mikenz66 wrote:Sorry, perhaps I wasn't clear. Let me re-phrase it: . . .
Thanks for the clarification, and I agree with you.
mikenz66 wrote:Sorry, perhaps I wasn't clear. Let me re-phrase it: . . .
mikenz66 wrote:... Let me re-phrase it:"It is logically possible that the Theravada Commentaries are correct, and the other sects are wrong. This is, of course, the view of the Theravada Tradition..."
Ajahn Sujuato and his ilk are using the working assumption that:"The correct things are those which everyone agrees on".
This is a useful way to analyse the data, but does not necessarily lead to the "correct" conclusion. Obviously one could quote historical examples in science and other areas where the majority turned out to be wrong.
Mike
Simplicity: Shorter, more basic teachings are likely to have appeared earlier than complex, scholastic elaborations. This is one of the fundamentals of historical criticism.
Multiple Attestation: Teachings appearing more often are likely to be more authentic than those less frequent. This of course only applies to independent attestation, not mere repetition.
Similarity: Teachings congruent in style, form, or content with known early teachings are more likely to be authentic than heterodox passages.
Dissimilarity: Teachings dissimilar to other traditions, whether pre-Buddhist or later Buddhism, are unlikely to have appeared through assimilation or revision and thus are likely to be authentic. Notice that this principle does not say that teachings held in common with other traditions are inauthentic; it simply can’t tell.
Concordance between Nikayas and Agamas: The essential congruence of the Nikayas and the Agamas is probably the most important finding of modern Buddhist studies, and should become a standard criterion in all matters concerning early Buddhism. Although the basic findings are in, there remains much work to be done in sorting out the finer details.
Paññāsikhara wrote:Do we then throw all that out as well? Without even looking at it?
pink trike wrote:...certainly difficult to address at any intelligent level of discourse within what has become a closed system that has a prevailing standard of "Buddha said it, I believe it".
retrofuturist wrote:
What venerable Sujato seeks to do is to help identify what the Buddha taught versus what he didn't teach, and he sees traditional Buddhist myths as getting in the way of such a pursuit... thus he wants to call them out for what they are.
Paññāsikhara wrote:I'd like to make a qualifier here:
I've met too many Buddhist practitioners, who have such "mythic" beliefs, who, partly because of those beliefs, apply themselves very whole heartedly to their practice of the Dharma, and as a result, are endowed with love, compassion, warmth, wisdom and insight, to think that they "get in the way of such a pursuit" should not be applied as a blanket term.
If, for ourselves, they get in the way, then that is one thing, but we must acknowledge it as such. And, if we acknowledge that such an "historical" approach works for us, but then a "mythic" approach works for others, to the degree that they "work", they may just be equal. And, as many later traditions have been telling us for some time, we end up with a case of being able to classify them all (equally) as "expedient means".
Otherwise, just another case of "ekameva saccam moghamannam" - "only this is true, all else is false". We think that our personal expedient is ultimate, and that it is only the other expedients that are somehow not. This may blind us, one day, when, under differing circumstances, stagnation in practice, and so forth, the application of other methods is sometimes what we need to advance further.
Paññāsikhara wrote:Otherwise, just another case of "ekameva saccam moghamannam" - "only this is true, all else is false". We think that our personal expedient is ultimate, and that it is only the other expedients that are somehow not. This may blind us, one day, when, under differing circumstances, stagnation in practice, and so forth, the application of other methods is sometimes what we need to advance further.
Jechbi wrote:
How far beyond the boundaries of what we now, in this moment, personally perceive as "Buddhadhamma" are we willing to extend this acknowledgement of expediency? If at all? For example, can expediency be found in approaches that might appear to us (at this particular moment in our development) not to be Buddhadhamma at all?
PeterB wrote:I think to some extent the apparent split between myth and history is not altogether relevant when talking about a spritual tradition. Something can be true without being historical, just as something can be historical but not directly shed light on what is true. Poetry is true, but does not correspond with scientific fact necessarily. A poetic description of a sunset is no less true than an analysis of the refraction of light through water droplets and atmospheric particles..
My own questioning of the Mahayana is not due to its relability as history or myth. Its to do with whether its myths tell the same story as does the Theravada.
My faith in the Theravada stems from it's narrative about what it is to be a human being whose existence is coloured by Dukkha, and its narrative of the way to be free of Dukkha by clear and practical means.
Some of the commentaries are poetic, some of them are analogous to science. Some are both. Instead of junking the commentaries I think which should learn to read them aright.
PeterB wrote:Clearly the Dhamma does not belong to anyone. Its custodian however is the Sangha. We were given three jewels to go to for Refuge.

Paññāsikhara wrote:Even the Anguttara Nikaya states to the effect of:
"What is spoken by the Buddha, is well spoken,
What is well spoken, that is spoken by the Buddha."
Can you help me track down the passage you were referring to?Ven. Uttara wrote:King of gods, close to a village or hamlet there is a huge mass of grains collected and the public carry it away. They carry it away in pingoes, baskets, on the hip, and in their hands. If someone approaches them and asks - From where do you take this grain? Explaining it in what manner would the public explain it correctly? Venerable sir, answering it correctly, they would say from that mass of grains we carry it away.
In the same manner king of gods, whatever good words spoken, are those of The Blessed One worthy and rightfully enlightened. We and others follow it up and say it appropriately.
Paññāsikhara wrote:To me, some revisionists miss the latter in favor of the former.
The latter meaning - whatever is "well spoken" (~~ leads to kusala) is "buddha-vac".
Even if some deranged psychopathic lunatic states - "Be good to your mother", that too is "buddha-vac".
... which is from this thread.christopher::: wrote:First off, i am in agreement with Chicka-Dee that what really matters is the change within ourselves, learning to trust or actualize our Buddha potential, walking the path Buddha taught. In other words, that we take the instructions the Buddha gave (or for nonBuddhists, the instructions of the wisest teachers they have come across) and actually come to live by those instructions. In other words, practice trumps views, dharma practice (aka, how we think and live and behave) is most essential and views are important mostly in how they assist us in that way.

pink_trike wrote:"A call to arms..."
I keep thinking that's a very interesting title coming from a Buddhist.

PeterB wrote:well it does go on to make clear that the "arms" are reason...
mikenz66 wrote:Ajahn Sujuato and his ilk are using the working assumption that:"The correct things are those which everyone agrees on".
This is a useful way to analyse the data, but does not necessarily lead to the "correct" conclusion. Obviously one could quote historical examples in science and other areas where the majority turned out to be wrong.
Mike
PeterB wrote:well it does go on to make clear that the "arms" are reason...


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