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| Buddhism Buddha and Buddhism: issues, discussions, and questions. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Humanist Contemplative
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 148
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A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
I have just finished an essay by this title and thought I'd post it here for those who may be interested. We could have a discussion on it in this thread if folks like.
http://dtstrainphilosophy.blogspot.c...-buddhist.html Thanks ![]() Daniel |
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#2 (permalink) | |
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Zen philosopher
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 44
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Quote:
I love your essay! Taking a naturalistic approach to karma and rebirth is extremely necessary if Buddhism is to be transplanted to the west and thrive. Have you read Buddhism Without Beliefs by Stephen Batchelor? He goes a bit too far in suggesting that we jettison karma and rebirth altogether but he does say that seeing rebirth as a PSYCHOLOGICAL rebirth will go a long way in ensuring that Buddhism speaks to the secular west. Thanks for taking the time to write your insightful essay. I'm telling you that naturalistic religion is hear to stay and the fossilized institutions of the past (but not their core) are on their way out. Namaste, Tony |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Humanist Contemplative
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 148
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Thanks for reading Tony. I'm glad you liked my essay. I have not read Batchelor's book, but it sounds interesting. It sounds similar to a recent article by Sam Harris in "Shambhala Sun" called "Killing the Buddha".
I think it is important we not be intolerant of those Buddhists who do have a more mystical or transcendental approach though. One thing I enjoy about Buddhism is its diversity and flexibility in being useful to a variety of people. If Buddhism is to evolve this way or that, it should be allowed to do so naturally according to the proclivities and inclinations of its practitioners, without dogmatism or imposition from either camp. I think you might agree, but I just thought this was worth mentioning. ![]() With Compassion, Daniel |
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#4 (permalink) |
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a simple buddhist
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
namaste,
i must say that i really enjoyed reading your essay. to me, it was very insightful and very well worded. i even passed the link onto other friends who i thought would be interested in reading it. i assume that u wouldnt mind my doing that b/c you posted it up here for all of us to read, however, if you would not like me passing the link on, please let me know and i will not. i look forward to reading your other essays (which unfortunately i havent had the time to do thus far) and i also look forward to more of your posts on this forum. i would like to talk with you about quantum mechanics, if you wouldnt mind. i dont know a whole lot about it, and im not sure how much of it you have studied, but i remember you mentioning it in your essay and its a topic that im very interested in. so, if you would like to talk about it a bit to a novice, i would greatly appreciate it. i have i bit of knowledge on it due to a movie that i watched called, 'what the bleep do we know?'. however, that movie seems to go against what you said in your essay. to my understanding, the scientists in that movie seem to come to the conclusion that quatum mechanics proves that you make your own reality based on many different factors. however, i could be wrong. but again, thank you for posting your essay on here. i learned much from it. be well in peace |
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#5 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 8
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
I like it!!
that was good!! Although I did not read the whole thing. I love it!! Sorry to say I have a lot of things to do and am barely online. Have to get ready for exam now I sure do get sleepy on the last month of school. Adios amigo! Me gustaba mucho!! |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Humanist Contemplative
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 148
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Hello Toujur!
