I'm not here to de-rail threads or to evangelize, or to intimidate.
Then why do you continue to do so?
...it looks like most participants don't want to pursue any scientific analysis of experiences here...
Okay, we are not all scientists here. Or psychologists. The fact that you (another non-scientist) actually thinks that non-scientists can accurately
scientifically analyze your
daydreams and
figments of your imagination is a direct result of your misunderstanding of the scientific process. This is why we post links and not stories. Until you learn how the scientific process works and learn and use correct definitions to words, you are - and you will remain - TOTALLY off course.
My slide show, by the way is just cataloging existing symbolism that shows common denominators throughout Kabbalah, Hinduism and Taoism in particular.
Your slideshow erroneously attempts to combine ancient Oriental mysticism with contemporary Christianity. You set out to prove they are the same philosophy/religion via extreme data mining and cherry picking. You confuse Chinese characters with Korean symbols. You confuse the periodic table of elements with the 4 ancient mystical elements (although you only used 3). You admit yourself that the reason you began studying that in the first place is because the Chinese character for "truth" reminded you of a Hindu "Om." What you experienced there is called pareidolia - you did not discover a hidden correlation between religions. A lot of what I read of your slideshow was some serious grasping at straws and confirmation bias.
I did read it. I am happy to explain myself more -
but I strongly suggest you repost your slideshow in a new thread.
Besides, if you want to try and mix all religions together, go and study the Baha'i faith. It's still crazy talk (like ALL religion), but they've done a better job at than you have.
Once it is then understood, then we can see if it holds any meaning for modern physics....then we are qualified to ask that question, in other words.
So, I believe that parts of buddhism are compatible with nonbelief, they are very similar to cognitive behavioral therapy.
The very obvious problem here, is that things like modern physics and cognitive behavioral therapy were not invented until
MUCH later when people were
WAY smarter. Trying to make some retroactive correlation because some of the things sound similar is an insult to the modern sciences. If Buddhism had physics and cognitive therapy sorted out thousands of years ago, then we wouldn't have "discovered" them so much later.
It really seems to me like Buddhists who do not like the stigma associated with other religions cling to the philosophy side and brush off the rest. Also, there is another stigma (created by the New Age people) that implies one who studies Eastern religions/philosophies is more "open-minded," or has some sort of knowledge unavailable to the rest of civilization. I believe that these modern attempts to attach something like physics to an ancient belief system is a self-serving way to distance your religion from others. As if some connection to science would "elevate" Buddhism past other religions.
A lot of Buddhism's non-religious rhetoric seem to revolve around the "Do unto others" Golden Rule mantra. That's not at all exclusive to Buddhism. Meditation is, but meditation and self-reflection can be taught and practiced without Buddhism (and they probably would have arisen anyway if Buddhism never had existed). So IMO, Buddhism must still sit at the religion table with all the other brats.