R
rossum
Guest
From the point of view of the universe it is not a moral law, it is a law of cause and effect: if you act in such a manner then these consequences will result. It is us who interpret it as a moral law.You claim that responsibilities do not have to come from God, they are themselves part of reality. I ask how is it reasonable for a material universe to make a moral law with moral obligations?
The universe is driven by cause and effect; there is nothing that does not come into existence without a cause. Objective meaning and purpose can be obtained from outside oneself, that is the meaning of ‘objective’ as opposed to ‘subjective’ which comes from inside oneself.If your original universe has a spiritual component, how does a finite spiritual component of creation give objective meaning and objective purpose to itself once it exists that it did not have before it came into being for no reason?
Yes. However the universe originated, it exists outside ourselves here and now. Since it exists we can draw objective reasons from it. While the universe itself may not be able to draw objective reasons for itself, that is not my problem. I am me, I am not the universe. I can draw objective reasons from the universe external to myself.Do you reject my point that if creation, “just happened” then there is nothing that gives creation, or you or me, objective meaning or objective purpose?
Buddhism is a practical religion. If you want to avoid the hells then do not do these things. If you want to go to the heavens then do these things. If you want to attain nirvana then do these other things. As long as the mechanisms work that is all I need to know. I can tell that the mechanisms work because of the results I see in the world around me. Remember that nirvana is attainable in this life – the Buddha attained nirvana at age 35 and he died at age 80. That is 45 years on Earth while also in nirvana.Is it possible that Buddhism does not address the exact mechanisms that ‘karma uses’ because Buddhisms solution has inherent problems? Is it possible?
Karma does not “judge”; it is cause and effect. A person’s intent is part of the (name removed by moderator)ut to karma. Look again at the first two verses of the Dhammapada, which I have quoted before:Mind precedes all conditions,My problem is that it appears you want to have ‘karma’ punish and reward like gravity; yet karma has no consciousness, no intelligence, does not have a personality and therefore karma could not judge according to the intent of a person.
mind is their chief, they are mind-made.
If you speak or act with an evil mind then suffering will follow you,
as the wheel follows the draught ox.
Mind precedes all conditions,
mind is their chief, they are mind-made.
If you speak or act with a pure mind then happiness will follow you,
as a shadow that never leaves.
Dhammapada 1:1-2
Notice the words in the third line of each verse: “with an evil mind”, “with a pure mind”. Intent is built into karma from the start.
If there is no time then I have no way of telling whether God existed before creation or if creation existed before God. Without time the word “before” is a meaningless jumble of letters like ‘fobree’.To create means to bring something into existence from nothing. For God to bring into existence all creation absolutely requires that He bring into existence time also because if He does not bring into existence time, if time existed with God but not as part of God, then God is not the creator of all things that are not Him.
In order to understand the word “changeless” we need to understand the word “change”. An object, O, changes if it is different at two different points in time, T1 and T2. O(T1) =/= O(T2). Building on this an object is changeless if for all possible pairs of points in time T1, T2 then O(T1) == O(T2).You make the unsupported claim that " “changeless”, “eternal” and “the present tense” cannot be defined without the concept of time", and I understand it differently.
I have shown my definition of ‘changeless’, now you please show your definition which does not involve time.
Buddhism aims to enlighten all living beings. It does not aim to enlighten all of existence because there are parts of existence that are not living beings. Living beings obtain objective purpose from outside themselves. There is no requirement for an objective purpose for the non-living part of existence.I asked, “In your understanding of Buddism, is there any objective purpose or objective meaning to all of existence”
No.Again I ask,“In your understanding of Buddhism, is there any objective purpose or objective meaning to all of existence”?
Your previous question was about “all of existence”, this question is about “life”. Different questions with different answers. Life does have an objective purpose which can be derived from a careful observation of the workings of the universe. This is what the Buddha did; he rediscovered the Path to enlightenment. The rest of us are just following that Path.If you do not believe there is objective meaning or objective purpose to life, just say so. But back to my first paragraph above, what gives objective responsibilities if there is nothing to give objective meaning to life?
rossum