Nirvana is nondualistic awareness is ultimately beyond all concepts and language, even beyond the
Buddhist teachings.
Buddhism: ~ Buddhist teaching has itself become a
kind of interactive and Self -evolving process, much like its idea of pratityasamutpada.
However, the end goal is still Nirvana, which is an experience ultimately
beyond all concepts and language, even beyond the Buddhist teachings. In the
end, even the attachment to the Dharma, the Buddhist teaching, must be dropped
like all other attachments. The tradition compares the teaching to a raft upon
which one crosses a swift river to get to the other side; once one is on the
far shore; there is no longer any need to carry the raft. The far shore is
Nirvana, and it is also said that when one arrives, one can see quite clearly
that there was never any river at all.
Bhagavan
Buddha said: ~” Believe
nothing just because a so-called wise person said it. Believe nothing just
because a belief is generally held. Believe nothing just because it is said in
ancient books. Believe nothing just because it is said to be of divine origin.
Believe nothing just because someone else believes it. Believe only what you
yourself test and judge to be true.
Even
Buddhism is mixed up with regional culture and traditions of the local
religion, wherever it existed. Thus, to get the full essence from Buddhism is
very difficult.
Dalai Lama
said: ~ Buddhism
need not to be the best religion though it is most scientific and religion and
inquisitive. But Buddhism has no answer to certain questions like the existence
of Atama (Soul) and rebirth. Dali Lama said that as an individual he believes
in rebirth as he had come across a few cases of rebirth. Modern science, Dalai
Lama hoped would unearth the mystery behind the rebirth. (In DH
–dec-212009-Gulbarga).
Buddhism
and its relationship with Science is like that of water and wine, one cannot
say there is no water in wine, but when you drink it, it would not be the water
but wine... thus Einstein’s view is water in the wine, because, modern science
does not believe in the matter but in this religion, everything is the matter
only.
"
Bhagavan
Buddha: ~ “There
are only two mistakes one can make along the road to truth: not going all the way... and not starting.
Dali Lama:
~ If the
scientific analysis ware conclusive to demonstrate certain claims in Buddhism
to be false, then we must accept the findings of science and abandon those
claims.
Thoughtless
awareness comes only when there is oneness in awareness in the midst of
dualistic illusion. The dualistic illusion exists as a reality until the
ignorance is there. Ignorance will vanish only when the nondualistic or
Advaitic wisdom dawns. The wisdom dawns only when one becomes aware of the fact
that the world in which you exist is a dualistic illusion created out of single
stuff that is the consciousness.
Thus, by
realizing the consciousness alone is and all the three states are merely an illusion created out of consciousness leads to nondual self-awareness.
Buddhist
Sunyavada is incongruous because every thought has its opposite every word is
tied to its coordinate for all thought and speech can only operate under such
dualism. Hence, taking the most fundamental word, existence its implied
opposite non-existence is also there, and vice versa. Therefore, the Sunya
"non-entity" is meaningless without "entity". Both are
there.
Buddhist
Idealism speaks only of ideas.
What
about the knower of these ideas?
Buddhist
Nihilism does not ask, "What is meant by Nihilism?
It is
a thought. There must be a thinker of this thought.
Bhagavan
Buddha kept silent, refusing to answer
questions on the ultimate. Therefore, he was the wisest man in refusing to
commit himself.
Zen is
quite OK in mentioning non-duality: it is the nearest to Advaita, but it is still
inferior because:~
(1) It fails to prove non-duality,
(2) It illogically gives ‘Koan’ exercises as
a means of attaining that which is beyond attainment, because always here,
(3) It talks of insight or intuition to see the reality when sight involves a second thing, duality.
When you
say "Nothing is" what is the meaning of "is"?
"Sunya" is something which exists: you cannot prove that
consciousness does not exist.
Zen
Buddhism gives a highly important place for meditation practice. The truth is
that Zen advocates the necessity of meditation for those of its adherents who
cannot grasp the absolute truth.
Zen
Buddhism is also on this lower stage of Yoga because it depends on flashes of
Intuition gained by meditation, not by reasoning.
Has the
Void a meaning? If so then it is only your imagination.
Bhagavan
Buddha gave
up yoga after practicing it for six years. He saw it could not yield truth.
Bhagavan
Buddha gave
up his austerities of yoga as impossible and useless. (Page.70/71 "Buddhism in Translation” by Warren)
Bhagavan
Buddha got enlightenment only after he gave
up Yoga. Unless you exercise your Buddhi--reason--there is no chance of getting
the truth, which is beyond the form, time, and space. Buddhism is based on the
form alone, and it does not include the time and space in its investigation.
Buddhism
has not proved the truth of Nonduality. Bhagavan Buddha pointed out the unreality of the world. He told people they were foolish
to cling to it. But he stopped there. He came nearest to Advaita in speech but
not to Advaita fully.
Zen
Buddhism Satori is not Advaitic wisdom because it comes as flashes, it does not
depend on seeing the world and does not depend upon mental sharpness so much as
intuition.
Zen
Buddhists are only mystics ~ they do not offer proof. How is their main method
different from that of Christian mystics, Hindu mystics, all of whom do not
seek to prove by reason, but by "I know," intuition? : ~ Santthosh Kumaar

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