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| <div class="section">Some section</div> | | <div class="section"> |
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| | <div class="discover-slide p-5 rounded depth-3 normal-scroll" style="font-size: 1.2em;"> |
| | <div class="h2 mt-0 pt-0">'''Learn More'''</div> |
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| <div id="screenThree" class="discover-screen" style="height: 100vh;">
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| <div id="screenFive" class="discover-screen listen-back" style="opacity: 1;"> | | <div id="screenFive" class="discover-screen listen-back" style="opacity: 1;"> |
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| <div class="screen-heading">Watch & Listen</div> | | <div class="screen-heading">Watch & Listen</div> |
| <div class="screen-text"> | | <div class="screen-text"> |
| <div class="row mt-3 no-shadow"> | | <div class="row mt-3"> |
| <div class="col-lg-6 mt-1">
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| |image=File:Buddha_disciples_gold.jpg
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| |content=<div class="tile-heading">'''The Questions'''</div>
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| <div class="bnw-question mb-4">Are buddha-nature teachings controversial?</div>
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| Not all Buddhists accept the teachings of buddha-nature, and some actually disparage it as "non-Buddhist." This is because of the similarities between buddha-nature and the "self," which the Buddha famously declared does not exist. The Buddha taught that all individuals are subject to "dependent arising," which simply means we exist thanks to causes and conditions. We are made up of parts in dependence on other things, and so there is no clear defining line between ourselves and the world. We exist, but we exist as parts of a larger process that is constantly changing, and there is no underlying permanence to any of it. As the Greek philosopher Heraclitus said, the only constant is change. Because buddha-nature is described as our "essence" or "innate nature" some teachers and scholars have argued that it is a return to a notion of a self and is therefore in contradiction with basic Buddhism. Some buddha-nature scriptures even use the word "self" (ātman in Sanskrit) to describe buddha-nature, but they mean the term in a very different way, describing a basic fact of reality shared by all beings rather than an individual essence. Proponents of buddha-nature defend the teaching by either classifying buddha-nature as "provisional," meaning a teaching of practical value that is not literally true, or by explaining that buddha-nature is not something belonging to an individual, but is rather a basic characteristic of having a mind. It is like the air in our lungs—it is in us as a necessary factor of our being alive, but it is not our individual air.
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| <div class="bnw-question mb-4">Is buddha-nature like a soul? Is it the same as the Hindu ātman?</div>
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| "Soul" is a Greek-inspired teaching of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. There are many ways that these traditions understand the soul, but at its most basic it is said to be a permanent individual entity that survives our death. Indian religious traditions do not have this idea. The Hindu ātman is individual, but more like the wave on an ocean than a truly separate entity—the individuality of the ātman is said to be illusory and the cause of human suffering. The goal of Hindu practice is to abandon that illusion and experience the universal unity of existence, for the wave to dissolve back into the ocean. Buddhism however does not accept the individual existence of anything, neither the wave or the ocean. Both are dependent on causes and conditions to exist. Buddha-nature is neither an individual permanently-existing entity nor a universal presence manifesting as individual entities. Instead it is simply a basic characteristic of sentient existence, the innate capacity for wisdom.
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| <div class="bnw-question mb-4">What does buddha-nature have to do with enlightenment?</div>
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| Buddha-nature is the fundamental capacity of the mind to understand the world as it is. The mind is said to be like a glass of dirty water all shaken up by desire and ignorance. When the water in the glass is allowed to still the dirt all settles, revealing the basic purity of the water. So to, when the mind is properly trained the impurities vanish, and we perceive reality as it actually is, untainted by petty desires and impulses. In other words, buddha-nature teaches us that we are fundamentally pure, yet obscured with ignorance. Enlightenment will be achieved by freeing the mind of that ignorance.
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