The Buddha and Buddhism is all about self-absorption and self-sufficiency; it is about achieving nondualistic and nonconceptual "nirvana". I myself cannot imagine anything nondual and nonconceptual being anything but oblivion, nothingness. Buddhism is about being free from dependency on others; it's all about oneself, or One's self! Jesus was definitely unique. Confucious preached a form of Love thy neighbour, so did others, but this is a far cry from the boundaries Jesus crossed and joined.Proinsias wrote:I think it is rather hard to distinguish myself, and from what little anthropology I've done at university and some casual reading it seems to me that the scholarly consensus is similar to my own thoughts on the matter but of course we are all entitled to our own opinions and there is a great deal I still need to learn about early Christianity. I'm not sure what you mean by saying that Jesus was the first to step amongst prostitutes, destitutes, the poor and the downtrodden - that seems like quite a claim. I read Job last week for the first time and he claimed to step amongst similar sorts and help them where he could, I believe the Buddha also stepped amongst them. Are you suggesting no one ever crossed class boundaries until Jesus turned up?.
Please explain to me how I can at once believe in God and at the same time suspend my judgement on whether there is a God? Also please explain how an atheist can at once believe there is not a God and at the same time suspend his judgement on whether or not there is a God? "Hard atheism" "soft atheism" "hard theism" "theism" "agnostic atheism" "agnostic theism" ... listen, Proinsias, I do not want to come across as trying to destroy whatever you believe; I am not. But, for me, this is plain nonsense; it is logically bogus. However, I do not wish you to take this as aggressive; I am just giving you my honest opinion.Proinsias wrote:There is plenty of middle ground and blurry ground. As I have said previously one can be an agnostic theist, there is secular pantheism, spiritual pantheism, soft atheism, hard atheism, humanism and probably many others I have no knowledge of. It may seem absurd to you to think of an agnostic atheist but there are many out there. To all intents and purposes they are atheist but as they cannot see into the future they leave a small window of possibility open much as they would for the flying spaghetti monster, Russell's teapot or the previously mentioned leprechauns. There are also doctrines which hold that one is/can become God which are generally rather difficult to pigeon hole.I'm not saying that your definitions don't make perfect logical sense in and of themselves it's just that they become a little more vague and meaningless when you try to apply them to the vast range of believe systems out there.
God bless ... Dan