Thanks for reading my essay and for your comments. Please feel free to forward to anyone you like. Quantum mechanics is a wonderfully exciting thing to me as well. I am no scientist, but for a lay person, I'm fairly well-read in physics and biology, simply because it's something I've spent a lot of time reading out of interest. Most of this is on a conceptual level (rather than in depth mathematics). The film you refer to unfortunately suffers from some rampant misconceptions about quantum mechanics. One of these misconceptions is that our consciousness somehow determines reality. I believe this misconception got going because of a misunderstanding about the use of words in describing QM. One can often read that "our measurements collapse an indeterminate wave function into a specific value." This would seem to mean that a particle is a wave with no definite real position until we look at it. But this isn't the case. When physicists talk about "wave functions" they don't mean physical things. As professor Dan Styer has said in his paper, "Philosophy of my first-semester junior-level quantum mechanics course": "The vector state (or wavefunction) is an algorithmic tool for calculating probabilities, not a physical entity... The 'collapse of the wavefunction' is no more worrisome than is throwing out scratch paper." -- http://www.oberlin.edu/physics/dstye...Philosophy.pdf Unfortunately, many have taken this wording and extrapolated it into a sort of postmodern conception of reality where there's nothing in the closet until we open it, or where our minds can create reality. Some of this has been honest misunderstanding, and some of it has been by New Age quacks and charlatans exploiting a gap in understanding of the public to claim their spiritual or supernatural ideas have some scientific backing they don't actually have. Whichever is the case for the film you mention, I'm afraid it seems to be more pseudoscience than science. There is plenty to be amazed by QM as it is, however. If you'd like to learn more, I would recommend The Cosmic Code: Quantum Physics as the Language of Nature by Heinz R. Pagels. It's good at communicating the real scientific nature of QM in a conceptual way that doesn't require a mathematics or science degree to understand. I'm sure there are plenty of others, but please beware the pseudoscience and New Age sources, as they are typically misleading. With Compassion, ![]() Daniel |
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#8 (permalink) |
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a simple buddhist
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
thank you vry much daniel for the book title. ill be sure to check that out soon. can i find 'the cosmic code' in any bookstore, like barnes and noble?
what u have warned me about with the pseudoscience and new age theories is basically what the movie that i mentioned is about. it talks a lot about wave fuctions and how something like a basketball is actually in many different places at the same time until we check on it and actually see it in the one place (this was an actual example used in the movie, by the way). i do believe that some of the theories that the movie claims to be fact, could possibly be fact, however the new information that u have given me about the misconception of QM in the movie really makes me question the rest of it. the way the director of this documentory/movie was he used many scholars in their feild of QM to verify information and use brief snipits of what they actually said to prove it, which mislead me to believe that everything that they were saying was the truth. its very hard to doubt someone who has spent their entire life on something. but, i would suggest that u check the movie out b/c it does have some very interesting viewpoints in it which i would love to discuss with u more. so u said that u have spent a lot of time studying QM out of pure interest? thats very astounding to me since where i live i very rarely find people who have even heard of QM, much less anyone who knows anything about it. unfortunately, i doubt that i could really carry on an intellegent conversation with u about it since i really only know what ive been told thus far, however im hoping to change that here very soon. what else do u study, if u dont mind me asking? well, i must be going, but i do appreciate the time that u have taken to explain all of this to me. i hope that we can talk again sometime. be well in peace jon |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Mod ~ Eastern Thought
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Dharmadhatu
Posts: 2,667
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Namaste all,
for those that are interested, heres a good lay overview of Bells Theorem: http://www.ncsu.edu/felder-public/ke...pers/bell.html heres one for the more mathmatically inclined: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physic...nequality.html here's a link to a fantastic essay on the interplay of Buddhism and Spooky Action At A Distance: http://home.btclick.com/scimah/Quantumphenomena.htm metta, ~v |
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#10 (permalink) | |
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Zen philosopher
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 44
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Quote:
Thanks for your reply. I definitely agree with your comment on tolerating the mystical and transcendental approaches that other Buddhists have concerning Ultimate Reality. According to my POV, I take more of a pragmatic approach to spirituality...if it works (and is wholesome) then do it. Have you read the Quantum and the Lotus? It is available in most book stores and is a great read. Another QM book that is fantastic (and I have been lucky enough to meet the author and have dinner with him) is The Physics of Consciousness by Evan Harris Walker...also available in stores. His theory states that...in a nutshell...consciousness can be accounted for by the activity of electrons tunneling throughout the brain. By using this theory, he is able to explain why we sleep and why melanin is found all around brain tissues. A large portion of his book is devoted to Zen koans too. It really is fascinating stuff! I'm looking forward to reading your past and any subsequent articles. With metta, Tony |
