cattasalla: (Default)
The core of Buddhism is what has been translated into English as "the four noble truths". They're still called that as a sort of legacy translation. The word itself, ariyasacca, could also mean "truth of the noble ones", or "ennobling truths", as in truths that make you "noble". I've never been able to connect with the "noble" adjective, probably in large part because I'm pretty firmly on the anarchist side of things, but it occurred to me that a related idea that I could connect to was "dignity". While as a political being I reject "nobility", I affirm the basic dignity of all human beings (and cats). So, the practice of the "noble truths" is really a practice that brings one to a life of dignity.

Note I say "practice". The ariyasacca are all too often understood as a beliefs. You believe these four principles or postulates, and that's the basis of the Buddhist Belief System. But considering them as beliefs is to go nowhere near understanding them. Yes, they form a basic framework for a view that you adopt as a Buddhist, but it's something you actually put into practice. Something you actually do, and having done so, you bring it to completion.

So what is the Truth Of Suffering, then? )
cattasalla: (Default)
The Buddha's teaching starts from the problem of the fundamental unsatisfactoriness of life. None of the various experiences we have, the thoughts and feelings, can bring a lasting, perfect happiness. Pleasures can be enjoyed while they are present, but when they are not present, the default orientation of the human animal is to seek them out. Discomfort and displeasure is similarly avoided. We are kept constantly in motion by our craving and clinging. Indeed, it is this craving and clinging that causes this dissatisfaction to be woven into the fabric of our lived experience. The Buddha took the Pāli word for physical pain, dukkha, and extended it to refer to this dissatisfaction, to refer everything from the slightest frustration or annoyance to the most traumatic suffering.

Read more... )

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Upāsaka Cattasallā

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