Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Nope, no dying god he, merely mortal. No promises made by his followers that he was god man either. That little bit of mythology is not the buddha'sAccording to the standard account of Gautama's turning point in life, whereby he could not find anymore satisfaction in his luxurious and kingly secure existence: he accidentally saw a decrepit old man, a gravely sick man, a rotting corpse, and an itinerant monk leading a life of self-deprivations.
He was devastated by the realization of what awaited him: helpless old age, disease, and death; and he thought that he could attain imperturbability by adopting the life of the itinerant monk. That did not liberate him from the dread of old age, disease, and death; for he continued to get older and older, he still got sick every so often, and he still could not escape from the face of death looking at him with a sneer chilling his bones. All that was suffering for him as for everyone else even to this very day in the most advanced of society.
Then one day he came to what I might call his moment of eureka: the discovery that the cause of suffering is desire; so get rid of desire and you will be liberated from suffering.
On his earthly departure he was not liberated from death for he died the common demise of every man,
Which part of enlightenment was supposed to protect him from toxic mushrooms or bad pork?and not liberated from sickness for he died from lethal food poisoning as he -- notwithstanding having proclaimed himself or been acclaimed by his followers to be enlightened -- unwittingly ingested spoiled meat
No, no super hero he, claiming supernatural powers.
I don't recall any statement that he would escape death, illness or old age. Could you point out for my slow witt why that should be important?, and not liberated from the decay of death for they cremated his corpse, the quick annihilation by fire instead of the slow malodorous feasting of worms.
The myth is that he encountered the things that he might have suffered from, sickness, death and old age. But unlike the mistaken followers of jesus, who never said he was immortal, the mistaken followers of the buddha never claimed his immortality or superhero status.
That would be dependant on the defintion of suffering now would it, did the buddha say he would be liberated?Are Buddhists today 2500 years after the departure of their founder and 2500 years of meditating on his doctrines and observing his ordinances, are they any nearer to liberation from helpless old age, disease, and death? emancipation from desire and hence from suffering?
Emancipation from suffe5ring, from what the sages have written, is not the emancipation from physical pain or old age, sickness and death.
That might bee xplianed to those who were interested.So, what has Buddhism contributed to make life safer, better, and longer, enable mankind to lead healthier and more comfortable lives?
No, not as far as anyone with working eyes can see; but they are still into the discussion of anatta, dukkha, karma, samsara [and que sera sera* -- from an irreverent wit].
That is the usual habit with human nature, instead of facing the problem and solving it, from indolence and pusillanimity it prefers to direct its attention to the metaphysics of the pointless kind.
Yrreg
Que sera sera -- Spanish: what will be will be.
I must be very old and forgetfull, I thought sera was the future tense of to be in Italian not in spanish. Oh well old brain have I.
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