Buddha Essay

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    Siddhartha Gautama or the Buddha was born as a prince to a family in India during the sixth century. At age 29 he began to notice the sufferings around him were everywhere and cannot be avoided to the eye. He decided to leave his privileged life and trade it into becoming a man living in full abandonment. He later discovered the path of avoiding the path of sufferings and how to save us. He soon discovered Buddhism and made constant discovers and encourage forming a group of followers to accompany

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    In the book Buddha of Infinite Light by D.T. Suzuki, the nature of Shin’s True Pure Land School is discussed at great length. He speaks of many important concepts found in this sect of Pure Land Buddhism, and explains his interpretations of these ideas. One of the most important ideas found in this sect is the concept of Other-Power, and its relation to that of self-Power. Suzuki spends much of this book going over this concept, and though it may seem constricting and full of paradoxes at first,

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    regulate our physical being and our mental being by aiding our fellow beings, rather than doing wrong, as well as producing knowledge of our own, we defeat our personal evil. In the text titled, ‘The Word’, Buddha has created the standard for the eightfold path. The first standard that Buddha has created is correct thought, this is interpreted as not wishing bad to happen to those with different views than yourself. This seems overall to be a value found in most religions as well as cultures. To

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    According to the text book “What the Buddha Taught”, by Dr. Rahula page 17, he stated that “Buddhism in neither pessimistic or optimistic. If anything at all, it is realistic, for it takes a realistic view of life and of the world.”. I do agree with what he said because a religion can be view and interpret in many different ways. It depends on what the people learn from the religion that they practice and using what they learned in their life. For example, some religion may have a strange practice

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    Buddha and Asoka were the two important people in medieval India. They were two excellent people in medieval India. They all impacted India a lot. People are very inserted at this two people. Siddhartha Gautama is Buddha’s name when he didn’t become Buddha. Siddhartha Gautama was born around 565 B.C. in Lumbini Park in the city of Kapilavastu in the ancient northern India. He was a great spiritual leader from ancient India who founded Buddhism. Asoka was born later around 300 years than Siddhartha

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    This Buddha has a bun-shaped fleshy protuberance on the crown of the head with a round and plump face, which has been severely weathered, leaving half of a halo behind the head. However, a sense of solemn and compassionate can still be perceived from the downward gazing eyes and the facial expression. The Buddha wears a full-shoulder kasaya with compact and specified drapery that forms into a U-shape along the axis of the body. The left hand naturally drops to hold a piece of the clothes yet the

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    and nobility in order to cease his own suffering and upon achieving his own enlightenment, provided a path for others to follow. Following his enlightenment, Gautama came to be known as the Buddha and his journey, the epoch of Buddhism. Unaccepting of some social and cultural practices of the time, the Buddha was openly critical of the Hindu Brahman’s possessiveness and almost secretive knowledge of the Veda texts; sharing this knowledge only with their son’s, assuring their family’s position socially

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    based on the teachings of Jesus Christ and Gautama Buddha respectively. They have spread from where they originated and had changed the religion has moderated in the past decade, these different religions claim different knowledge and utilize histrionic stories for teaching, and to gain followers and popularity. As a meaning of life, Jesus was prophesied several years before his unnatural conception. In contrast, Buddha was conceived normally. Buddha taught that we must not rely on God but on self-avoiding

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    Socrates and Siddhartha Guatama Buddha have many similarities; they both believe in the importance of justice and good, and a simpler way of life. However, they have different goals: Socrates concerns with worldly meanings and codes, he deals with truth and morals. Buddha concerns with attaining the outer-worldly through mastering the worldly. Socrates relinquishes sensual desires in hopes of spiritual rebirth after death and achieving enlightenment in life. Buddha relinquishes the same ideas, but

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    Hesse Siddhartha to Reflect the Legendary Atmosphere of Buddha "Siddhartha" is one of the names of the historical Gautama, and the life of Hesse's character resembles that of his historical counterpart to some extent. Siddhartha is by no means a fictional life of Buddha, but it does contain numerous references to Buddha’s philosophies and his teachings. Although Hesse’s Siddhartha is not intended to portray the life of Gautama the Buddha but he used the name and many other attributed to reflect

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