him to go back in time, he was accepting his situation by doing so, thus making life possible in the first place. It was about acceptance and also very weird. I'd give it a 7 out of 10 on the weirdness scale.I think that everyone should, but there is no real solution presented in that movie. Materialistic reincarnation is hardly satisfying.
I wish this were a more open question instead of a question in the Buddhism dir. Is there a general Buddhist teaching about this or is this something that is just a question being bandied about?
What if the old-age, disease and death problems are solved by Science someday?
My conclusion is, if Science would solve those 3 problems (and "birth", with contraception, although a World without kids would probably be too sad), life would be "less suffering" and we'd only have the disadvantages of living in the physical plane, which is of limited possibilities of enjoyment compared to higher planes.
But I wondered what a Buddhist would answer, since the main problems of life; birth, old-age, sickness and death, were seen as unsolvable in the days of Siddharta, 2500 years ago, but not now. I even dare to say that neither are unsolvable in other planets with more technologically advanced people.
But the little detail is: Is the mind of most humans today prepared for such blessings as immortality, lack of old age and disease? There's even people that gets sick on purpose, just to be taken care of!
So maybe the problem is not lack of technological advancements, but lack of illumination. So I think that "life is suffering" maxim only applies to people who don't do their spiritual homework.
Well said!
I'm not so sure that suffering is a question of available technology. People are living longer, but suffering continues. It continues because people continue clinging to impermanent phenomena. I don't know that there's a tech solution to that.
Medicine and technology have already resulted in a population exceeded the planet's carrying capacity. The biological systems sustaining life on Earth are crashing. The sixth extinction is already underway.
Without instituting some way to curb population growth, wouldn't any medical advancement merely exacerbate this catastrophe?