On 11/17/2012 06:49 PM, Tang Huyen wrote:
> On 11/17/2012 10:45 AM, Sevenhundred Elves wrote:
>
>> Thank you for the commentary. Now I'm beginning
>> to think that I've never seen a good translation.
>
> One thing to notice about Oriental religion and
> philosophy is that they are suggestive and not
> quite declarative. They don't quite lay things
> down for you to believe, like in Jewish
> mythology, but only point out fissures in
> convention, so that you can follow through and
> figure out convention for yourself.
Most of that isn't because the guys who wrote it were wise and
inscrutable, but because what they had to say simply does not admit
itself to verbal description; they were stuck with poetry and paradox as
the best they could do.
The Abrahamic tradition seems more dedicated to maintaining control than
to conveying truth, it's rule-based, black-and-white, guaranteeing
either submission to its demands or expulsion from the tribe.
The two approaches are only marginally comparable, similar only in their
forms but dissimilar in their underlying meaning and intent; classifying
both as either "religion and philosophy" makes a hash of it... one is
philosophy, the other is propaganda.
> The situation of Buddhism and Daoism is this:
> people (us) create suffering for themselves by
> attachment, or more overtly, by taking in dead
> seriousness some of the things which happen or
> do not happen, and if they want to end their
> suffering, all that they need to do is to stop
> taking such things in dead seriousness, and
> rather just relax and be serene.
No, no, ten thousand times no. Those things are dead serious and should
be taken in dead seriousness, just not in the way they are usually taken
in dead seriousness. It isn't that people are seeing their proper
significance and taking them too seriously, but that people are not
seeing their proper significance and taking what is not their meaning
seriously. In other words the problem isn't an issue of being too
serious about something, but not understanding correctly what one is
taking seriously.
> Buddhism and
> Daoism do not talk about truth or reality,
> other than in an assumed mode (i. e., if
> people want to talk about truth and reality,
> Buddhism and Daoism will also talk about them,
> but only to lead people away from them, for
> truth and reality are dead-serious stuff
> which only drags people down). Indeed, truth
> and reality are traps which belong to the
> barrage of things (often called delusion)
> which cause suffering. If people want to end
> their suffering, they need to do away with
> truth and reality, and take things in levity
> and humour instead.
Such bullshit, Tang, you seem to have an endless supply of it springing
forth from your misunderstanding. If people want to end their suffering
they need only stop wallowing in it. They will still feel pain and
endure grief but they need not get all suffering over what is simple
sensory or emotional input by allowing it to own them.
> Buddhism and Daoism only
> point to this attitude, which either causes
> suffering to ourselves or does not cause
> suffering to ourselves, and only this
> attitude matters. The beginning of the Way
> and Its Virtue (DDJ) has much penetrating
> analysis of what makes us unhappy, and what
> makes us unhappy is our attachment to fixity
> and certainty, like truth, reality and
> virtue.
>
> DDJ Chapter 2:
>
>
http://taoism.net/ttc/complete.htm
>
> <<When the world knows beauty as beauty,
> ugliness arises
> When it knows good as good, evil arises
That bit is a direct reference to literalism, to focusing on form in
preference to its underlying meaning. When people think that going to
church every sunday makes you virtuous, some ugly shit has just been
created by that literalism.
> Thus being and non-being produce each other
> Difficult and easy bring about each other
> Long and short reveal each other
> High and low support each other
> Music and voice harmonize each other
> Front and back follow each other.>>
>
> That is in the line of:
>
> "The Way that can be talked about is not
> the eternal Way." DDJ Chapter I.
>
> "What and what they think it, it is
> otherwise." The Buddha.
>
> Buddhism and Daoism only point to this
> attitude,
Yet both of those quotes have come right out and said the very same
thing in very specific literal terms: the way can not be expressed as a
set of rules (as the Abrahamic tradition appears to attempt), it can
only be pointed to. Any way you describe it is by definition wrong,
even though you can say things about it that are true and correct. The
outside of a box can not be reproduced at its full size within that same
box.
> which is an attitude of
> detachment and aequability, of taking
> everything in levity and humour.
Bullshit, that is utter bullshit Tang, and you should know better than
to tell the rubes that it's all a joke when in fact it is deadly serious.
> This
> attitude is not bound to any content, like
> content of belief (e. g., the credo). It
> is merely an attitude, and it encourages
> freedom from beliefs, freedom from views
> and opinions. Of course we need beliefs,
> views and opinions,
No, in truth we do not need those things, they are excess baggage, the
mere wrappers of past candybars; what we need is the candy which can
only be found in the immediate present where no beliefs, views, or
opinions can exist.
> but we can take them
> as good servant and bad master. That is
> all that Buddhism and Daoism teach. If you
> understand that much, there is no more
> secret to Buddhism and Daoism, and if you
> don't, Buddhism and Daoism can't help you.
> Technique is largely irrelevant.
>
> Tang Huyen
Attitude and technique are inseparable, merely opposite sides of a
single coin, two aspects of one.