- May 26, 2010
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Why do you think it is unjustified and delusional?
Because I don't believe the self is permanent and thus should not be attached to. Is that difficult to understand?
You misunderstand. I agree we should be self determining beings. That's not being a robot at all. You seem to be the one suggesting we're created as robots, because we all, like robots, have some pre designated purpose. I don't believe that, which is where we disagree it seems. Not disagreeing on free will/volition at all.That would not be reasonable. Why create some robots? There would be no purpose to that for a Creator that is powerful enough to create the univers.
I don't see why we should want to extend our existence. You haven't defended this. Annihilation is not said to be preferable to existence in Buddhism, it's simply an isolated fact with our selves and everything being impermanent. Buddhism affirms life as a whole, not as isolated incidents.Close to correct. We are all created with limited existence. If we are to extend that existence we must become loving beings. If we do nothing, there is no act of annihilation. That is simply the consequences of life not being extended.
If I do not survive then I do not survive because others temporarily survive.
I never said you survived indefinitely, only in memories of others. It's called virtual immortality for a reason, it's virtual, not actual. No one's saying you actually survive as a consciousness because others remember. It doesn't work that way.
The wicked --unloving do not survive in any way.
I doubt that. Hitler survived in cultural memory. You're misunderstand what I mean by survive, it seems. But then you seem to have an unjustified hatred or hostility towards these wicked and unloving people when by Jesus' own declaration you should show them love, correct?
I agree, if self is gone, nothing matters to self.
Self is the problem here, though. You're attached to it and I don't think I can convince you by reason exactly why it could be understood that way.
I find it unrealistic to value others opinions after you are deceased and cease to exist. At that time as we have agreed above, their opinions do not matter to us.
I don't think I ever said we could value people's opinions when we're dead. It's more the expectation that people will remember us. It's sort of a comfort before we die, you might say. Though of course, in my general system, we don't survive our deaths, so technically it's a matter of hope for a future where we don't exist.
We have already agreed above that has no meaning for the one that is dead.
But meaning is not purely a self centered thing. Other people have meaning in life too. Just because you cease to have meaning in life does not mean other people will. If we'd stop being so self centered about this, meaning would not cease to be meaningful just because we die. Others will survive us.
I never said the survival was indefinite, so I never promised anything like the survival you crave.That is no survival at all. Even if you could glean some sembalence of survival, that is gone when those people die.
The existence of God is not predicated on the existence of time and space.
Only because you, like pretty much every other apologist, insists God is somehow categorically different, when it's still a construction of the human mind, which you cannot deny in part.
Not correct. I do exist as we discuss our existence.
Depends on what you mean by existence. Empirically, perhaps, you exist. But you as an identity changes from moment to moment, as you interact with others and the environment in general. And as you die, those aggregates I'm pretty sure I mentioned before disassociate because things are breaking down.
I am a changing existence--which is not the same as non existence
I never said you were nonexistent. Changing existence means you are a necessarily transient being and should not by association be attached to your life. You are impermanent in your existence, which is in some nominal sense, a kind of emptiness and nonexistence. This is not to advocate nihilism at all, though. But this is another issue entirely.
That is an assumption of realism. It may be correct and it may not be correct.
I'd like to see you demonstrate otherwise though. Is it not more practical to focus on the present instead of the future that we know nothing about?
By the recognition that permanence would render this life stagnant. This life is good because it is impermanent. I think we could agree to that on some extent.Ridiculous. There is no permanence in this life--how can you know permanence would be stagnation?
I never said memories of others constituted the exact identity of those people. Of course not, they are phenomenological beings themselves, experiencing life in different ways than ourselves. Again, it's called virtual immortality.Our memories of others is not them--simply memories of others that die with us.
The existence of God or the non existence of God cannot be demostrated.
Then like an apatheist, I do not care either way. It does not affect me primarily because it cannot be demonstrated. Unlike say, numbers or love. God is hardly anything like numbers or love in terms of verifiability or demonstrability.
You seem to be stating your assumptions as if they were proven reality.
They're practical reality at the least.
If I do not exist, life going on is not important because nothing is important to the one who is non existing.
Again, this reflects your unnecessary attachment to your own life persisting after you die. Is it really necessary for you to persist after your death?
Life is not futile and meaningless because we happen to not exist after our death. That sounds more like nihilism than anything Buddhism teaches.It is not about hostililty. It is more about accepting the fultility and meaninglessness of life.
I don't need comfort, I need truth, I need experience of life and learning about life. You want comfort and security, that is your prerogative and attachment/craving.My bigger picture is a comfort to me. Yours is not. It is similar to my conversation with Christians who belive the streets of gold will be literal gold. My view is, if that is the way it is, I want to be there, but I expect much better than literal streets of gold. I also expect much better than merging with the rest of the universe and ceasing to exist. Fortunatly if you are correct, I will not be disappointed, because disappointment is only for the living, not the dead.
Buddhism does not say precisely what happens when you die, but in that sense, you can regard my answers as only probabilities. Not to mention you seem to regard the universe with hostility because it doesn't conform to your expectations. Perhaps becoming one with the universe is better than being with God, but this seems to be a matter of perspective.
You will be disappointed as you live as long as you are attached to living forever.
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