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#11 (permalink) |
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Humanist Contemplative
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 148
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Hey Toujour,
It seems to me what the film did was present actual experts to present one aspect of QM, then switch to other folks when they expounded on what the experts said. So, what you have left are things being said that, while *based* upon the initial thing the experts said, wouldn't really agree with them. I remember at the time this film came out that many of the scientists involved were dismayed, but that's just a crude memory if I recall correctly. I've always had an interest in science and took it upon myself to read up on Relativity, QM, evolution, cosmology, history, and a little anthropology. People are impressed sometimes, but I like to remind them that what I know isn't all that different from knowing a lot about which baseball players played for which teams, their records, etc. It's just my area of interest (and I know nothing about sports!). And, I like to stress too that, to a scientist, I'd appear quite ignorant. My info is on a conceptual level more than applied (although I can calculate how much mass and time dialation would happen at a given percentage of light speed for a given duration). But I try to at least keep my laymans' info consistent with the applied level info without undue exrapolation, distortion, or exaggeration. My primary interest is in philosophy, and as a Humanist I value learning. I've always thought that our philosophy should be backed up and in agreement with what we can measure and see around us if it is to be useful. This is something Buddhism holds as well I think. Therefore, a study of science makes for a good backing if one is going to be philosophizing. Please feel free to email me if you'd ever like to discuss anything else (my email is on my website). Sincerely, Daniel |
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#12 (permalink) |
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Humanist Contemplative
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 148
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Hi YNOT,
Thanks much. I think pragmatism is an excellent approach. Having not read it, I can't speak to all of what you mentioned, but thanks for the references. I think we have to be careful we aren't jumping the gun. There seem to be two dangers to look out for in this: (1) taking what science says and exaggerating or imagining it to mean something extra than what it literally means, and (2) trying to "fill in gaps" in scientific knowledge with our personal ideas about how things work. That's ok for speculation, as long as we don't dogmatize it if something new comes up or if we find we've misunderstood something in science. Fortunately, surprisingly much of Buddhism makes wonderful sense without doing any of that. I'm not saying you or your references do any of this - just that it's something I like to watch out for and be aware of ![]() With Compassion, Daniel |
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#13 (permalink) |
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General Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 105
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Hello,
It's been a while. I'm glad to see you're all still here and apparently well. I would highly, highly, super highly recommend seeing a documentary called "The Elegant Universe". It's the best route to go for the novice such as myself who doesn't have the drive or technical knowledge to sit through a book. Although, if you really want to, there is a book out by the same name. The documentary was a special on PBS in the states a while back and it was so good that they decided to market the DVD. Best visual I've seen on the subject. |
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#14 (permalink) |
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Humanist Contemplative
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 148
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
Thanks for the kind words Rdwillia
![]() I think I may have that book, but I'm not sure. In any case, if it's associated with NOVA, then I'll bet it would be an excellent source. Thanks! |
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#15 (permalink) |
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General Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 105
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Re: A Naturalistic Approach to Karma & Rebirth
You're very welcome DT.
I have to admit, I don't too much support a more naturalistic approach to Buddhist beliefs ultimately. But perhaps it would be beneficial to start westerners off with a more naturalistic aproach. I truly feel that everything I have come across in my study and practice is there for a very good reason and are very valuable tools along the path, such as the idea of rebirth. Buddhists don't typically believe in rebirth just because we're told that it's the correct view but because it's beneficial to us to hold that belief. The Elegant Universe documentary goes into super-string theory in detail but all in laymen's terms with nice computer effect visuals. It's amazing to me how close science is getting to Buddhist ideals, theoretically. They're almost at emptiness. It seems that they're just doing a multi-century analytical meditation on emptiness. Right now, they think that all of creation is made up of tiny strings, invisible to our most sensitive microscopes. How much would anyone like to bet that in the next hundred years there will be some form of scientific realization of emptiness? Namaste ![]() |
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