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HINDUISM, BUDDHISM, and TAOISM

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Title: HINDUISM, BUDDHISM, and TAOISM


1
HINDUISM, BUDDHISM, and TAOISM
  • Kindred religions

2
Common elements
  • Emphasis on
  • Acceptance of things the way they are
  • Overcoming desire
  • Humility
  • Recognizing that a human life is always extremely
    short and personal achievements are strictly
    limited
  • Belief in a particular way of life dharma
  • Belief in a universal principle of merit karma

3
Common elements
  • View of good and bad is more like learning to
    ride a bicycle than learning spelling
  • Rather than a personal god who metes out
    punishment for breaking rules, these religions
    are based on universal forces or principles which
    lead to pain and discomfort if they are ignored
    (like someone who rides a bicycle recklessly can
    get hurt)

4
Hinduism
  • An ethnic religion of the Indian subcontinent

5
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6
HINDUISM
  • A label that includes a wide range of
  • Religious practices
  • Customs
  • Beliefs
  • Sacred places
  • Deities
  • Hinduism is tolerant of this variety and does not
    condemn certain religious practices or beliefs as
    evil

7
Origins of Hinduism
  • Indo-Europeans were polytheistic and worshipped
    cattle
  • Brought their beliefs to the Indus Valley by
    relocation diffusion from 1,400 BC
  • Rig Veda (oldest Indo-European document, written
    ca. 1,200 BC) is the foundation of Hinduism
  • The diversity of religious practice in India
    suggests a process of syncretism (combination of
    cultures) during a phase of expansion diffusion

8
Fundamental beliefs of Hinduism
  • Reincarnation
  • Karma
  • Caste system (4 main castes or varnas, many
    sub-castes or jatis)
  • Brahmin
  • Kshatriya
  • Vaisya
  • Shudra
  • Sanctity of the cow

9
Five Major Doctrines
  • Truth is one, Sages call it by different names
  • Rig Veda, 1.164.46
  • All Mankind is One Family
  • Hitopadesha, Subhashita Ratna Bhandagare
  • Law of Karma - As you sow, so shall you reap
  • Mahabharata, Shantiparva 299.42 BG 18.60
  • That mode of living which is founded upon total
    harmlessness towards all creatures or in case of
    genuine necessity upon a minimum of such harm,
    is the highest morality
  • Mahabharata, Shantiparva 262.5-6
  • Whenever there is a decline of virtue, God
    incarnates Himself on earth to uphold
    righteousness
  • Bhagavad Gita 4.7, 4.8
  • www.hindunet.org

10
Brahman/Paramatman
  • Brahman is the supreme reality
  • Brahman has two aspects, transcendent (impersonal
    and unknowable) and immanent (personal and
    knowable)
  • In the impersonal aspect, Brahman lies outside
    the realm of human description and can only be
    sensed as a presence within oneself and the rest
    of the universe
  • God is immanent, the universe is the
    manifestation rather than the creation of God
  • In the personal aspect, Brahman can be known in
    various formsthe many Hindu deities and the rest
    of creation

11
Deities (gods/goddesses)
  • Brahma creative force
  • Vishnu sustaining force (incarnated as Krishna
    and others)
  • Shiva force of renunciation, release,
    self-mastery
  • Hanuman (incarnation of Shiva who has Rama in his
    heart) epitome of devotion
  • Ganesha (son of Shiva Parvati) remover of
    obstacles
  • Saraswati (Brahmas consort) human creative
    force, arts sciences
  • Lakshmi (Vishnus consort) prosperity, love,
    beauty, delight
  • Kali/Parvati/Durga (Shivas consort) power,
    transformation, destroyer of evil

12
Representations of Deities
Hanuman service, devotion, intelligence, strength
Krishna (an incarnation of Vishnu) divine love
Saraswati arts and sciences, knowledge, purity
Shiva Renunciation, self-mastery
13
  • Ganesh
  • Remover of obstacles
  • Source of knowledge (legend attributes the
    Mahabharata to Ganesh)
  • One of the most commonly-seen icons

14
Hindu iconography Images are meant to recall the
various aspects or powers of a god, not to be
literal representations of a physical form. For
example, four arms on a god are not meant
literally to represent a four-armed god.
15
He has four hands, elephant's head and a big
belly. His vehicle is a tiny mouse. In his hands
he carries a rope (to carry devotees to the
truth), an axe (to cut devotees' attachments),
and a sweet dessert ball -laddoo- (to reward
devotees for spiritual activity). His fourth
hand's palm is always extended to bless people.
A unique combination of his elephant-like head
and a quick moving tiny mouse vehicle represents
tremendous wisdom, intellegence, and presence of
mind. www.hindunet.org
16
Ganesh Son of Shiva and Parvati Was protecting
his mother while she bathed. His father returned
and cut off Ganeshs head, not knowing the person
who kept him from his wife was his own son. Shiva
solved the problem by replacing his sons head
with the head of a passing elephant
17
Buddhism
  • An offshoot of Hinduism that is dominant in
    regions other than its cultural hearth

18
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19
BUDDHISM
  • An outgrowth from Hindu mysticism (tradition of
    wandering ascetics)
  • Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) lived about 563BC
    in the foothills of the Himalayas
  • Raised as royalty
  • Exposed to hardship suffering in his 20s
  • Lived as ascetic for 6 years
  • Achieved enlightenment or nirvana by adopting the
    middle way taught for 45 years throughout India

20
Branches of Buddhism
  • Therevada (Hinayana)
  • SE. Asia and Sri Lanka
  • Focus on meditation personal perfection
  • Mahayana
  • China, Japan, Korea, Tibet
  • Belief in enlightened beings (bodhisattvas) who
    have perfected themselves to the point they are
    capable of leaving the cycle of death and rebirth
    because they have reached nirvana
  • Bodhisattvas remain in human form to help others
    reach nirvana (perfect contentment, release of
    attachments, and release from cycle of death
    rebirth)

21
The Eightfold Way
  • right understanding
  • right thinking
  • right speech
  • right conduct
  • right livelihood
  • right effort
  • right mindfulness
  • right concentration
  • What does this all mean?
  • Compassion, patience, serenity achieved through
    meditation and self-discipline
  • Spiritual work is required
  • The eightfold way leads to Nirvana
  • Sanskrit for "to extinguish means to extinguish
    ignorance, hatred and earthly suffering

More religious iconography
22
Buddhist Iconography
  • The hollow of the bell symbolizes the wisdom
    cognizing emptiness. The clapper represents the
    sound of emptiness. The eight lotus petals are
    the four mothers and four goddesses and the vase
    represents the vase containing the nectar of
    accomplishment.
  • Buddha Dharma Education Association
    http//www.buddhanet.org.au/budstudy/buddhism/hist
    ory/b_bell.htm

23
The Buddha Image
The Buddha is the enlightened person, a role
model to emulate not a god to try to please or
placate
24
Diffusion of Buddhism
Can people in our culture who have not grown up
in a Buddhist household consider themselves
Buddhists? To what extent is the diffusion of
Buddhism a case of stimulus diffusion in which
popular culture takes an element of folk culture
and turns it into a fashion with a set of
commodities?
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