Talk:Karma/Archive 5
This is an archive of past discussions about Karma. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | ← | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 | Archive 6 | Archive 7 |
Misrepresentations and persistent reliance on poor quality sources
- I have reverted insertion of blog and random website-sourced content with no evidence that those websites have any editorial oversight. Further the content in these unreliable websites is WP:Primary opinion - they don't reflect widely accepted scholarly view and do not belong in an encyclopedic article.
- The tagging and misrepresentation of peer-reviewed journal articles with allegations that these are "western opinions" is nonsense, false and getting tiresome. Because if you study the cited references in this article, you will notice that they are secondary sources, that is they review, among other things, numerous eastern scholars and ancient Indian literature and thus summarize "eastern literature and scholars". Such secondary sources are preferred sources for any encyclopedia.
- Tiresome too is the monologue on what may be wrong with this article, without identifying scholarly reliable external sources, and while admitting "lack of knowledge and incompetence about the topic".
- Equally tiresome is the assumption, "multiple blogs or promotional websites or equivalent could not ALL be wrong". Two or five unreliable sources do not collectively become a reliable source. Go to a good university library, read the hundreds of journal articles and other reliable literature on karma in Hinduism and other religions, figure out what the widely accepted scholarly views are, identify what is missing in this article, then suggest reliable sources on how to improve this article. Constructive suggestions/edits with scholarly reliable externally published sources are welcome. Expect content that violate wikipedia policies and guidelines to get reverted. Kind regards, Mark.muesse (talk) 03:53, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
- How is an original article written by a respected Hindu Swami poor quality? It is a primary source for his views on the matter, and he is a Hindu.
- I don't get it, how can you say " The law of karma operates independent of any deity or any process of divine judgment" in an absolute sense when the notion of Karma has many different meanings in the various Eastern traditions, and here is a Hindu who uses the necessity of God to create the fruits of Karma as an argument for the existence of God? What makes your source more reliable as a source for the beliefs of Hindus than an article written by a Hindu master? And how can it assert a universal truth when you have exceptions to it?
- Swami Sivananda_Saraswati puts it like this:
"Some people die when they are eighty years old; some die when they are in the womb; some die at twenty; some at forty. What is the cause for the variation? Who has fixed the span of life for all? This clearly proves that there is the theory of Karma, that there is one Omniscient Lord, who is the dispenser of the fruits of the actions of the Jivas, who fixes the span of life of the Jivas in accordance with their nature of Karma or actions, who knows the exact relation between Karmas and their fruits. As Karma is Jada or insentient, it certainly cannot dispense with the fruits of their actions."(Source: God Exists SRI SWAMI SIVANANDA, A DIVINE LIFE SOCIETY PUBLICATION, First Edition: 1958, World Wide Web (WWW) Edition : 1998)
- The wikipedia article says this about him, with citations:
Sivānanda Saraswati (8 September 1887 – 14 July 1963) was a Hindu spiritual teacher and a proponent of Yoga and Vedanta. Sivānanda was born Kuppuswami in Pattamadai, in the Tirunelveli district of Tamil Nadu. He studied medicine and served in British Malaya as a physician for several years before taking up monasticism. He lived most part of his life near Muni Ki Reti, Rishikesh.
He was the founder of The Divine Life Society (1936), Yoga-Vedanta Forest Academy (1948) and author of over 200 books on yoga, Vedanta and a variety of subjects. He established Sivananda Ashram, the headquarters of The Divine Life Society (DLS), on the bank of the Ganges at Sivanandanagar, at a distance of 3 kilometres from Rishikesh
- How on earth can you say that his writing on Karma is not a notable source for beliefs of some Hindus, and use that as a reason for reverting my edit? These are the primary sources that your scholars rely on when they discuss contemporary Hinduism. Far better than the secondary sources you are using. Or do you think that the only reliable sources on Hindu beliefs are articles written by Western theologians?
