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Old 04-02-2003, 10:21 PM   #21
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Enlightenment is a path, not a destination.

I don't see much enlightenment in satanism.
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Old 04-03-2003, 05:36 AM   #22
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Quote:
Originally posted by Nowhere357
Enlightenment is a path, not a destination.

I don't see much enlightenment in satanism.
Yes, I agree. One odd thing I've noticed about the various types of modern satanism I've read about (LaVey's Church of Satan, and the Temple of Set) is that they are not strictly anti-Christian. They are both strong athiest, so they don't teach that there is a literal Satan in opposition to an existing God. They see Satan as a symbol for a strong egocentric self-awareness.

As such, it's not anti-Christian but it is diametrically opposed to the Buddha's teaching. Here's an excerpt from an essay at the Temple of Set's website:
Quote:
The Buddha, who is perhaps the purest Right Hand Path philosopher, answered the question of the nature of Being as "Being is suffering." He saw (and rightly so) that the Being was furthered by Desire, and that led to a permanence of the Self and greater suffering for the Self. His solution was to eliminate Desire and harmonize the elements of the psyche with those of the objective universe. The Left Hand Path rejects the ethical imperative of this notion. We see "Being is Knowing" and the ethical imperative is to further the permanence of the Self by embracing the pleasures and pains of existence. We exalt and revel in the disharmony our Desire brings, we accept the pains that come from trying to make our dreams come true, we realize the absolute responsibility for our actions is our own.
from The Black beyond Black by Don Webb
Of course, it's way off the mark on what the Buddha's teaching really was, but I expected that.

As for Harumi's question, I don't know of any serious practitioners of what you might call "traditional Satanism". Most of its modern proponents know that the earliest information about so-called Satanism (from the Inquisition) was extracted under torture and so is pretty much useless for objective information. The few teenagers that do try to be Satanists are probably trying to (as they say in fandom) freak the mundanes.

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Old 04-03-2003, 07:03 AM   #23
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prove to me that consciousness survives death, and i'll believe in reincarnation You seem to have the mistaken assumption that Buddhism teaches that reincarnation involves the transmigration of consciousness from one body to another. In fact this is a "wrong view" that the monk Saati was explicitly admonished for.

Buddhism teaches that consciousness arises only when supporting conditions exist (namely the sense organs, in Indian thought including the brain).

"Bhikkhus, Do you see, that it [consciousness] arises supported? Yes, venerable sir. Bhikkhus, Do you see, that if the support ceases, the arising too ceases? Yes, venerable sir. " MN 38

Clearly consciousness does not survive the death of the physical body in Buddhist thought. The same is true for all the other mental and physical consituents of existence: the Buddha explicitly taught that none of them survive death.

So what exactly does reincarnation mean if there is absolutely no physical or mental continuity between one birth and the next? I posted some explanations from the Milindapañhaa in the other thread about reincarnation, but I'll add some more here:

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SAID the king: “Bhante Naagasena, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating [passing over]?”
“Yes, your majesty. Rebirth takes place without anything transmigrating.”
“How, bhante Naagasena, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating? Give an illustration.”
“Suppose, your majesty, a man were to light a light from another light; pray, would the one light have passed over [transmigrated] to the other light?”
“Nay, verily, bhante.”
“In exactly the same way, your majesty, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating.”
“Give another illustration.”
“Do you remember, your majesty, having learnt, when you were a boy, some verse or other from your professor of poetry?”
“Yes, bhante.”
“Pray, your majesty, did the verse pass over [transmigrate] to you from your teacher?”
“Nay, verily, bhante.”
“In exactly the same way, your majesty, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating.”
“You are an able man, bhante Naagasena.”
- Mil. 71
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Old 04-03-2003, 12:37 PM   #24
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Red face

Lol.

I'm was former Buddhist and I know less than you guys! It wasn't from lack of trying though. I had desperately wanted to know, but my parents just wouldn't tell me. This seems to me like my parents don't know anything about it either. Sad isn't it?

But back to Satanism. There seems to almost be a type of apathy amongst the followers that a I really dislike. Isn't it all focused on materialism and getting what they want? That's what I got from it at any rate. Satan, as I knew before, is mostly a symbol, not truly believed. But what is the real point of it?
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Old 04-04-2003, 01:32 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally posted by bagong
[Buddhism teaches that consciousness arises only when supporting conditions exist (namely the sense organs, in Indian thought including the brain).

So what exactly does reincarnation mean if there is absolutely no physical or mental continuity between one birth and the next? I posted some explanations from the Milindapañhaa in the other thread about reincarnation, but I'll add some more here:
I agree with Mr. Buddha. Our bodies turn to dust, and our spiritual energy dissipates also like a drop of water in the ocean.
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Old 04-04-2003, 02:04 AM   #26
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Thumbs up

Quote:
SAID the king: “Bhante Naagasena, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating [passing over]?”
“Yes, your majesty. Rebirth takes place without anything transmigrating.”
“How, bhante Naagasena, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating? Give an illustration.”
“Suppose, your majesty, a man were to light a light from another light; pray, would the one light have passed over [transmigrated] to the other light?”
“Nay, verily, bhante.”
“In exactly the same way, your majesty, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating.”
“Give another illustration.”
“Do you remember, your majesty, having learnt, when you were a boy, some verse or other from your professor of poetry?”
“Yes, bhante.”
“Pray, your majesty, did the verse pass over [transmigrate] to you from your teacher?”
“Nay, verily, bhante.”
“In exactly the same way, your majesty, does rebirth take place without anything transmigrating.”
“You are an able man, bhante Naagasena.”
- Mil. 71
Great! Naturalistic reincarnation! Something I can believe in without having to discard the whole system of naturalism! If matter combined this time to form a person which I call "me", it can do so for a new "me" once again. There's no proof for this, of course, but at least it provides consolation in the face of fear of death. I believe in life after death without rejecting naturalism.
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Old 04-06-2003, 11:42 AM   #27
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Satanism, as it is explained at religioustolerance.org, seems like a very interesting religion, apart from all those rituals. Satanism, as it is explained at churchofsatan.com, seems like just those "wiccans" who are wiccans just because it's cool, except that they try to seem evil.

If it weren't for those rituals and symbols and other occult stuff, I might even consider becominga some sort of satanist.
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Old 04-07-2003, 08:00 AM   #28
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Quote:
Originally posted by BigBadShrubbery

If it weren't for those rituals and symbols and other occult stuff, I might even consider becominga some sort of satanist.
What do you find so negative about rituals?
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Old 04-07-2003, 11:53 AM   #29
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Quote:
Originally posted by Harumi
What do you find so negative about rituals?
I find it hard to believe that they are actually useful. I'd say that 'negative' is a too strong word. I merely dislike the idea of seemingly pointless rituals.

Of course, the possibility exists that these rituals actually work, but that pretty much questions the whole "not believing in a living deity"-part. Or, at least, that's the conclusion I ended up with. I might be wrong.

Are there any actual religious satanists around? I suppose that they would be the persons to ask about this ritual part of satanism.
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Old 04-07-2003, 04:32 PM   #30
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Quote:
Originally posted by BigBadShrubbery

Of course, the possibility exists that these rituals actually work, but that pretty much questions the whole "not believing in a living deity"-part. Or, at least, that's the conclusion I ended up with. I might be wrong.
My daughter noticed that each morning, as I stir my coffee, I make the same liitle tune or ditty with the spoon on the cup. Sort of a ritual? Do satanists like coffee?
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