? Islam and Buddhism are more alike than you think

The Buddha may or may not have been a god when he had mortal form but he's certainly a god now and there are multiple deities in Buddhism. Religion is not defined solely as belief in only a single god or a single supreme god.

Buddha is NOT a God. The "Buddha" that you are referring to might be "Śākyamuni"? He's the founder of Buddhism but he is NOT God. He's like a teacher of Buddhism, sorta similar to the prophets in many of the religion but he is NOT Buddha even though he's being regarded as one by many but that is NOT correct. And all those multiple deities in the so called metaphysical form with all those statues that you see people pray to in those temples only exist in folklore legends but in true Buddhism, they all represent an ideal. Buddhism is a bit complicated in that it exists in two different forms, the traditional "folklore" form and the spiritual or the true form.
 
Buddha is NOT a God. The "Buddha" that you are referring to might be "Śākyamuni"? He's the founder of Buddhism but he is NOT God. He's like a teacher of Buddhism, sorta similar to the prophets in many of the religion but he is NOT Buddha even though he's being regarded as one by many but that is NOT correct. And all those multiple deities in the so called metaphysical form with all those statues that you see people pray to in those temples only exist in folklore legends but in true Buddhism, they all represent an ideal. Buddhism is a bit complicated in that it exists in two different forms, the traditional "folklore" form and the spiritual or the true form.


Any system of beliefs that encompasses for example reincarnation and progression to an immortal non-corporeal form must be a religion. What else could this beliefs be?
 
Any system of beliefs that encompasses for example reincarnation and progression to an immortal non-corporeal form must be a religion. What else could this beliefs be?

A natural progression of biological beings after death that we just have not been able to prove with our scientific technology? Regardless, still MILLIONS of MILES of difference from Islam. LOL
 
A natural progression of biological beings after death that we just have not been able to prove with our scientific technology?


Until an after-life can be proven scientifically, it is taken as a matter of faith. And that's a religion.

A person may follow Buddhist principles with regards behaviour. Another might follow principles of behaviour set down by the Jewish faith. But that does not make the one a Buddhist nor the other Jewish.
 
Until an after-life can be proven scientifically, it is taken as a matter of faith. And that's a religion.

A person may follow Buddhist principles with regards behaviour. Another might follow principles of behaviour set down by the Jewish faith. But that does not make the one a Buddhist nor the other Jewish.

So if a doctor tells you your illness is due to a nano-virus that cannot be seen by any existing microscope and you can't see it, does that mean that doctor is practicing a religion when giving you the diagnosis? LOL
 
So if a doctor tells you your illness is due to a nano-virus that cannot be seen by any existing microscope and you can't see it, does that mean that doctor is practicing a religion when giving you the diagnosis? LOL


You're going off the subject now. We're talking about how to define a religion.
 


* Why are Buddhist monks attacking Muslims? - BBC News - BBC.com
www.bbc.com/news/magazine-22356306

May 2, 2013 - Non-violence is central to Buddhist teaching but Oxford University historian Alan Strathern says some monks in Burma and Sri Lanka have been promoting aggression.

* Can Anyone Stop Burma's Hardline Buddhist Monks? - The Atlantic
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/...burmas...buddhist.../538992/

Sep 6, 2017 - Buddhist nationalism and religious tensions in Burma have existed at least as far back as the British colonial era and into the rocky period following independence in 1948. Rohingya groups have for decades fought under different banners for more autonomy in Rakhine. But these tensions reached a new ...

* Myanmar: World needs to stop romanticising Buddhism - News.com.au
www.news.com.au/world/...buddhism/.../37bf65e55ec59eb1922f82942576161a
Sep 17, 2017 - Dr Zarni said the military consider Rohingya “borderlands people”, who have cultural and historical ties with both Burma (now known as Myanmar) and East Bengal (a Muslim majority area formerly known as East Pakistan and now Bangladesh). He said the military initially had concerns about the growth of ...

* Burma: Buddhists tell Rohingya Muslims 'leave or we will kill you all ...
www.independent.co.uk › News › World › Asia

Sep 18, 2017 - Thousands of Rohingya Muslims have pleaded for safe passage from two remote Burmese villages cut off by hostile Buddhists and running short of food. Villagers feared their houses would be burned down and said they could starve to death unless authorities helped them flee.
 
So if a doctor tells you your illness is due to a nano-virus that cannot be seen by any existing microscope and you can't see it, does that mean that doctor is practicing a religion when giving you the diagnosis? LOL

If you understand what I wrote, you would know that I am defining religion. :)
 
If you understand what I wrote, you would know that I am defining religion. :)


I am sure the doctor would be able to call on the latest scientific research to justify his conclusions that the nano-virus existed and caused the illness in question. But this is just a dry debate over conclusive or circumstantial evidence in the scientific or legal context.

Religion is concerned with matters of faith for which evidence is irrelevant, and for which the deliberate seeking of evidence wold in any case be a matter of apostasy, and specifically with the existence and actions of immortal beings on a "higher" plane of existence than our own, i.e. gods. Also with the question of what happens to human consciousness or the human soul after physical death of the body.

So not all matters taken on a degree of faith due to lack of conclusive evidence can be called a religion. But all systems of belief that form a framework or context for issues of world creation, deities, immortal beings, afterlife and reincarnation or progression of the soul after physical death to a "higher sphere" are religions.

Anyway, I am confused as to why anyone would think buddhism is not a religion. What separates it from other major religious belief systems?
 
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