Wednesday, February 10, 2010

WHAT IS ';ATTAINING TRUE KNOWLEDGE'; WITHIN THE RELIGION BUDDHISM????

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THANX!WHAT IS ';ATTAINING TRUE KNOWLEDGE'; WITHIN THE RELIGION BUDDHISM????
In Buddhism, ';attaining'; something is not the same as ';knowing'; it. To attain the truth is to have direct, personal experience of it.





Example: I can read that Mt. Everest is the tallest mountain in the world and I can fully believe the truth of this. However, until I climb Mt. Everest, I cannot attain the truth of its tallness.





In Buddhism, ';true knowledge'; refers to three truths about human life:


1. Nothing is permanent -- everything always changes


2. To be human is to suffer -- there is no way to avoid this


3. Despite our belief, there is no human soul, spirit, or self





With study and reflection, we can come to believe the truth of these statements.





However, only through Buddhist practice can we actually have an experience of these statements.





We can actually experience the reality of impermanence, the reality of suffering, and the reality of no-self. When a person has a deep experience of this ';true knowledge,'; we say that they ';attain enlightenment.';WHAT IS ';ATTAINING TRUE KNOWLEDGE'; WITHIN THE RELIGION BUDDHISM????
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entr鈥?/a>





I copied this from the second paragraph:








Socrates made a clear distinction between true knowledge and opinion. Based upon his conviction about the immortality of the soul, Socrates defined true knowledge as eternal, unchanging, and absolute. Opinions are temporal, changing, and relative; whereas, true knowledge is eternal including in life after death. Socrates was convinced that true knowledge and moral virtues are inscribed within the soul of every individual. Learning is, therefore, to cultivate the soul and make one鈥檚 implicit understanding of truth explicit. Socrates engaged in dialogues, not to teach knowledge, but in order to awaken the soul of a partner in dialogue, a method comparable to certain practices in Zen Buddhism.








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I hope this helped.
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