- I don't know of any Wikipedia guideline that would make this an unreliable or low quality source. That was why I was so confident that i just went ahead and did the edit. And to just revert it without discussion! What is the wikipedia guideline you think I voilated? Robert Walker (talk) 10:46, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
- I didn't say I have lack of knowledge and incompetence. I just said I am a practicing Buddhist but not a Buddhist teacher and not a Buddhist scholar. You don't have to be a scholar to edit wikipedia. But when it came to expounding the details of the Buddhist teachings on Karma for that section of the article, then I felt that because it is such a subtle topic in Buddhism, that that particular task was beyond my abilities and asked for help. I have the basic general understanding of the meaning of dharma, the four noble truths, and karma in Buddhism that any Buddhist practitioner would have who has been practicing the Buddha's teachings for many years and been to many teachings on the subject. Also as a mathematician who did post graduate research in maths and philosophy i understand scholarly disciplines, citations and such like well enough, just am not a scholar in the particular area of the Buddha's teachings. (Some Buddhist scholars may spend much of their lives studying a single Buddhist sutra). Robert Walker (talk) 11:10, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
Peruse WP:Fringe. Guideline: "in an article about a mainstream idea, a theory that is not broadly supported by scholarship in its field must not be given undue weight, and reliable sources must be cited that affirm the relationship of the marginal idea to the mainstream idea in a serious and substantial manner." Can you offer any karma article in peer reviewed scholarly journals or a widely respected encyclopedia that includes opinions of Sivānanda Saraswati on karma? If not, then it is not mainstream idea and does not belong in this article.
Consider similar sources in Karma in Buddhism. What, if anything, would you like to include from 1 and 2? In [2], see section on The Sutra of the Causes and Effects of Actions from Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archives. How about 3 (Quick summary: 4)? In [3], see David Barash's contrast between traditional Buddhism and modernist Buddhism. Traditional Buddhism in certain parts of the world had deities, notes David Barash. How about Sivānanda Saraswati type deities-linked opinions on Karma doctrine by ancient and modern era Buddhist monks from China or Bhutan or Myanmar or Thailand or Cambodia or Vietnam or Korea, who express a different karma doctrine in Buddhism that the current summary in this article? Mark.muesse (talk) 12:20, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
On your past admissions about your knowledge and competence about this topic, teachings and scholarly works. You wrote: "Okay first on the sources, I am not a scholar myself. I'm a Buddhist practitioner who has heard many teachings on the subject but not studied the sutras."; "I can't speak to Hindu teachings, only been to one teaching in the Hindu tradition so don't know much about that", etc. Mark.muesse (talk) 12:25, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
In the above list, include Yidam-related karma in Buddhism literature written by Buddhists, such as 5 or more ancient ones; and opinions of Buddhists such as Lama Shenpen's on divine intervention in Buddhist karma doctrine as expressed in 6. What, if anything, from these type of sources should be used in this article? Kind regards, Mark.muesse (talk) 13:24, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
- First, unlike Christianity or Buddhism, or Islam, Hinduism is not a single unified religion. It's an umbrella word for a wide range of different Indian traditions and belief systems.
- So, you don't need a secondary source to prove that he is a Hindu, it is enough that he identifies himself as such and is recognized by others as a Hindu. It's clear he is a historically important C20 Hindu, and the Divine Life Society is a major organization with many members and branch organizations world wide.
- Obviously I wouldn't write a detailed section about his views or tradition. But this is a simple one line statement that is easy to check for veracity about whether or not he did use ideas of Karma to prove the existence of God as one of his many proofs.
- Also, I just said " But in other traditions, it is thought to require divine agency to operate, and some Hindus especially in the Nyaya tradition use Karma to prove existence of God". Not that all Hindus think like this, indeed many of them think that Karma is a natural force just as you said, especially the earlier traditions, as I understand it.
- So, whatever ones personal opinions might be about particular Hindu teachers, you can't say that something is true of Karma in a universal way as you do in this section, when there are many people who have other ideas about it. Robert Walker (talk) 17:03, 24 October 2014 (UTC)
Your questions about Buddhism
Collapsing all of this now. The short summary is - that none of the citations given by Mark say that Buddhas or Yidams or Adhisthana or anything else in Buddhism is an example of some being other than ourselves who knows our past and brings about results of karma in the present as a judgement for the past. Though that is said explicitly by some Hindu teachers, it seems - it is never said by Buddhists, and he didn't give any example of a Buddhist who says this.
