- Apr 30, 2013
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Evidence isn't proof, as I'm sure you know.
Since Buddhism isn't based on faith in its founder, it matters little if the Buddha is dead or alive. The foundation of Buddhism is on the Dhamma - its teachings (to be experienced & known personally by each disciple in the here-and-now) - not faith in a personality (somewhere in the past which we cannot know).
OK, in your experience, Buddhism is not based on faith in its founder but I know from studying Buddhist epistemology that isn't entirely true for most Buddhists. Trust in the Buddha's realization is central to most Mahayana epistemologies. And I suspect it's behind Theravadan's implicit epistemology as well. I mean, you are basically doing that, by assuming that the Buddhist presuppositions about the world are true, that there really is such a thing as suffering (a Vedantist would deny this, and say it's an illusion, after all), because Siddartha Gauthama really did experience Nirvana. That bit is really taken on faith among Buddhists.
Experience is the source of your knowledge. I can't argue with that. But it also seems your experience is closed off to the possibility that the Gospel is true, that Jesus really did rise from the grave, because you are unwilling to look at historical evidence, and you seem to embrace an irrational skepticism towards human knowledge.
One thing is for sure, that methodology doesn't work in science, why do you assume it is useful for understanding the rest of the world, including spiritual truths?
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