The Buddha refused to deal with those things that don’t lead to the extinction of dukkha [suffering]. He didn’t discuss them. Take the question of whether or not there is rebirth after death. What is reborn? How is it reborn? What is its “karmic inheritance”? These questions don’t aim at the extinction of dukkha. That being so, they are not the Buddha’s teaching nor are they connected with it. They don’t lie within the range of Buddhism. Also, the one who asks about such matters has no choice but to believe indiscriminately any answer that’s given, because the one who answers won’t be able to produce any proofs and will just be speaking according to his own memory and feeling. The listener can’t see for himself and consequently must blindly believe the other’s words. Little by little the subject strays from dharma until it becomes something else altogether, unconnected with the extinction of dukkha.Buddhism at its essence.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
A Single Handful
Tricycle Magazine's Daily Dharma for today quotes from "A Single Handful" by Buddhadasa Bhikkhu
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Buddhism
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