So - I went through his examples one at a time to answer that - you can argue that my reply was OR - but so was his use of those pages to argue for the idea that Buddhists say that divine beings bring about karmic judgements - as none of them say that.
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+====Summary of my replies==== Short summary: first this is for information on this talk page only, it's probably too advanced and detailed to include in the Karma in Buddhism section, and wouldn't be for me to write about it anyway. But as a practitioner this is how I understand it as taught by my teachers. So first, Yidams -they are not separate from us. Like poetic ways of talking about the qualities of compassion, wisdom etc that we all have. Adhishthana is inspiration - the pages talking about how Buddhas can help us in our lives, at any moment, through Adhishthana - that's talking about inspiration, the inspiration that arises from reading the teachings and recalling them, for instance. Can arise in more immediate, vivid inspiring ways, but it is the same thing essentially. Devas in Buddhism -they are just long lived beings, like us in other respects, just have happier longer lives, may be more powerful - but as understood in Buddhist teachings they are not gods in the Western sense. Also spirits and powerful beings - they are just beings in Samsara like everyone else. Not a requirement of Buddhism to believe they exist, just traditionally thought they do. If they exist, they may be able to interfere with our lives. But so can other humans, and non human beings, and natural events. They don't at all fit this role of judges that know what we did in the past and bring about fruits of karma after weighing up the evidence of past actions. They have no idea what we did in the past, are just acting under their current motivations whatever they are.
+=====More about yidams - not separate from us ===== Yidams are often talked about as if they are separate from us, but that's to be understood poetic fashion as ways of talking about compassion, wisdom etc and the direct connections with those qualities we are all capable of. As the Dalai Lama explained (quote below in details) it would be a grave error to think of them as having an independent and autonomous existence from beginningless time. Here he is talking about the primoridial Buddha but same is true for yidams.
+=====More about Adhishtana===== As for Adhishtana - that works by inspiration. E.g. many Buddhists offer bowls of water to Shakyamuni Buddha (and to all the Buddhas) every morning. We believe this physical and symbolic action brings his inspiration into our lives. But he entered paranivarna - though we can make a direct connection with the inspiration of his teachings 2500 years ago, and in a way can connect to the past Shakyamuni that way - and though his enlightenment is timeless, he is not any more here as a living being in our world system and can't intervene in our lives in that way. And he has nothing at all to do with bringing about the fruits of karma, no Buddha is. So in your citations that referred to the support of Buddhas in our lives, that they can help us right now, through Adhishtanha - that is how that is understood. +=====Living Buddhas who are born in our current time===== Living Buddhas who are born in our current time, of course can help in many other ways, e.g. when Buddha Shakyamuni was alive he could help not just by teaching but in many other ways as well. They can do this if you have the right connection to meet them, and if you also let them help you, when you encounter them. But again none of that consists of them bringing about the fruition of Karma. They help anyone, no matter what they did in the past. So this is not divine intervention or judgement. |
Detailed reply (collapsed)
Here is the original detailed reply, collapsed
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Your other citations
Sorry you posted a whole bunch of links to web pages. Sp,e of them long pages. But you didn't say anything specific about them, I've no idea at all what your reason was for posting those links. I've just responded to the ones that seemed to have some relevance to the topic we are discussing. The others do talk about yidams etc - there are many pages about such topics - but said many things and I don't know what you wanted to draw my attention to.
If the others are relevant also, do please explain more, thanks! Robert Walker (talk) 12:54, 25 October 2014 (UTC)
Your 145 stories of Yogi Chen
- Mark.muesse, just had a good read of your link 145 Stories about Karma (Cause and Effect) with Pictures and Poems
- Summary of my reply here: - seems that he is a Taoist / Confucian hermit from China who moved to Tibet and met many Tibetan teachers and took on their teachings
- So, his stories mix together features of Taoism, probably Confucianism also as well as Buddhism. I can see what you mean here, that these stories may possibly be talking about Karma as divine judgement but if they do, that doesn't make it a Buddhist view.
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The reverted material and future proposals
Just realized, nobody reading this except myself and Mark will know what he means by the reverted material. So here it is.
