Hello,
A question arose in my mind while reading again some Buddhist texts.
In all the texts that describe the previous births of the last Buddha and all
the previous ones, I noticed that all the rebirths and previous lifes take place
somewhere in the vast region of India or near. Same for all his students as well.
While Buddha talks about world systems and countless aeons it looks like
that they all prefer reappearing in a specific region only.
How is this possible?
Do you have any account of a Buddha that was reborn for example in Europe?
Another strange fact that was mentioned in the texts, is that at any given
time, only one Buddha can exist in any world system. Have you ever thought
about that and the reason behind it?
Thank you.
George.
Buddha's Rebirths - Possible Paradox
Buddha's Rebirths - Possible Paradox
Last edited by hgg on Mon Jun 17, 2013 7:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
hgg2016.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
I see little reason to try to get the entire chronological spectrum of Buddhist myth to hang together; the emphasis on rebirth and kamma was a complex cultural environment within which the Buddha taught, so these cosmological descriptions to which you refer look to me like culturally-constrained developments of the framework which conveyed the teachings, as opposed to Dhamma instructions in and of themselves.hgg wrote:How is this possible? Do you have any account of a Buddha that was reborn for example in Europe?
That a culture's gods tend to look like the people who describe them is rather revealing...
- "And how is it, bhikkhus, that by protecting oneself one protects others? By the pursuit, development, and cultivation of the four establishments of mindfulness. It is in such a way that by protecting oneself one protects others.
"And how is it, bhikkhus, that by protecting others one protects oneself? By patience, harmlessness, goodwill, and sympathy. It is in such a way that by protecting others one protects oneself.
- Sedaka Sutta [SN 47.19]
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
Maybe common folks back then didn't really have the geographical knowledge and/or concept about India, America, Europe, etc. and so the Buddha simply used whatever terms familiar to his people back then to get the message across..hgg wrote:While Buddha talks about world systems and countless aeons it looks like
that they all prefer reappearing in a specific region only.
How is this possible?
Obviously the amount of time it took for one to perfect all the required paramis to become a Samma-SamBuddha (Perfectly Enlightened One) is incredibly long...Another strange fact that was mentioned in the texts, is that at any given
time, only one Buddha can exist in any world system. Have you ever thought
about that and the reason behind it?
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
But how is it possible for the Buddha to know the existence of the 31 planes and not know the continents of the Earth?Maybe common folks back then didn't really have the geographical knowledge and/or concept about India, America, Europe, etc. and so the Buddha simply used whatever terms familiar to his people back then to get the message across..
Why did he always choose India? It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher.
He even mentions in one text that people that were born in times with no Buddha alive, are unlucky.
It doesn't sound like a small probability, but rather like a rule that in a single world system there can only be one Buddha at a time.Obviously the amount of time it took for one to perfect all the required paramis to become a Samma-SamBuddha (Perfectly Enlightened One) is incredibly long...
hgg2016.
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Re: Buddha's Rebirths
It is impossible that two Buddha's could arise together.hgg wrote:It doesn't sound like a small probability, but rather like a rule that in a single world system there can only be one Buddha at a time.
If he could not know all of the 31 planes of existence, then he would not be a Buddha.
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Re: Buddha's Rebirths
I have read the text but the answer that Nagasena gave was that "the Earth could not bear two Buddhas at the same time" which I thinkIt is impossible that two Buddha's could arise together.
it does not really explain anything. Also, disputes were arisen with a single Buddha as well. It sounds strange that Milinda was so easily
satisfied with that explanation.
I agree. But then I would have to ask again the same questions:If he could not know all of the 31 planes of existence, then he would not be a Buddha.
"Why did he always choose India? It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher.
He even mentions in one text that people that were born in times with no Buddha alive, are unlucky."
hgg2016.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
If you re-read my message, notice the keyword "common folks". The Buddha certainly had evolved way beyond the knowledge level of common folks and so He definitely knew about all the realms of existence and stuff. The problem is how to convey the message to other people. Imagine you're a quantum physicist who's trying to explain quantum mechanic to a mentally-challenged 3 year-old child. Are you gonna use terms like boson, wave function, and elliptical orbits or you have no choice but using the terms the kid can identify with?hgg wrote:But how is it possible for the Buddha to know the existence of the 31 planes and not know the continents of the Earth?
Why did he always choose India? It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher.
He even mentions in one text that people that were born in times with no Buddha alive, are unlucky.
I think you already had the answer with your observation: "It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher." If the event of the arising of a Samma-SamBuddha is a very rare event, it won't make sense to have 2 Buddhas to teach in the same world system. It's just not fair for other beings in other world systems..It doesn't sound like a small probability, but rather like a rule that in a single world system there can only be one Buddha at a time.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
You seem to bypass my main question:
Why did he always choose India? It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher.
He even mentions in one text that people that were born in times with no Buddha alive, are unlucky.
So imagine how unfair it is to those who have never met a Buddha.
Why did he always choose India? It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher.
