January 2010
Steam balloons
The brothers Montgolfier invented the hot air balloon upon the observation that smoke rises, and thus they figured that if they could catch it in a bag, the bag would be pulled upward.
Hot air ballooning is quite popular today; people think of balloons as being quaint and pretty and natural, or at least more natural [...]
Zen Community of Oregon to host workshop on Buddhism and debt
From The Oregonian: On February 6th, the Zen Community of Oregon will host a workshop exploring the relationship between dharma and debt. Laura Jomon Martin and Patrick Bonsho Green will lead the program and will incorporate tools from Debtors Anonymous, along with the Buddha’s teachings about money.When asked what solution Buddhism offered to the [...]
US arms deal angers China - Independent
![]() New York Daily News |
US arms deal angers China
Independent The dispute deepens the rifts between Beijing and Washington, also at odds over trade, currency, Tibet and the internet. Beijing said it would retaliate ... US sells weapons to Taiwan, angering China China voices anger over US arms sales China hits back at US arms sale to Taiwan |
Narrative verses Awareness in Buddhist Ethics
While I was in China this summer I tried to explain my ph.d. thesis to one of my travel mates.
"I am examining the underlying structure, philosophically speaking, of Buddhist ethics. I seek first to understand the Buddhist worldview or cosmology -based roughly in the dualism of samsara and nirvana- and then spell out the various injunctions found in the texts that purport to lead one from the former to the latter."
"That doesn't seem to have much to do with people's lives... or ethics," he replied, obviously a bit disappointed.
I realized then that my doctoral thesis will leave out a potentially significant source of Buddhist ethics, namely narrative. If I had said something like, "I'm going to study why Buddhists in Sri Lanka justify war or what the stories of the Jatakas tell us about morality," I have a feeling he would have been more satisfied. This snippit from a recent BBC article about politics helps show why:
Stories not facts
In his book The Political Brain, psychologist Drew Westen, an exasperated Democrat, tried to show why the Right often wins the argument even when the Left is confident that it has the facts on its side.
He uses the following exchange from the first presidential debate between Al Gore and George Bush in 2000 to illustrate the perils of trying to explain to voters what will make them better off:
Gore: "Under the governor's plan, if you kept the same fee for service that you have now under Medicare, your premiums would go up by between 18% and 47%, and that is the study of the Congressional plan that he's modelled his proposal on by the Medicare actuaries."
Bush: "Look, this is a man who has great numbers. He talks about numbers.
<!-- S IBOX --><!-- E IBOX -->
"I'm beginning to think not only did he invent the internet, but he invented the calculator. It's fuzzy math. It's trying to scare people in the voting booth."
Mr Gore was talking sense and Mr Bush nonsense - but Mr Bush won the debate. With statistics, the voters just hear a patronising policy wonk, and switch off.
Unfortunately for me, I love Al Gore - and numbers, and structures, and metaphysics. Stories and sound bytes tend to bore me, especially when they tend toward mere gratification of the speaker or listener. There are of course plenty of exceptions: I do love Buddhist stories and sound bytes like "just let go" or "return to the breath" can be quite powerful when properly applied.
I think my distrust or dislike of narrative comes from how easily it can be misapplied and/or distorted. So when we wish to examine the potential distortion of Buddhism or Buddhist ethics, perhaps narrative is the place to look, as in In Defense of Dharma: Just-war Ideology in Buddhist Sri Lanka. By Tessa J. Bartholomeusz.
In Chapter 1, "Narrative, Ethics and War," Bartholomeusz follows Stanley Hauerwas's approach to ethics, focusing on the power of religious narratives to shape individual moral decisions. She finds his approach highly appropriate for Sri Lanka, where she finds religious stories take a prominent place in public debate due to a type of "Buddhist secularism" that interweaves religion and politics.
(reviewed by Annewieke Vroom)
Facts, on the other hand, tend to be pretty stable. Sure you can argue them, or push them this way or that, but fundamentally they do not lie.
When I think of "just the facts" of Buddhism, my mind immediately goes to the three marks of existence, the ti-lakkhaa: impermanence, not-self, and dissatisfactoriness. It is these three that we seek to "see" clearly or awaken to via insight meditation. The fact that we do not see these (experientially, not intellectually) is what keeps us trapped in samsara. Awareness is the path and the practice and the goal.
This may, however, be an extreme interpretation of Buddhism.
The other extreme would be to say that whatever Buddhists do or say is de facto "Buddhist." If Buddhists justify a war, then the war is "Buddhist." If Buddhists say you don't need to meditate or that there is a permanent existing Self, then these ideas are also "Buddhist." In this extreme there is no legitimate ground for saying a Buddhist has misunderstood "Buddhism" or that this or that Buddhist's practices are in fact not "Buddhist." All forms of criticism (read "critical thought") and that dualistic thing called logic are thrown out the window.
Ta ki maatha, majjhimo maggo hoti?
What do you think, is there a middle path?
The Fog Ate my Valley!
.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anZVAsQvUFA
May you and yours be
happy and healthy!
Om Mani Padme Hum,
Lama Jigme Gyatso: Rime Manipa Tantrika
How could you converse with my other students?
Download FREE practice materials
Twitter much?
My silliness is now on YouTube:
To be automatically notified the next time I
post an essay then simply "join"
my FREE yahoo group.
How could you help Feed a Monk for only One dollar?
If weight-loss is an issue in your life you may
enjoy the principals in the Primal Blueprint as well as it's recipes."
You may also enjoy video #1 and #2.
Simply write to make arrangements for your
One-on-One Instruction either
in-person or over the FREE internet telephone.
.
.
PS Thank You
By the way, I wanted to again thank everyone for reading and exploring Buddhism with me these last few years. According to Google Analytics for the month of January though the 29th I have had:
5,757 Visits
8,412 Pageviews
3,381 Unique Visitors From 75 different countries/territories
I never thought my little blog would be read like it is and I can't thank everyone enough...even if you've had to put up with my odd humor and ranting.
I'll be blogging again in about a week or so with new material, but for those of you new to my blog, perhaps you might find some of the older stuff I posted interesting. Also, don't forget to check out some of my on-line friends on the Blog Roll, some old and some new, who have been of great support and encourgement to me.
I'll leave ya'll with one more 'what the hell' picture.
A Break
It's been long over due for me to take a small break from blogging. I have a lot of things going on in my life at the moment that need attention way more than this. Besides, it's very difficult to come up with new things to write about everyday and not get burned out. In the meantime I will be posting some of my older stuff to keep things fun. I'll be back blogging soon enough and I thank everyone for reading!
I'm sure me not blogging for a bit will make more than a few people very happy.
Take care and see you soon!
13 countries agree on plan to save wild tigers | San Francisco ...
20, 2010, a Buddhist monk examines a tiger at a temple that offers care for tigers in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. China and other Asian nations should shut privately run tiger farms as they are inhumane and fuel demand for the endangered bigcat's bones and skin, the World Bank said Thursday, Jan. 28, 2010. ... All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words. ...
San Francisco Examiner AP Story... - http://www.sfexaminer.com/templates/ap-stories-rss






Recent comments
3 weeks 4 days ago
3 weeks 4 days ago
4 weeks 16 hours ago
4 weeks 1 day ago
4 weeks 2 days ago
4 weeks 6 days ago
5 weeks 3 days ago
5 weeks 4 days ago
6 weeks 1 day ago
6 weeks 5 days ago