Buddhism in 3 Pages
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Buddhism is based on “the awakening” of one man. Buddhism holds that life is full of suffering which comes from desire. The ultimate goal of Buddhism is nirvana, the extinguishing of human desire and suffering. This is accomplished by seeking enlightenment to end desire, and thus end suffering. Since desire is inherent in human nature, this results in an effort to renounce the self and “awaken” to the truth of reality. Once a seeker has awakened, he or she is said to be “enlightened.” Buddhism was inspired by Hinduism which teaches intelligent indulgence in human desires. The Buddha thought desire to be the prime adversary to human life, and attempted to rid himself of all desire. During his awakening the Buddha resisted all desires, and nearly starved to death at one point. Soon after he realized that indulgence nor denial was the answer to end desire, and thus developed The Middle Way: the Buddhist philosophy of controlled response to human desire. The Western philosopher Spinoza summarized the Buddhist ethic as, “to understand something is to be delivered of it.” (Smith, 75)
In analyzing religions, you will often see many of the same characteristics; some of them being authority, ritual, questions, explanations, and tradition. Buddhism started in India, in a concentration of Hindu people. Buddhism was influenced by Hinduism, but diverged from the Hindu structure (and that of religion in general) dynamically. I find this unique structure very interesting. There is no authority figure in Buddhism. Buddha taught that each seeker must strive for enlightenment and attain it himself or herself. One can not rely on external influences to tell them what to believe or what to do, these things must come from inside the seeker. The Buddha said, “Do not accept what you hear by report. Be lamps unto yourselves.” (Smith 68) Buddhism does not answer questions to life like “where did the world come from?” because there is no certain answer. Any answer to that question is speculative. Buddhism concentrates on freeing the mind to see only truth and renounces speculation. Buddha told a fictitious parable about a man who was shot by a poison arrow and died because he would not have it removed until he discovered the answer to several questions pertaining to the origin of the arrow. The moral of the story: do not sit and think about where the arrow came from; the past is done and can not be changed. Solve the problem at hand: get the arrow out. Buddhism does not teach tradition, but instead teaches that each seeker must find their own way. It does not ask a person to accept any concept, but to meditate upon it and conclude a reasoning themselves. Buddha asserted self effort and denounced blind faith. There are also no supernatural beings in traditional Buddhism. If presented with physical evidence of the supernatural like a soothsayer or a miracle worker, the Buddha regarded it as an art, like juggling. Buddhism is very interesting to study because it is unlike any religion familiar to the myself as a Westerner uneducated in Eastern religions. Buddha taught a way to your own salvation. He was nothing superhuman, just a man awake.
While on the path to enlightenment, the Buddha noted four truths that he would teach as the Four Noble Truths. The Buddha recognized that the normal way of life that humans have come to is