Local Media9097512665960967401
Local Media9097512665960967401
Local Media9097512665960967401
4. Do you agree with the contention that Buddhism is an ethics of liberation? Why?
- Yes, because it aims to alleviate all types of human suffering. Experiencing old
age, sickness, or death.
5. What are the three jewels in Buddhism?
- Buddha
- Sangha
- Dharma
6. Do you agree with Buddha when he argued that life is permeated by suffering?
Why?
7. Do you think Buddha is right when he argued that it is craving that causes
suffering? Why?
- Yes, if you don't chose the proper things for you or the appropriate things to do,
life's temptations can bring serious harm.
8. Banking on your own experience, what can you say about suffering?
- Suffering is a difficult thing to go through. Heartbreaks, family's high expectations, and being self
sufficient when I'm at my lowest are all things I've experienced in my personal life. I've gone through
a lot and have had suicidal thoughts; I've also injured myself on several occasions. When I was in
pain, the desire to die was repeatedly here already. At this point, I'm grateful that I'm surviving.
9. Discuss Buddha’s four Noble All beings experience pain and misery (dukkha) during
their lifetime:
1. "Birth, old age, sickness, and death are all painful experiences; sadness, grief,
sorrow, grief, and concern are all painful experiences." Contact with the
disagreeable causes discomfort. Pain separates the pleasure from the
unpleasant. It hurts to not obtain what one wants. In a nutshell, the five mind-
matter assemblages that are prone to attachment are pain."
The source of anguish and misery (samudaya) is related to a specific cause:
"It is the want for pleasures, the desire for existence, the desire for non-existence; that is, the desire
for pleasures, the desire for existence, the desire for non-existence."
2. The following steps can be taken to bring agony and misery to an end (nirodha):
"With its abandonment and renunciation, with its emancipation and detachment from it, with its full
non-passion and cessation of this very desire."
3. The Noble Eightfold Path is the approach we must use to put an end to sorrow and suffering.
10. Do you agree with Buddha when he posited his claim that suffering can be
eliminated from man? Why?
- No, I believe that suffering is an inevitable component of life. When you DIE, the
anguish will come to an end.
11. How do you compare Indian Ethics with Chinese Ethics?
15.5 Xiao - Xiao is a Chinese character that means filial piety. This refers to one's
parents, blood relations, or the entire family.
16. Discuss and explain the original meaning of Tao
23. What is the place of Tao in the correlation of Yin and Yang?
- The Tao sign features two Yin and Yang sides with dots representing opposed
dualism concepts within them.
24. Could Tao stand independently of Yin and Yang? Why?
- complementary (rather than opposing) forces interact to create a dynamic
system where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
25. What have Tao, Yin and Yang to do with the way toasts understand and
interpret morality?
- We all need balance in life.
26. What is Zen – Buddhism?
- Zen-Buddhism is a way of life.
30. As a student in moral, what do you think Zen-Buddhism has taught you?
- That temptations will entice you at all times, and that you need learn self-
control so that you can regulate whatever you do and that you do not harm
yourself.
31. Explain the meaning of the following:
31.1 Salam - Salam is an Arabic word that signifies "peace and surrender." Islam
literally means "absolute serenity" as a result of total surrender to Allah
(God)