Sam Vara wrote: ↑Sun Jul 01, 2018 5:40 am
This looks as if it might be a version of Zeno's Paradox of Motion.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno%27s_paradoxes I'm happy to take interest and observation as sufficient evidence of the efficacy of the Eightfold Path; if that's not evidence, then what counts as evidence for anything? What counts as evidence that UG Krishnamurti was in any sense different from other people, in a sense worth paying attention to?
Perhaps the evidence I and others have that the Eightfold Path including its mental processes is necessary is as strong as any evidence you have about UG. And perhaps this "transformation" you talk of (What is "transformation"? Was UG "transformed"? Let's get a bit more clarity into this...) is completely different from the teachings of the Buddha. Perhaps there are people trying to get to Rajagaha
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitak ... .horn.html but you are advising them that motion is not required, because you are confusing the term "Rajagaja" with something else.
For those wishing to attain
nibbana, do you consider the Eightfold Path necessary? Or is there no
nibbana?
The 8 fold path as described in Theravada is a path of 'becoming', imo. I don't want to go into why this is so as I've posted many times why I think this. To me, this is in contradiction to what the Buddha taught about 'not grasping', 'not being attached'. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with the 8FP if you want to lead a life that follows the 'rules' of good behavior. What I am objecting to is the description that has come down through the ages that meditation, altering your state of mind through it, is going to lead to nibbana, an unconditioned way of living. I have said many times that you want to use a conditioned dhamma like thought to lead to the unconditioned. Personally, I don't see this being the case. If it has led you to the unconditioned, which it seems it has not, then you are hoping and believing it will at some future date. So, I answer that time cannot be a factor in this matter.
I have no objection to you or anyone else trying all this. But, I think that is all that it amounts to, trying, not achieving. But, achieving is not what the Buddha is teaching. He is teaching that grasping is dukkha. If you believe that following this path is not grasping, then you will continue.
As for what UG put forth, it is also easy to get caught in the same thing that I am talking about when I refer to the 8fp, grasping, holding on to a view. There are very similar things in both 'teachings'. My basis for listening to UG is the real life observation of someone in whom dukkha ceased. This only proves to me that it is possible for someone to live this. It doesn't prove it's possible for me to achieve this. The achiever must cease first in my way of logic. You, who have only words, which are beliefs and hopes in someone who lived 2500 years ago and who may not have said the things that are attributed to him, think there is a path to this. Buddha may have been the real deal, but the orthodoxy is certainly not. And, that is what you are really practicing. But that's okay with me. You can try. I don't consider the 8fp necessary. As for nibbana, this image of what it is is what everyone has to stop grasping at in order for dukkha to cease. It's quite simple for me.
If you want to know about UG, read the books that have been published. I read about the Buddha and have practiced. You, otoh, have not really studied what the 2 K's have put forth and contemplated it. How can we really have a talk about this?