I didn't realize how much Buddhism "developed" over the centuries, long after Gautama was said to have lived, including the forms of Mahayana and Tantric Buddhism, not to mention the innovations of Nagarjuna in reinventing teachings to be portrayed as seriously atheistic (sunyata/emptiness and anatman/no-soul), with the logical problems involved. So many developments occurred that are called "Buddhism" but are from the teachings of later movements rather than attributed to Gautama himself. Seems like there was alot of confusion involved in trying to understand what was attributed to Gautama from the earliest writings and what emerged among others much later.
And of course the intent of Gautama was not to establish a new religion, so "Buddhism" per se did not exist for a long time, just as we know that "Hinduism" is a modern catch-all for all the Indian religious philosophies, including Vedism (Sanatana Dharma). Indeed, the original teachings of Gautama should easily be included in a reforming Vedic context rather than as something new.
And of course the intent of Gautama was not to establish a new religion, so "Buddhism" per se did not exist for a long time, just as we know that "Hinduism" is a modern catch-all for all the Indian religious philosophies, including Vedism (Sanatana Dharma). Indeed, the original teachings of Gautama should easily be included in a reforming Vedic context rather than as something new.
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