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In Karma#Definition and meanings I replaced "The law of karma operates independent of any deity or any process of divine judgment" by:
Where the main citation there is to an article by Sivananda_Saraswati, a Hindu and author of over 200 books who used Karma as one of his proofs of existence of God, and I balanced it with an article by the Buddhist V. A. Gunasekara who used Karma to disprove existence of God in a statement made to a multireligious seminar. I added this to the following para:
before: " Karma thus has not one, rather multiple definitions and different meanings." And finally I also edited the last para of this section to:
where I replaced the Western word "ethicization" by the word used in this context by the Eastern religions, "dharma". In the section "Karma and ethicization" I added a template Pov-check - that's because I suggest this section also is written from a Western perspective, and it would be more authentic in the Eastern traditions to call it "Karma and Dharma". and the section would be expressed differently based around the Eastern idea of dharma as the path you hold to, rather than an intrinsic externally imposed good. I also added to that section
That's because I thought there was too much emphasis there on Karma as "good" and "bad" as after all the main aim in the Eastern traditions is not to have a good life but to find freedom from the cycle of existence. It should also, I think, at least mention Nirvana and Moksha Further back in time, I changed the title of "Discussion" to "Discussion in Western Theology / Philosophy" and wrote a short para of intro here; https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Karma&diff=628468124&oldid=628467573 Just saying that for completeness. I think it needs some kind of intro, but I'm sure what I did there could be improved. And before that, several of us had decided in discussion that the "Discussion" section belonged at the end of the article, as you can see here https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Karma&oldid=627991735 where it is nested under "Understanding within Western culture" as "Scholarly debates" And that's it. Minor changes really. But they were all reverted by Mark. And that's what this discussion has been about Robert Walker (talk) 06:35, 26 October 2014 (UTC) Proposals for the futureI propose that we replace Ethicization by Dharma in the introduction and present the ideas as understood in the Eastern traditions first. And that we follow Dorje's proposed section ordering with the Western scholarly debates nested as "Scholarly Debates" under "Discussion in Western Theology / Philosophy" as these discussions have not so far spread to any of the Eastern scholarly debates on these topics. I think also that it would be good to have some section on Eastern debates as well, just like the "Discussion in Western Theology / Philosophy" to have "Discussion in Eastern Traditions" where it would be appropriate to talk about some of the debates from an Eastern perspective. As they are discussed there. Because, it is clear that there are different ways of framing the debates in the East and the West, and that you can't merge discussions into a single paragraph if they are conducted by people using different concepts who don't refer to each other. And the Western scholarly debates are surely not "objective". In the Eastern traditions there is a long past of scholarship, right back to the early universities in India, such as the great university of Nalanda with its hundreds of thousands of books, where everything was questioned. As much integrity as there is in the Western scholarship. And it is reasonable to use this for the Eastern traditions. You don't need Western summaries of them, by Westerners who often don't have much in depth understanding of the debates. In the East then typically those concerned will spend many years, decades of their lives studying these topics. A few Westerners have also taken on the discipline of studying the debates with the same level of commitment - but not many. For those who have, of course their contributions are important and significant parts of the debate. For the others, who haven't studied the Sutras or Vedas or Upanishads, and the subsequent Eastern scholarship, but instead rely on summaries plus Western ideas of theology, then their contributions are more suitable for the Western section. Robert Walker (talk) 06:33, 26 October 2014 (UTC) Also to say - the Discussion section derives from authors who don't believe in Rebirth or Karma spanning multiple livesHad another thought - perhaps the most distinctive feature about those Western writers is that they write about rebirth as a belief system they don't have themselves. And they make various conclusions about what the Easterners should believe about how Karma continues from one life to another, that Karma is.
