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You can't PROVE matters of the spirit until you are dead and meet God personally
Engyo said:Alaric-
I had written a fairly long reply to your questions which seems to have vanished. I will try again.
Buddhism concerns itself with long views almost exclusively; ranging for the total of this lifetime at a minimum, and onward for eons and kalpas, and to other worlds and universes.
Suffering in the short term for a long-term goal is considered wise. However "suffering" is probably not the correct word to use here. This would be considered more in the way of a lack of attachment to desires or greed. Similarly sacrificing long term prosperity for short term happiness would be considered attachment to physical/material pleasure.
Happiness and Suffering in the Buddhist sense have distinct meanings. True happiness is considered to be that which brings one closer to enlightenment, or its attainment. What most people in western society consider happiness is probably what a Buddhist would call rapture - sensual pleasures of one sort or another. Suffering in a Buddhist sense is related to life; there are four categories: Birth, Sickness, Ageing, and Death. Anything which can't be classified as one of these four isn't suffering, but attachment. IOW, I won't die if I can't afford a new BMW, and my health won't be destroyed because I don't look like Tom Cruise. I may have an unhealthy attachment to the desire for a new BMW, or to my looks. This is a result of my ignorance, and can be corrected through practice.
Engyo said:Buddhism is fundamentally about the understanding and eventual mastery of the self. If I understand and have mastered my self, I don't need society to provide me with a moral code or compass; I already have a built-in one.
Engyo said:What of those who don't currently choose to pursue the path of enlightenment? Are you willing to subject yourself to a society where no moral code is enforced on those who CHOOSE NOT TO take responsibility for their own behavior?