an anarchist
Your local loco.
I am reading the Dhammapada and the translator’s introduction talks about the Four Noble Truths. Apparently, after a long night of mediation, Siddhatta Gotama (who became Buddha) realized the Four Noble Truths and became enlightened.
The author lists the Four Noble Truths as:
1. There is suffering in this world
2. Suffering has a cause
3. Suffering has an end
4. A path exists to end suffering
My question is: is this supposed to be taken literally? I’ve seen some interpretations of the Four Noble Truths say it is ultimately about shedding your attachments and losing the perception of suffering.
Is it not about the end of literal suffering? Is the Buddha not saying that there exists a path for humanity to transcend suffering altogether, in every sense of the word?
Anecdote. Several years ago, I was meditating and reciting the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Then, a vision came to me. I saw a flower which I never saw before ascend from a pond, then open. I later researched the description of the flower and found it was a lotus. I remember now, it was in this vision with the lotus that my new philosophy was bestowed upon me: suffering is not inevitable. This was before I read the Dhammapada and of the Four Noble Truths. It was a conclusion I reached through deep meditation. At the moment of realization, I reached peak spiritual ecstasy.
So, because of anecdotal reasons, I believe the Four Noble Truths are meant to be taken in the most literal sense.
What is your perspective of the Four Noble Truths? I am a complete layman and novice in theology and philosophy altogether.
The author lists the Four Noble Truths as:
1. There is suffering in this world
2. Suffering has a cause
3. Suffering has an end
4. A path exists to end suffering
My question is: is this supposed to be taken literally? I’ve seen some interpretations of the Four Noble Truths say it is ultimately about shedding your attachments and losing the perception of suffering.
Is it not about the end of literal suffering? Is the Buddha not saying that there exists a path for humanity to transcend suffering altogether, in every sense of the word?
Anecdote. Several years ago, I was meditating and reciting the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Then, a vision came to me. I saw a flower which I never saw before ascend from a pond, then open. I later researched the description of the flower and found it was a lotus. I remember now, it was in this vision with the lotus that my new philosophy was bestowed upon me: suffering is not inevitable. This was before I read the Dhammapada and of the Four Noble Truths. It was a conclusion I reached through deep meditation. At the moment of realization, I reached peak spiritual ecstasy.
So, because of anecdotal reasons, I believe the Four Noble Truths are meant to be taken in the most literal sense.
What is your perspective of the Four Noble Truths? I am a complete layman and novice in theology and philosophy altogether.
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