It is clear that some Westerners do think that those are inevitable consequences of the idea, such as Whitely Kaufman, a Western philosopher and lawyer. There has been no evidence, in all this discussion, of anyone in the Eastern traditions - in the Buddhist traditions anyway (which I know most about) - who subscribe to these views. And there are many scholarly writers in these traditions, including many Westerners who have spent decades of their lives studying them. Surely it is best, in an article on Karma, to describe Karma as it is understood in Easterners - for Buddhists at least it is
There is plenty of evidence to back that up, just read the Karma in Buddhism article for some of them, and other articles on Buddhism here in wikipedia. And for some of the variety of beliefs about rebirth see Reincarnation. I don't give citations here as it is a talk page, and it is easy to find many - just read those articles and then follow up the citations given there. Is it not best to
Well that's how I see it anyway.Robert Walker (talk) 07:57, 30 October 2014 (UTC)
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Misrepresentations and persistent reliance on poor quality sources - part 2
Robert Walker, You make new allegations, assume new premises, almost all without reliable scholarly sources. For example, you allege "Some of these traditions consider it [karma] is due to divine agency" and cite Sharma reference (ISBN 81-208-0365-5, pp. 209-10) as support. But, Sharma makes no such claim. He never uses the phrase "divine agency" or equivalent in his discussion of karma, neither on pages 209-210, nor elsewhere. You are misrepresenting Sharma reference. You allege, "First, unlike Christianity or Buddhism, or Islam, Hinduism is not a single unified religion." That is a naïve assertion! Christianity, Buddhism and Islam are not unified religions either. You allege Sivananda wrote 200 books. Did he write 200 books on karma in Hinduism? in total? any source for either? Have you checked the citation index or a library?
You ask, "How on earth can you say that his [Sivananda] writing on Karma is not a notable source for beliefs of some Hindus, and use that as a reason for reverting my edit? These are the primary sources that your scholars rely on when they discuss contemporary Hinduism. Far better than the secondary sources you are using." You are mocking wikipedia's content source policy, and generally accepted principles for writing encyclopedic articles.
Primary sources and individual opinions, particularly when they reflect fringe views, are poor quality sources. They should not be given undue weight. That applies to individual Hindus, individual Buddhists, individual Jains, and others. There is plenty of verifiable sources that individual Buddhists link "divine intervention" to "karma in Buddhism". For example, I provided a link to Lama Shenpen's views above. He states, "I believe there is such a thing as divine intervention in that I believe the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas always are there helping as much as it is possible to help us given our karmic situation (...). So people’s prayers do help but if the karmic situation is unfavourable the help doesn’t manifest in any obvious way." You find a variety of personal views on divine agency and karma, among some Buddhists, in various sects of Buddhism, particularly in Tibet, Bhutan and southeast Asia (for example, see Matthew T. Kapstein, The Tibetan Assimilation of Buddhism, ISBN 978-0195152272, Oxford University Press, pages 42-54). Where should such Buddhist's views, from various sects of Buddhism, be mentioned in this article? Or, should this general article on karma avoid including individual opinions and 'divine agency and karma' theories from regional sects of Buddhism?
You wrote earlier, "I didn't say I have lack of knowledge and incompetence. I just said I am a practicing Buddhist but not a Buddhist teacher and not a Buddhist scholar." You also wrote, "In case of Hindu teachings, I am not familiar with it, but just summarized the Hindu sections of wikipedia as best I could." Instead of poor quality wiki articles, constructive sources for suggesting changes to this article would be peer-reviewed scholarly publications. Kind regards, Mark.muesse (talk) 14:13, 3 November 2014 (UTC)
It's no problem mentioning other articles IN A WIKIPEDIA TALK PAGE DISCUSSION - that's not using articles as a citation - and the few page edits I did were minor and good faith
- First, surely you agree it is okay to mention other articles in wikipedia in a talk page discussion. Of course I'd never use them as citations in a wikipedia article. But - do you not agree that it is acceptable to do that?
- Apart from that - linking to wikipedia articles in this talk page discussion with you, the only edits of the page itself which I attempted were relatively minor changes (all now reverted) - adding tags, a couple of sentences, an attempt at an intro to the discussion section - that's it. So, I don't feel I have done anything particularly dire or dreadful or against the wikipedia guidelines :). They were all Good Faith edits
Detailed reply to your comment on the Sharma ref
- On the Sharma ref Sorry I haven't read it. But I remember reading this section on the Nyaya in wikipedia Nyaya#The_Nyaya_theory_of_causation - so probably copied / pasted from there.
