anonymous_4_200_2006
New Member
**************** I posted a post similiar to this -- the only difference is I had to take out
the URLs and replace them with notes of where the things are, because this forum
does not allow to put URLs unless one has posted a minimum of 15 posts -- at the
Yahoo! Group 'buddha-direct', but message is waiting for approval by moderator(s) to
be posted there, I guess ****************:
Samahita (I was anonymous_3_17_2006, and anonymous_4_11_2006; this
anonymous_4_200_2006 was trying to make an ID using the day's date --
April 20 -- as the ID name, but I added one more zero by accident, I
guess, so it is '...4_200...', instead of '...4_20...'),
Please verify.
You believe the buddha taught 'no self', right? 'No self' meaning no
self, not 'not self', right?
Thanissaro does not believe Buddha taught 'no self', right, or wrong?
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See the writing found in the General Index of accesstoinsight.org, under 'Anatta (not-self)':
The Not-self Strategy
by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Books on Buddhism often state that the Buddha's most basic
metaphysical tenet is that there is no soul or self. However, a
survey of the discourses in the Pali canon the earliest extant
record of the Buddha's teachings suggests that the Buddha taught
the anatta or not-self doctrine, not as a metaphysical assertion, but
as a strategy for gaining release from suffering: If one uses the
concept of not-self to dis-identify oneself from all phenomena, one
goes beyond the reach of all suffering & stress. As for what lies
beyond suffering & stress, the Canon states that although it may be
experienced, it lies beyond the range of description, and thus such
descriptions as "self" or "not-self" would not apply.
,,,
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***************************************************
***************************************************
According to buddhism is Thanissaro correct or not?
***************************************************
***************************************************
***************************************************
Here is something I wish to say, but may be not true:
If anatta is emptiness, this emptiness is the same emptiness as in
Mahayana buddhism. The perfection of wisdom -- 'prajnaparamita' -- is
the coursing in anatta/emptiness. There is no self, others according
to the anatta doctrine and the prajnaparamita literature.
But if Thanissaro is correct saying the buddha never implied there is
no self (I emphasize: NO self), then there is doubt.
from,
anonymous_4_200_2006
the URLs and replace them with notes of where the things are, because this forum
does not allow to put URLs unless one has posted a minimum of 15 posts -- at the
Yahoo! Group 'buddha-direct', but message is waiting for approval by moderator(s) to
be posted there, I guess ****************:
Samahita (I was anonymous_3_17_2006, and anonymous_4_11_2006; this
anonymous_4_200_2006 was trying to make an ID using the day's date --
April 20 -- as the ID name, but I added one more zero by accident, I
guess, so it is '...4_200...', instead of '...4_20...'),
Please verify.
You believe the buddha taught 'no self', right? 'No self' meaning no
self, not 'not self', right?
Thanissaro does not believe Buddha taught 'no self', right, or wrong?
***************************************************
***************************************************
***************************************************
See the writing found in the General Index of accesstoinsight.org, under 'Anatta (not-self)':
The Not-self Strategy
by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Books on Buddhism often state that the Buddha's most basic
metaphysical tenet is that there is no soul or self. However, a
survey of the discourses in the Pali canon the earliest extant
record of the Buddha's teachings suggests that the Buddha taught
the anatta or not-self doctrine, not as a metaphysical assertion, but
as a strategy for gaining release from suffering: If one uses the
concept of not-self to dis-identify oneself from all phenomena, one
goes beyond the reach of all suffering & stress. As for what lies
beyond suffering & stress, the Canon states that although it may be
experienced, it lies beyond the range of description, and thus such
descriptions as "self" or "not-self" would not apply.
,,,
***************************************************
***************************************************
***************************************************
According to buddhism is Thanissaro correct or not?
***************************************************
***************************************************
***************************************************
Here is something I wish to say, but may be not true:
If anatta is emptiness, this emptiness is the same emptiness as in
Mahayana buddhism. The perfection of wisdom -- 'prajnaparamita' -- is
the coursing in anatta/emptiness. There is no self, others according
to the anatta doctrine and the prajnaparamita literature.
But if Thanissaro is correct saying the buddha never implied there is
no self (I emphasize: NO self), then there is doubt.
from,
anonymous_4_200_2006