He even mentions in one text that people that were born in times with no Buddha alive, are unlucky.
So imagine how unfair it is to those who have never met a Buddha.
hgg2016.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths - Possible Paradox
I don't take the rebirth stories as literal truth. The stories do not agree with what we know of the history of the planet. There was no such thing as India kalpas ago and it is a stretch to imagine in all these ages when the past Buddhas appeared, human kind evolved over and over again in the same manner and developed indian culture with indian names. The Dhamma is for practice, not for belief.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths - Possible Paradox
Well said, Pilgrim.pilgrim wrote:
The Dhamma is for practice, not for belief.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths - Possible Paradox
Then, how will you be able to decide what is true and what is not in the accounts of Buddha ?I don't take the rebirth stories as literal truth. The stories do not agree with what we know of the history of the planet.
If some of the accounts are not true, then more might be false.
How will you be sure for example that there are 31 planes of existence and not only one?
It is very important for a theory to be sound in order to inspire confidence.
If we cannot account for this possible discrepancy in Buddha's rebirths,
the validity of the theory of rebirths might be shaken.
hgg2016.
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Re: Buddha's Rebirths
+1daverupa wrote: That a culture's gods tend to look like the people who describe them is rather revealing...
Yet one thing that often bothers me is how come the sangha of monks who were responsible for writting the suttas can be so deluded to allow such discrepancy, did they appointed novice monks for the task while the enlightened monks go golfing?
Re: Buddha's Rebirths - Possible Paradox
I just need the Four Noble Truths and Eight -fold path to be true. If any part of this is proven to be false, I'll stop being a Buddhist. But if it is proven there are only 30 or 22 planes of existence, it makes little difference to me.hgg wrote:Then, how will you be able to decide what is true and what is not in the accounts of Buddha ?I don't take the rebirth stories as literal truth. The stories do not agree with what we know of the history of the planet.
If some of the accounts are not true, then more might be false.
How will you be sure for example that there are 31 planes of existence and not only one?
It is very important for a theory to be sound in order to inspire confidence.
If we cannot account for this possible discrepancy in Buddha's rebirths,
the validity of the theory of rebirths might be shaken.
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
One reason could have to do with the fact that this is where he passed away.hgg wrote:You seem to bypass my main question:
Why did he always choose India?
If we posit that the the state of one's mind upon death importantly influences the place where one will be reborn, then, if one's thoughts close to death are about India (which is likely, if one is living in India), one will be reborn in India.
If one would be living in, say, Italy, but would have an intense desire to live in Brasil, then, by the above principle, one would be reborn in Brasil.
Why unfair? Could you explain?It would not be fair for all the other beings not been able to have such a teacher.
He even mentions in one text that people that were born in times with no Buddha alive, are unlucky.
So imagine how unfair it is to those who have never met a Buddha.
Hic Rhodus, hic salta!
Re: Buddha's Rebirths
The underlined portion is probably a mistake, since it judges the centuries-long composition of this oral material according to modern historical values, rather than according to then-standard mythical pedagogies and narratives. The oral tradition was such that the reciters were also encouraged to make inferences and connections with the material, and the nature of the recitations would have been such that a reciter would have easily imputed "obvious" additions - ones which felt readily apparent and valid, but which to our way of thinking were unoriginal.barcsimalsi wrote:+1daverupa wrote: That a culture's gods tend to look like the people who describe them is rather revealing...
Yet one thing that often bothers me is how come the sangha of monks who were responsible for writting the suttas can be so deluded to allow such discrepancy, did they appointed novice monks for the task while the enlightened monks go golfing?
We also ought to remember that the Sangha existed in a context of other groups who vied for social support, so the narrative formats would have been aligned with lay interests and lay conceptions of the cosmos - indeed, since the Buddha left so much undeclared that puthujjana find enticing, it would have been a matter of course to flesh out the conceptions of worlds and beings and whatnot according to prevailing cultural values.
It pays to remember that the Nikayas were formed over a long period; basically the period between 400 BCE and about 70 BCE, and even then the differences between the Nikayas and the Agamas, small though they be, show that some editing still occurred at the end of that period. The presence of abhidhammic and other scholastic ideas in the Nikayas is an example of this. There may also have been some cross-contamination with ideas from other wanderer groups during this time, especially in terms of meditation methods.
So, as I said earlier, attempts to square the entire chronological span of Buddhist myth is ad hoc and probably not very useful, nor accurate with respect to what the earliest Buddhists probably understood (I am reminded of Ptolemy's epicycles in this connection - the original orbit of the Dhamma is heliocentric ellipsoids, while later scholasticism renders geocentric circles).
- "And how is it, bhikkhus, that by protecting oneself one protects others? By the pursuit, development, and cultivation of the four establishments of mindfulness. It is in such a way that by protecting oneself one protects others.
"And how is it, bhikkhus, that by protecting others one protects oneself? By patience, harmlessness, goodwill, and sympathy. It is in such a way that by protecting others one protects oneself.
- Sedaka Sutta [SN 47.19]