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Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

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  • #16
    Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

    Not sure I would use the term "pessimistic assessment" :

    1st Noble Truth = life contains suffering (realist)
    2nd Noble Truth = the cause of suffering is attachment to illusion (diagnostic)
    3rd Noble Truth = the cure for suffering is breaking the attachment to illusion (prescriptive)
    4th Noble Truth = the Noble Eightfold Path leads to the breaking of attachment to illusion (optimistic)

    To identify a problem, learn the cause of the problem, find a solution to the problem, and put the solution into practice is NOT pessimissism. Identifying, understanding, identifying a cure, effecting the cure - this indicates hope that the chains binding human beings to their past errors can be broken.

    This is better described as "optimism."
    Every moment of a life is a horrible tragedy, a slapstick comedy, dark nihilism, golden illumination, or nothing at all; depending on how we write the story we tell ourselves.

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    • #17
      Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

      I think that this is exactly what McCann eas referring to, and despite being the proud possessor of my own personal zen - I tend to agree.

      Life is viewed as a problem to be solved. This is a necessarily pessimistic view of life. Regardless of whether it's true or false.
      Last edited by Rhythm; 23 Dec 2019, 08:34.

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      • #18
        Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

        Originally posted by Rhythm View Post
        I think that this is exactly what McCann eas referring to, and despite being the proud possessor of my own personal zen - I tend to agree.

        Life is viewed as a problem to be solved. This is a necessarily pessimistic view of life. Regardless of whether it's true or false.
        "Life is a problem to be solved" is far too broad a statement to be meaningful. In Buddhism, "the inevitable suffering that comes with life" is the specific "problem to be solved."

        If identifying a single problem in a broad system, and then finding a way to solve it is "pessimistic," then anybody who does anything to improve either their own condition, or the condition of others must be a "pessimist." In this case, the word suddenly becomes meaningless.

        However, examining a system, identifying a specific flaw, and determining that such a flaw can be fixed via specific actions, clearly shows optimism.
        Last edited by B. de Corbin; 23 Dec 2019, 10:07.
        Every moment of a life is a horrible tragedy, a slapstick comedy, dark nihilism, golden illumination, or nothing at all; depending on how we write the story we tell ourselves.

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        • #19
          Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

          Originally posted by B. de Corbin View Post
          Not sure I would use the term "pessimistic assessment" :

          1st Noble Truth = life contains suffering (realist)
          2nd Noble Truth = the cause of suffering is attachment to illusion (diagnostic)
          3rd Noble Truth = the cure for suffering is breaking the attachment to illusion (prescriptive)
          4th Noble Truth = the Noble Eightfold Path leads to the breaking of attachment to illusion (optimistic)

          To identify a problem, learn the cause of the problem, find a solution to the problem, and put the solution into practice is NOT pessimissism. Identifying, understanding, identifying a cure, effecting the cure - this indicates hope that the chains binding human beings to their past errors can be broken.

          This is better described as "optimism."
          Yep this is correct. It's diagnosing a problem, not glorifying it.

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          • #20
            Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

            Many religions seem to contradict itself as a whole. Well for the fundamentalist ones anyway.

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            • #21
              Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

              Life as a problem may be too broad a statement to be meaningful (in some context - though this hardly seems to be that context if there is one). Nevertheless, it is how buddhism views life at a fundamental level. I can understand why buddhism conceptualizes life this way even if I don't agree with it.

              The pessimism in the viewpoint is inherent, whether it's warranted or not - and it helps to remember that a view can be pessimistic even if it's true. We might prefer to use other terms because of a negative connotation - but a view which states that life is a problem to be diagnosed is necessarily more pessimistic than one which asserts that life is the solution to some problem, for example. Perhaps the first view is factually accurate, and the second a wishful fantasy - but still. OFC, as you note..it's rare to find any pov that leans entirely to one side or the other in that divide. There's certainly some optimism in the notion that the problem of life can be fixed, but this view only makes sense in light of the earlier proposition. One wonders whether any tradition which does not offer some similar tangible or intangible solution would be able to compete with those that do.

              We could repeat this with other beliefs, all without ever referring to or debating their factual accuracy, their internal consistency, or asserting that either state of affairs is or should be negatively weighted. The notion of sin is inherently pessimistic, but the hope for salvation is decidedly not.

              Miasma, again, inherently pessimistic - and the solution to the problem of miasma if generally tragic (in the classical sense of the term, no less)...but again there is at least the hope of breaking free.
              Last edited by Rhythm; 25 Dec 2019, 23:15.

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              • #22
                Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

                In that case, I will continue to pessimisticly believe that, if I take certain actions, my life will be better in the future than it was in the past.
                Every moment of a life is a horrible tragedy, a slapstick comedy, dark nihilism, golden illumination, or nothing at all; depending on how we write the story we tell ourselves.

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                • #23
                  Re: Why is Buddhism so contradicting?

                  That sounds more like an optimistic belief that things will be improved with respect to some pessimistic view of past events. As I mentioned before, this isn't any attempt to debate the factual accuracy of what you believe or attach any negative value to it's appraisal of life.

                  It's merely the observation that buddhism takes a necessarily pessimistic view of life. This does make a person wonder why we would desire it so much, as Mccann noted - but ofc buddhism has some explanation for this as well - again not looking to debate the factual accuracy or proper connotation of that, either.

                  There's no need to defend or posture over what you believe, to me. We all have beliefs.

                  I would even answer the initiating OPQ with "sometimes, those contradictions are deliberate" Koan as intuition pump.
                  Last edited by Rhythm; 26 Dec 2019, 13:55.

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