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11-01-2011, 11:30 PM | #21 |
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"And at the moment when a being sets this body aside and is not yet reborn in another body, what do you designate as its sustenance then?" |
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11-02-2011, 12:32 AM | #23 |
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"And at the moment when a being sets this body aside and is not yet reborn in another body, what do you designate as its sustenance then?" Vaccha, at the time this body is laid down and the being is not born in another body, I say the supportive condition is craving. http://www.metta.lk/tipitaka/2Sutta-...tavaggo-e.html Notice that it does not say "rebirth" but merely "birth". From my understanding, what the Buddha says here is that "craving" is the supportive condition for "birth" and this "birth" is the mental birth of the ego-self (a body). As long as there is craving, ego-self appears again and again. It makes perfect sense. You seem to be interpreting the sutta as, when a being dies (leaves this "physical body") and is someone who has not eliminated defilement altogether, then taking his mental craving as a supportive condition, the being is reborn in another body?? Am I right? No matter how much you try to interpret this with similes or examples, it still sounds at lease remotely resembling to "reincarnation." If not please explain the process directly without being so vague about it. |
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11-02-2011, 07:39 AM | #25 |
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What could be a better translation of the same sutta you are referring to is here: |
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11-02-2011, 07:51 AM | #26 |
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What exactly is your understanding of this "rebirth"? Rebirth is a hi-jacking of the pre-existing concept of reincarnation, just as the Buddha hi-jacked the term 'kamma' and made it mean something quite opposed to the original. Reincarnation pre-supposes entities and essences that might transmigrate; rebirth doesn't. The simile of the poetry teacher is the clearest example to me. Phenomena replicate, not people, because there are no people (selves) in the first place. That replication of phenomena is rebirth, as far as I can tell at the moment. Of course, my understanding will change over time. |
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11-02-2011, 10:27 AM | #27 |
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Reincarnation pre-supposes entities and essences that might transmigrate; rebirth doesn't. Phenomena replicate, not people, because there are no people (selves) in the first place. That replication of phenomena is rebirth |
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11-02-2011, 10:34 AM | #28 |
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Yes, that and more. Other abstract things, emergent phenomena, are included. For example, you beat your kid and make her into a distrustful, angry person, which affects her relationships for the rest of her life, potentially, which affect innumerable people in a potentially infinate number of ways. Patterns of behavior tend to replicate. Not in a strict deterministic way, but tendencies.
To the best of my understanding, even what we commonly consider to be solid objects are only representationally real, not things-in-themselves. Even our corporeality is a mental construct. Useful, even necessary, but it creates an illusion of certainty and continuously existant entities. I've found this to be a position consistent with ordinary observation as well meditative absorption experiences. |
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11-02-2011, 11:15 AM | #29 |
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For example, you beat your kid and make her into a distrustful, angry person, which affects her relationships for the rest of her life, potentially, which affect innumerable people in a potentially infinite number of ways. Patterns of behavior tend to replicate. Not in a strict deterministic way, but tendencies. The harm that the kid feels is not because a stream of consciousness ; it is a feeling because she/he remembers a past event, as an image of being hurt. An image that is an object of mind-consciousness. I don't think that those are streams but objects of mind/eye/... consciousness. |
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11-02-2011, 12:04 PM | #30 |
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We were talking about this as a stream of consciousness. Like the case of the poem. The poem is not consciousness nor a stream. It is a mind object. Also, if you reify even thought objects into entities that persist through time, you're making the same mistake as reifying a person out of experience. Every memory is a new event, not the same event repeating itself. Yet its pattern is the result of an experience, so it's not completely random, either. When you hear a poem and then recite the poem, it's not really the same poem. It's a completely new event, patterened after and dependent upon the hearing of the poem the first time. Poems aren't entities any more than people, and the repetition of patterns experienced as people is the rebirth of the person. As far as I can tell. |
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11-02-2011, 12:05 PM | #31 |
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The Cha Chaka Sutta (M148) tells us:
"Dependent on mind and mind objects [could be the "poem case" as mind object], mind-consciousness arises. When the three meet, there is contact. Dependent on contact, there is feeling, dependent on feeling there is craving. [...] If one were to say, craving is self, this is not fitting. For the arising and passing away of craving is seen [discerned]. Where is re-birth from this "passing away" if it has passed away? |
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11-02-2011, 12:18 PM | #32 |
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Poems aren't entities any more than people, and the repetition of patterns experienced as people is the rebirth of the person. |
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11-02-2011, 03:53 PM | #33 |
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The Cha Chaka Sutta (M148) tells us: In other words, to say that there is rebirth is not equal to saying that there are people or selves that are reborn. As is commonly known, suttas can seem to contradict each other here and there because the Buddha adapted his words to the audience. If the suttas where the Buddha talks about rebirth of persons, then maybe his immediate audience was incapable of understanding a more advanced teaching. Anatta and rebirth are not contradictory, because phenomena are reborn, not selves. Sorry if I'm not explaining my ideas clearly enough! |
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11-02-2011, 04:00 PM | #34 |
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Here is where I get stuck, FBM. Maybe is just about semantics. The teachings of Buddha are very accurate about rebirth. What I experience when reading a poem is just an image, as a mind object... not a rebirth of any person, even if the poem is recited by someone... what really happens are mind objects seducing mind as a sense organ. In the unaware mind it can be the case of the birth of self... why re-birht? |
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11-02-2011, 06:03 PM | #35 |
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Yes, that and more. Other abstract things, emergent phenomena, are included. For example, you beat your kid and make her into a distrustful, angry person, which affects her relationships for the rest of her life, potentially, which affect innumerable people in a potentially infinate number of ways. Patterns of behavior tend to replicate. Not in a strict deterministic way, but tendencies. |
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11-02-2011, 06:10 PM | #36 |
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To the best of my understanding, even what we commonly consider to be solid objects are only representationally real, not things-in-themselves. Even our corporeality is a mental construct. |
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11-02-2011, 08:52 PM | #37 |
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Perfectly mundane and perfectly in line with the current principles of physics. That there's no 'thing' to be reborn in the first place. No new 'thing' comes into being in childbirth and no 'thing' is lost when the body systems decouple. The conservation laws of physics aren't violated. Matter and energy combine temporarily, then keep going their merry ways. It's OK to describe people and minds as emergent properties, because emergent properties aren't fundamental entities; they're dependent upon matter and energy for their quasi-existence. The ambiguity of using the term is no small source of confusion in discussion of the Dhamma. |
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11-02-2011, 08:55 PM | #38 |
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11-02-2011, 09:29 PM | #39 |
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If the suttas where the Buddha talks about rebirth of persons, then maybe his immediate audience was incapable of understanding a more advanced teaching. Anatta and rebirth are not contradictory, because phenomena are reborn, not selves. |
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11-02-2011, 09:38 PM | #40 |
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