Early Naiyayikas wrote very little about Ishvara (literally, the Supreme Soul). However, later Buddhists in India had become from agnostic to strictly atheistic. As a reaction, the later Naiyayikas entered into disputes with the Buddhists and tried to prove the existence of God on the basis of inference. They made this question a challenge to their own existence. Udayana's Nyayakusumanjali gave the following nine arguments to prove the existence of creative God:(ref: Sharma, C. (1997). A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 81-208-0365-5, pp.209-10)
...(9th of his nine reasons)
Adŗşţāt (lit., from the unforeseen): Everybody reaps the fruits of his own actions. merits and demerits accrue from his own actions and the stock of merit and demerit is known as Adŗşţa, the Unseen Power. But since this unseen power is unintelligent, it needs the guidance from a supremely intelligent god.
- It's not citing the other wikipedia article as a reference, just extracting material from it, including the citations from the original article, which is permissible and often done. But given that you challenge it, which I didn't expect, then presumably someone should follow this up and check it.
- Anyway so if you want to check it then presumably you need to look under Adŗşţāt in the reference.
- If this is accurate - then presumably if you know where to look there is an extensive literature on this debate between later Nyayas and later Buddhists. So that might be worth following up, probably scholarly articles on it - if you wish to learn more about this subject. Robert Walker (talk) 14:28, 5 November 2014 (UTC)
Detailed reply to your comment on my use of a primary source to show that there are at least some Hindus who think that Karma is a result of divine intervention
- On primary sources - yes they should not be given undue weight, of course, that's one of the reasons you need secondary sources. I don't know how much weight should be given to Swami Sivananda Saraswati - all I'm saying here is that he is a historically significant Hindu - and so his views are relevant to a discussion of the views of Hindus. It may be a minority view, it may even be regarded as "fringe" by other Hindus - that needs to be determined - a primary citation can't establish that.
- However, a single citation from a historically significant figure is enough to show that this is a view about Karma that some people have, and also not just Joe Bloggs next door, but someone easily notable enough to count as an example of a Hindu who holds these views.
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Suggested solution if you want to keep your new sentence about Karma never being due to divine intervention
- BTW a Hindu wikipedia contributor has just said on the Talk:Karma_in_Hinduism#Western_Bias_in_main_Karma_article page that his is a minority view that most Hindus would not accept. Still, called him a Hindu. So presumably it is a "minority Hindu" view.
- I can't help clarify this any more myself - all I can say is that it is clear that your sentence in the intro can't be 100% cororect from this citation.
- Perhaps you could say something like "In most traditions, the law of karma operates independent of any deity or any process of divine judgment" if you do want to include the sentence still. Just a thought. It has to be qualified in some way. So, if you don't want to go into the detail of saying why it is qualified, at least can qualify it slightly like that and add a citation or two as a reference for those who want to know why you put it like that. Just a thought. Robert Walker (talk) 03:47, 5 November 2014 (UTC)
Why your citations don't support the view that Buddhists think that Karma is due to divine intervention
As I think probably not many people think that any Buddhists do hold this view, I'll just collapse this entire answer now, so the few who do think so can read my detailed reply. Though Mark didn't reply again, he has had plenty of time to read it now.
