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Is not death the foundation for the beginning of new life?I would. Death always has an element of tragedy, though not as much if one is old and is at the natural end to one's lifespan.
Death (especially an untimely death or a murder) is an evil. It is something to be avoided if one can help it.
eudaimonia,
Mark
Is not death the foundation for the beginning of new life?
Either. Physical death provides the seed and raw materials for the formation of new physical life in the soil.I'm not sure what you mean. Are you talking about rebirth? Or the next generation of human beings? Or what?
eudaimonia,
Mark
Either. Physical death provides the seed and raw materials for the formation of new physical life in the soil.
So, death (itself) may be a tragedy for one, but does that automatically make it an evil?While that may be a good thing in some sense, it is no less tragic for the one dying. If someone dies (whether through murder or accident or old age) does one say: "Oh goodie! Now there is more compost for the soil of my garden!"
I should hope not. At least, I should hope that one's reaction would not be limited to this, and would be tempered by the sobering thought about the end of a sacred human life.
For practical reasons, it may be, with respect to physical immortality, that one could be concerned about some sort of physical limitations of the creation of more life, though I can't see this as any sort of issue today. I don't see how long natural lives would be a threat to the ecosystem, and I certainly wouldn't see murders or accidental deaths as a "good thing" because of some ecological considerations.
eudaimonia,
Mark
I would never dream of hurting an animal. I wonder what made you look for the gap in my statement.
What prevents you from going to the heavens?
Buddha stated that things are either skillful or non-skillful; everything is subject to birth/creation, preservation, and death/destruction, but none of the three are inherently good or evil.
Like what things?Of course. But if you DO a certain things, then you could be doomed. Those things are evil.
So vegetarianism is a prerequisite in Christianity?
So why do you say eating meat prevents you from going to heaven?In Christianity, God specifically tells us that we CAN eat meat. So, eating meat is no evil in Christianity.
Like what things?
So why do you say eating meat prevents you from going to heaven?
According to the earliest Buddhist texts, the Buddha did not prohibit meat-eating.Buddhism said that. (I guess you know why. This is in Buddhism 101)
Note: when I talk to you, I treat you as a Buddhist. You can make me stop doing that.
Why is it "evil"? Note that I'm not looking for examples of "evil", but what "evil" is in and of itself.This is your second one.
For example: adultery.
So, adultery IS evil.
According to the earliest Buddhist texts, the Buddha did not prohibit meat-eating.
Eating of fish and certain types of meat are allowed, even to monastics (Vin II.197 & III.172), but we may not eat anything that was killed specifically for us (M I.369), nor are we allowed to kill an animal ourselves, directly (First Precept).
Mahayanists later on added to this with a ban on all meat eating.