No worries! I always appreciate your contributions.
And I do agree, we cannot take in everything - but I donât think thatâs necessarily whatâs being asked. The issue for me is when people start speaking for other traditions about what their âtrue heartâ is - like, say, when people Iâve met say the Buddha didnât really teach rebirth in a literal sense, because to them thatâs not true, and an enlightened being just wouldnât be deluded. Cultural exchange I think is different. If someone wants to participate in Buddhism and learn from it while just saying outright: I donât personally believe that teaching - thatâs fine.
There is a kind of skepticism in Buddhism, particularly in the later Mahayana philosophical tradition of Madhyamaka. It is a very specific flavour of skepticism though, more having to do with anti-reductionism via infinite reductionism, yielding a non-absolutist world - than it is about, say, proof regarding rebirth. Tibetans tend to be pretty adamant about that being a literal phenomenon, and they are not contradicting their particular flavour of skepticism in doing so. They donât think an ultimate account of the world is possible in principle any more than there is a final digit in the infinite series of numbers, but they do think the conventional bits we cut out are still readily described as truths.
However, the passage in the Pali canon many people who want a Socratic Buddha attach themselves to is a poor translation of a sutta, the Kalama Sutta, so poorly translated, that it leads to a gross misinterpretation of his meaning.
The misquote: âBelieve nothing, no matter where you read it, or who said it, no matter if I have said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and your own common sense.â
The real quote: âNow, Kalamas, donât go by reports, by legends, by traditions, by scripture, by logical conjecture, by inference, by analogies, by agreement through pondering views, by probability, or by the thought, âThis contemplative is our teacher.â When you know for yourselves that, âThese qualities are skillful; these qualities are blameless; these qualities are praised by the wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to welfare & to happinessâ â then you should enter & remain in them.â
Notice; he does indeed disavow himself as a basis of knowledge. But, contra the âcommon senseâ misquoted translation, rational sense is also rejected as a source of authority. The only way to know is to âknow for yourself that ⊠these qualities, when adopted and carried out, lead to welfare and happiness.â In other words, they need to be put into practice to be verified. This becomes clearer when the Buddha puts forward a proto-Pascalâs wager where he acknowledges that he cannot prove what he is claiming in a public epistemic sense, but still advocates it be put into practice - if it turns out to be true, it will be verified by having done so!
https://www.accesstoinsi...taka/mn/mn.060.than.htmlIt becomes clearest when we consider Udana 1:8. Unlike the proto-Pascalâs wager, here we cannot say âHey, whatâs the harm?â. There is real harm done. The wager breaks down. There is no moral recuperation of this sutta without a very clear conviction on the Buddhaâs part in the literal cosmology he taught - and it is a conviction that he is clear is not born out of probabalistic reasoning. Only practice can reveal that what he taught was true. Udana 1:8 is short, but stunning. It is clearly meant to sicken you. It is the biggest red underline I know of in the Pali canon for the following message: the Buddha was dead serious about the urgent need to renounce. No matter what. A metaphorical reading of his teachings would render the Buddha a moral monstrosity in this sutta - and that is precisely the point in this sutta. It cannot be intended metaphorically, in light of this short text. Note: men and women both abandoned their children regularly in the canon. This happened, more than once, you can be confident.
https://www.accesstoinsi.../kn/ud/ud.1.08.than.html