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  • Reviews the article Lack and Transcendence

    by identifying the changing self with the changing world and thusovercoming our sense-of-self and ...sense of lack caused by ourunconscious desires to reify our egos and to make something objective ...

    Carl Becker

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06195972491.html
  • Buddhist Spiritual Environmentalism

    Preface Our spiritual world is like the earth. Before it gets destroyed, it needs...maintained. When our mind is pure, our group is pure. When the small group is pure, the bigger ...

    Master Jing Ding

    |Buddhist|Spiritual|Environmentalism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/16203573891.html
  • In Defense of Mystical Science

    , of course, our own. p.73 Science and mysticism, as normally understood, exclude each other. A ...modes have their basis in our own nervous system: They [the exercises of meditation] are . . . ...

    John A. Schumacher and Robert

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06115672221.html
  • Religion and the Market

    our role in that world is, then it becomes obvious that traditional religions are fulfilling this ...probably the most influential of the "social sciences." In response, this paper will argue that our ...

    David Loy

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06192072460.html
  • The Karmic A Priori in Indian Philosophy

    The notion that we--our "minds"--contribute some but not all of what determines our experience is a ...thought as the mechanism of our ignorance and bondage. But are these conceptual constructions a priori? ...

    Karl H. Potter

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06265172707.html
  • The Religion of the Market

    religion as what most fundamentally grounds us by teaching us what the world is, and what our role ...the most influential of the "social sciences." In response, this paper will argue that our present ...

    David Loy

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06292372798.html
  • The Spiritual Origins of the West: A Lack Perspective

    for the "undevelopment" of non-Western societies -- why they did not evolve further along our path -...medieval society, but even more because it involved a radically new understanding of our human ...

    David Loy

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06300672822.html
  • An example of Japanese rationalism

    action is egoistic desire;(ii) but that if we try to satisfy our own egoistic desires without ...another, then we cannot fully satisfy our own desires, so that the unlimited egoism contradicts itself;(...

    Takehiro Sueki

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/21313471836.html
  • The Buddhist path and social responsibility

    empty, we nevertheless honor the reality of form. AsZen Master Dogen says: "Flowers fall with our attachment, and weeds springup with our aversion." Knowing deeply that all will cage--that the world ...

    Jack Kornfield

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06241072619.html
  • Buddhism and Money: The Repression of Emptiness Today

    Buddhist doctrine of no-self implies that our fundamental repression is not sex (as Freud thought), nor ...that our self consciousness is a mental construction. Here, the repressed intuition "returns to ...

    David Loy

    |english|buddha|buddhism|

    http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/21394571941.html