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Adhiṣṭhāna - yes Buddhas can help in this way. It's the main way they help. It's easiest to understand in the case of the historical Buddha. So, many Buddhists offer seven bowls of water to the historical Buddha every morning (in some traditions eight). When you do that, you invite the historical Buddha into your life, as a guest. And then his inspiration then helps you in your life. This does not mean however that he is there acting to fulfill your wishes etc in the way Westerners understand such things. You wouldn't pray to Buddha to give you a new car or house, or to help you succeed in your job interview or some such, as some of the more fundamentalist Christians would do, or indeed to save suffering people - not in the sense of expecting God to act on your prayers. It would be an error to interpret it as divine intervention. It works rather via inspiration. You've been to teachings about the dharma. You've read the sutras, enough to get a blessing connection. And then by inviting the Buddha into your life in this way, you make a connection to him in a physical, symbolic way. And in so doing that helps you to open out to the inner Buddha inside you. Different ways of presenting it - that's in the Tathahhatagarbha traditions. So that's the sense in which the Buddhas can help. Through inspiration. They can't intervene and change things in your life and they certainly have nothing to do with causing the fruits of your past karmic actions to occur. Through their inspiration they can help you to find a way to purify your past karma, because you get inspired. For instance, if in the midst of anger, you reflect on the teachings and have a moment of patience. then that's the inspiration and adhishtana of the Buddhas helping you there, as we understand it in Buddhism. And by so doing they help you to purify your past negative karma in that very moment. But they can't do anything to stop your anger or to prevent you from experiencing its fruits if you do get angry. And then for practitioners who follow the path of a bodhisattva, then that leads to a far vaster inspiration. But - nobody can make anyone else enlightened. They have to find out for themselves. All the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas can do is to help with their physical issues of course, if they have the right connection - and to inspire them, and show them the way by teaching the dharma in whatever form is suitable to them (not necessarily as "Buddhism"). This is how all Buddhists understand it. |
Why it is okay for a Buddhist practitioner to help with editing an article on Karma even though I'm not a Buddhist scholar
- And - I've already answered what you say about my competence for working on wikipedia. We don't have to be scholars to edit wikipedia. I do have background in scholarship in maths and philosophy, am just not a Buddhist scholar. But just as a carpenter can help edit an article in Wikipedia on carpentry - and doesn't have to be a scholar who has studied many books on carpentry - a Buddhist can help edit an article on Karma and doesn't have to read numerous scholarly articles first.
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The proposals under discussion here (recap)
Repeated more succintly below
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Short Summary of the Proposals
- Karma as understood in Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism etc needs to be presented first before the long discussion sections, as there are many ways of understanding Karma, and reader needs to see the original ideas first before they are discussed.
- Intro should introduce idea of "dharma" or the path you follow or hold to, with the idea of a multitude of possible paths - as that's how the original ideas are presented, in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. The word "Ethicization" is only used in modern Western discussions of the concept, so should be introduced later in the discussion section.
- Reader needs to be told that the existing discussion section (as of writing this) summarize a paper by the philosopher Kaufman, written from a Western theological perspective, for the online conference on "Revisioning Karma".
- All contributers to this online conference were Westerners - see List of contributors.
- In the original traditions many of the ideas are framed differently, to the extent that a merge of everything into one single discussion seems unlikely to work. This could be handled by adding extra sections covering other debates within and between the original traditions.
- Secondary sources can't be relied on to provide a single overall approach for the discussion section, because, as is common in philosophy and religion, it is easy to find secondary sources that contradict each other. For instance many things said in Kaufman's paper are directly contradicted by other secondary sources - see characteristics - I link to the old version of the page as this section has been recently deleted by Joshua Jonathon - see below. It gives citations to some secondary sources you can follow up. Is easy to find more. Here for instance is the list of citations to secondary sources in the old article on "Karma is not a judgement" which directly contradicts the discussion section statements on this matter: In Buddhist philosophy, karmic results not considered to be a "judgement" - list of citations to scholarly sources
- The discussion section comes first, and is also as long as the sections on Hindu and Buddhist ideas altogether. Ideas by a single Western philosopher don't deserve such prominence in an overview article on Karma.
As for how to label the discussion section - perhaps this would be enough for an introductory para:
"This discussion presents some of the ideas in a paper presented by Whitely Kaufman to the 2005 online conference on "Revisioning Karma" by Whitely Kaufman and other contributors"
Just an idea. Tells the reader where these ideas are coming from. They don't just come out of the sky as revealed truth :).
On that last, see Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view/FAQ#There.27s_no_such_thing_as_objectivity
"This most common objection to the neutrality policy also reflects the most common misunderstanding of the policy. The NPOV policy says nothing about objectivity. In particular, the policy does not say that there is such a thing as objectivity in a philosophical sense—a "view from nowhere" (to use Thomas Nagel's phrase), such that articles written from that viewpoint are consequently objectively true. That is not the policy, and it is not our aim!"
Hope this helps. Robert Walker (talk) 13:46, 22 November 2014 (UTC)