What is the human condition?
The current human condition is
that the human being is a being driven by desires and cravings which ultimately
lead to disappointment and suffering. According to Buddha, as humans, our minds
are in darkness, hindered from enlightenment. We understand this condition
through the teachings of the 4 Nobel Truths. The first truth is that in this
world, there is dukkha, or suffering, of both the mind and the body. Dukkha is
shown and experienced through fear, pain, sickness, old age, and even mental
suffering. The second truth is that in this world there is trishna or desires
and cravings, which Buddha points out as the cause of all suffering. These
desires attach us to things that are not truly reality, but physical objects of
impertinence. The third truth is where
Buddha becomes slightly optimistic in that he tells us that you can attain the
ceasing of suffering, or nirodha. Nirodha extinguishes the cravings of attachment
and desires of humans in order to reach Nirvana. Nirvana is the freedom from
all trouble, worries, ideas, and pain but can only be gained through a path of
gradual self-improvement through the Eightfold Path.
What is the solution to the human condition and how do we
get there?
The goal of this perspective from Buddha is to release oneself from
the distractions of craving and desires in order to reduce suffering and so one
can become truly enlightened towards reality. In order to get to this
understanding of reality, Buddha gives us the Eightfold Path, which I will try
to describe in a nutshell. 1) There is
the Right view which is the start and end to the path and it means to see and
understand things as they really are, that life is impermanent and imperfect.
2) There is the Right Intention which refers to the commitment to ethical and
mental self-improvement. 3) There is Right Speech which means to abstain from
false speech, to abstain from slanderous speech, to abstain from harsh words,
and to abstain from idle chit chat. 4) There is Right Action which means to
have wholesome actions to lead to sound states of mind. 5) Right Livelihood
says one should earn a living in a righteous way, peacefully and legally. 6)
Right effort is through which everything can be achieved with positive mental
energy. 7) Right mindfulness controls the use of cognition and consciousness. 8) Right Concentration allows for the
development of consciousness through direction to a purpose, usually trained
through meditation.
What is the best way to live out the solution?
Well, the
Buddha would say check it out for yourself, be your own authority and do not
simply accept truth for truth, but test it. So, the best way to live out the
solution would be to test the Eightfold Path, see if you believe in the Four
Nobel Truths, and see if you accept it. Personally, I am still testing this
out. I do not want to accept teachings though from someone who simply dismisses
good solid questions of theology as trifle issues not worthy of being dealt with. While I appreciate his truths and his desire to rid suffering, it seems to me that he only has the answers
to become really chill and just goes with the flow, which I am sure works for
people in their lives and that’s all they want to accept, is the moment. I feel like Buddhism challenges the discipline
of meditating the mind, but not truly enlightening, unless enlightenment is
that rocks are hard, crap happens, and life is life. I would hope we are
breathing and here for something more than Nirvana, that there is a purpose to
our human existence.
You raise one of the key differences between Zen and Christianity. For Zen life has no purpose, life is its own purpose. For Christianity life has a purpose that transcends life itself. That is why the idea "tall bamboo, short bamboo" doesn't say anything in a Christian context. What do you think the purpose of human existence is? How does your understanding of purpose impact how you live?
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