Some ‘Givens’ in Buddhism
1. Buddha (the
historical person) was human – nothing more, nothing less.
2. Buddha was
embedded in a cultural milieu.
3. “Reality” is a
bundle of chains of causes and effects, governed by natural laws. The effects are bundles of energy events we
sometimes think of as ‘things’ and sometimes think of as ‘processes’ or
‘events.’
4. The ‘problem’ in
the human condition is dukkhā. Dukkhā is
a complex concept which subsumes any, all, every form of dissatisfaction one
can experience.
5. Dukkhā is an
experience. It is not a substance, like
clay or air. As an experience, dukkhā
changes – it arises, abides a while and passes away.
6. The cause of the
experience of dukkhā is compound; that is, dukkhā arises in the interaction
between this bundle of processes called “I” and the energy events we call
‘living in the world.”
7. From the “I” side,
the cause of dukkhā is approaching life through the delusions of avijjā driven
by the cravings and desires of taṇhā.
8. Because there are
identifiable causes of the experience of dukkhā, one can intervene and reduce
the frequency, intensity, and duration of periods of dukkhā.
9. The tried and true
intervention is the discipline or practice come to be known as “The Noble
Eightfold Path.’
10 The Noble Eightfold Path is a discipline which cultivates
wisdom, morality and psychological development, the end product of which is reduction
or elimination of the experience of dukkhā in one’s life.
11. Nothing is
permanent. Everything is in flux.
12. There is no
‘atta’ (Sanskrit ‘atman’). That is there
is no eternal, unchanging substrate to human existence.
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