

Thank you for sharing what you believe.ground wrote:Open mindedness is often advocated by those who want to put forward their beliefs, i.e. as a means of persuasion.
Not believing anything while accepting that others believe regardless of what they believe is perfect open mind. Such an open mind may be the result of mindfulness.
tiltbillings wrote:Thank you for sharing what you believe.ground wrote:Open mindedness is often advocated by those who want to put forward their beliefs, i.e. as a means of persuasion.
Not believing anything while accepting that others believe regardless of what they believe is perfect open mind. Such an open mind may be the result of mindfulness.

Said Ground, expressing his belief. Thank you for sharing your expression of belief.ground wrote:tiltbillings wrote:Thank you for sharing what you believe.ground wrote:Open mindedness is often advocated by those who want to put forward their beliefs, i.e. as a means of persuasion.
Not believing anything while accepting that others believe regardless of what they believe is perfect open mind. Such an open mind may be the result of mindfulness.
You cannot know whether there is belief. All you see is just words. If there would be belief then the words would not be the belief but just a means of expression. Meaning of words arises depending on eye contacting words qua forms.
tiltbillings wrote:Said Ground, expressing his belief. Thank you for sharing your expression of belief.ground wrote:tiltbillings wrote:Thank you for sharing what you believe.
You cannot know whether there is belief. All you see is just words. If there would be belief then the words would not be the belief but just a means of expression. Meaning of words arises depending on eye contacting words qua forms.

Thank you, again, for sharing your belief.ground wrote:Remember: You cannot know.
mirco wrote:Well, I can't watch that video in my country due to copyright protection.
I think open mindedness is to accept everything that is going on in mind, without resisting or pushing anything away.
These processes in mind are just dependent arisen and impersonal, but if we start to take them personal and clinging starts, closed mind already happens. My two cents.
Regards
Cittasanto wrote:What do you think open mindedness is
porpoise wrote:Cittasanto wrote:What do you think open mindedness is
I don't take my opinions as seriously as I used to, I mean they are just opinions and it's OK not to know the answers.

Cittasanto wrote:What do you think open mindedness is
do you dismiss alternatives or consider them and find it worthy to question your theories through various means?
"Friends, just as the footprints of all legged animals are encompassed by the footprint of the elephant, and the elephant's footprint is reckoned the foremost among them in terms of size; in the same way, all skillful qualities are gathered under the four noble truths. Under which four?
Under the noble truth of stress,
under the noble truth of the origination of stress,
under the noble truth of the cessation of stress,
and under the noble truth of the path of practice leading to the cessation of stress. - MN 28

nibbuti wrote:But, as others suggested, 'open' mind can be ambiguous, as to what is to be dismissed and what is acceptable.

porpoise wrote:For me an open mind is less caught up in grasping and rejecting views, therefore less opinionated and more open to possibilites.
Possibly.

Cittasanto wrote:mirco wrote:I think open mindedness is to accept everything that is going on in mind, without resisting or pushing anything away.
These processes in mind are just dependent arisen and impersonal, but if we start to take them personal and clinging starts, closed mind already happens.
If the Buddha didn't resist... (fourth Noble truth) and wasn't open to a life without Dukkha (third noble truth) the extent he saw dukkha being present (the second noble truth) would not of been undermined and uprooted. These four Noble Truths are to some degree an expression of open mindedness. A receptivity to new ideas (what has not been heard before) and seeing whether they fit reality. not necessarily an acceptance of anything, but an understanding of everything.
nibbuti wrote:Possibly. But some views are necessary in conventional life to plan ahead and not starve. The Buddha taught wise view rather than no view.
mirco wrote:Cittasanto wrote:mirco wrote:I think open mindedness is to accept everything that is going on in mind, without resisting or pushing anything away.
These processes in mind are just dependent arisen and impersonal, but if we start to take them personal and clinging starts, closed mind already happens.
If the Buddha didn't resist... (fourth Noble truth) and wasn't open to a life without Dukkha (third noble truth) the extent he saw dukkha being present (the second noble truth) would not of been undermined and uprooted. These four Noble Truths are to some degree an expression of open mindedness. A receptivity to new ideas (what has not been heard before) and seeing whether they fit reality. not necessarily an acceptance of anything, but an understanding of everything.
O.k., understand that and I don't think both our understandings differs very much.
In order to understand something it has to be there. Performing any mental activity aiming not to experience a certain mental state means having no chance to investigate that thing, because you can't watch what isn't there.
If one is, i.e. used to mentally (and physically) push unwanted feelings away, you can't understand how exactly that feeling it works (arise, exist, descend). But that would lead to liberation. I'm the best example for that shit since I'm having a hard time everyday working on not to feel unwanted emotions.
Regards
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