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Queries

Introduction

 
The Nucleus software which runs this website keeps track of inquiries, as well as referrals from searches using Google and the like. Lately some interesting questions have been asked. I don't know if I have the answers, but I thought I would bring up those questions for discussion more explicity.

One question from a reader in India is, "What would happen if everyone attained nirvana?" A question from British reader is, "How can the maldistribution of income be solved?"

Somehow, I think these two questions are related ...

 

 

Before proceeding to the questions, I wondered why American readers don't ask such questions? (At least, not on this website.)

Nirvana

What is Nirvana? This seems to be a matter of deep division in Buddhist circles, but a few things are agreed. All concerned seem to agree that attaining nirvana ends the cycle of reincarnation, a doctrine taught by the Buddha himself and/or his immediate disciples. So, one approach to nirvana is to ask what causes reincarnation.

Reincarnation results from "bad karma," of not leading a right life. If one leads, in the Socratic phrase, "a life worth living," presumably one accomplishes in life all that one should. There is no residual of living. When one dies, it is satisfactory because one is fulfilled. On the other hand, if life is somehow insufficient or unfilled, one may have a hankering to live more. It is that hankering - craving - that leads to reincarnation.  Put differently, the person at peace with himself feels fulfilled and needs nothing more.

Nirvana is often described as lacking craving or desire, or being at peace with oneself. It can also be described as being in harmony with the world. Critics of Buddhism say that attainment of nirvana is essentially death, because no one alive could possibly be content with oneself or the world. That is a typically Western way of looking at things, which also gives us a differential method of describing nirvana. Those who constantly strive without feeling accomplishment have not attained nirvana. This implies that the American demand for more and more denies the possibility of nirvana. There has to be some point at which one says, "Enough!" Does this mean that attaining nirvana is inconsistent with economic improvement or leading a better life?

I think the answer depends on how one defines "improvement" and "better." Some of those teaching ways to achieve nirvana agree with the Western criticism. In that view, worldly desires are inconsistent with the purification necessary for attaining a state of nirvana. Typically, such a view of nirvana is given by ascetic monks or mystics who see lack of craving as denial of the body and self. I think it is unlikely or impossible for most people to understand or practice such self-denial. If such removal from the natural world is what is required for nirvana, then few or none ever achieve it. In contrast, it is important to recognize that the Buddha himself did not practice self abnegation in the manner of ascetics, and the Dalai Lama does not usually teach such practices. Thus, while the ascetic attainment of nirvana is one  heuristic, it appears there are other ways as well.

In Buddhist philosophy, one goal of meditation and other practices is to lose the self. The "I" is a barrier between one's existence and the world. It may seem paradoxical, but this does not mean that people lack an ego. Rather, the self should melt into the world, become one with the world. One's "self" becomes an aspect of the world integrated with it, and not an entity separate and apart. When the self is seamlessly part of the world, the "I" fades away. In that case, cravings fade away as well, to the extent that they are imbedded in the ego. In many artistic works, it is suggested the master (guru, yogi, etc) can accept whatever outcomes occur, because they are attuned to the way the world is. This is not at all the same thing as resignation or fatalism, but only "going with the flow." This perception of outcomes is part of melting into the world, of abandoning self. (Resignation or fatalism require an antecedent "I.")

I note that reduction of the ego to harmony with the world, and the acceptance of outcomes, is not the same thing as positing a Theory of History or taking a position on Cause and Effect. It is also not an abandonment of activism - efforts to change the world. It is only to accept the way the world is, and however it appears to work, and to find peace with it. Thus the activist must accept success or failure as given, and not be uncomfortable with the result. It is sufficient that 'I did what I could,' and 'I did what was right,' whether or not my activities succeeded. Those who cannot accept how things turn out get reincarnated.

Another way to look upon this is the Wheel of Dharma. All things cycle through the stages of life, from birth to fullness to death. To attain nirvana is to get off the wheel; to see it all as an onlooker. This is true, even as one's flesh is being carried by the wheel to its destiny.

There is a sense in which all life eventually attains nirvana, because our Universe is a Wheel of Dharma which eventually dissipates into nothingness. Strangely, modern Western physics and biology teach us the ultimate impermanence of self and material.

Income Distribution

The foregoing is one answer to the proper distribution of income.

If everyone sought nirvana, rather than another gaudy toy, our society would be organized entirely differently from the way it is now. Because our goals and outlook would be different, our economic arrangements would be different. We would begin with a proper regard for the needs of every individual, not with the cravings of some. Seeking nirvana is essentially a community project, not an individualistic one. Along the way, those seeking nirvana have to see themselves as human - as an example of humanity - and not as the self centered, ever-important "I."

Einstein's relativity gives us a way of seeing this last notion. When one is stuck on the Wheel of Dharma, the self is the center of the world. The "I" is the unique, immovable, Newtonian frame of reference. Such a conception always has causes and effects, ticking of clocks and machines that make it so. But, in the relativistic world, there is only the whole world; innumerable (infinite?) equivalent frames of reference. "I" is the same as "You" or "We." In the non-self oriented world, what is cause or effect depends on an arbitrary frame of reference. There is only the whole, which is the integration of a large number of nodes, which can be seen many ways. In such a whole Universe, one cannot distinguish oneself from the other.

Thus, I think those who seek nirvana cannot be capitalists, because the doctrine of Capitalism starts with greed; i.e., craving and want.

What this discussion shows, I hope, is that one's outlook determines whether we solve the problem of equitable income distribution.
I do not agree with those who say one must be an ascetic or a monk in a cave to pursue nirvana. Seeking nirvana, and even attaining it, is not inconsistent with improving the conditions of life. The resolution is in living a fitting, worthy life.

WalterB - clock 18:15:43 - Monday, 02/20/2006

Last update: 11/06/2007

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