nrose619 wrote:I said that almost everything is impermanent.
nrose619 wrote:That didn't answer my question but perhaps I should have rephrased my statement of impermanence. Also could you explain what my "misunderstanding" is instead of sending me a link to a forum to dig through?
daverupa wrote:nrose619 wrote:That didn't answer my question but perhaps I should have rephrased my statement of impermanence. Also could you explain what my "misunderstanding" is instead of sending me a link to a forum to dig through?
Sorry; the link is to this forum, where a very similar question was asked already.
Phrasing is important when discussing the Dhamma; it is worth the time to practice.
Now: I'm not sure you have any misunderstanding. But I feel certain that trying to discuss anicca in terms of objective science laws is altogether missing the point. Anicca is not saying that objects or concepts don't last; it's saying that anything which depends upon conditions is not self-sustaining, and for this reason cannot last.
So, gravity isn't a self-existent thing; it requires a universe and something like the Higgs boson in that universe, and so forth. It is at all times in relation to a context that is not permanent, and therefore cannot itself be permanent.
Does this make sense?

nrose619 wrote:So was I correct in that aspect?
nrose619 wrote:was I incorrect all along for engaging in such philosophical discussion?
MN 18 wrote:As he was standing there, he said to the Blessed One, "What is the contemplative's doctrine? What does he proclaim?"
"The sort of doctrine, friend, where one does not keep quarreling with anyone in the cosmos with its devas, Maras, & Brahmas, with its contemplatives & brahmans, its royalty & commonfolk; the sort [of doctrine] where perceptions no longer obsess the brahman who remains dissociated from sensuality, free from perplexity, his uncertainty cut away, devoid of craving for becoming & non-. Such is my doctrine, such is what I proclaim."

The Higgs boson explains inertial mass, not gravitational mass.daverupa wrote:So, gravity isn't a self-existent thing; it requires a universe and something like the Higgs boson in that universe
Doesn't really help with the equivalence principal thoughm0rl0ck wrote:E=MC2
Mawkish1983 wrote:... but I would love someone more educated in particle physics than me to explain how the Higgs field explains the force of gravity.

Return to Theravāda for the modern world
Registered users: Awarewolf, Bakmoon, Bhikkhu_Samahita, Billymac29, Bing [Bot], fivebells, Google [Bot], Lazy_eye, lsf20, Majjhima Patipada, mettafuture, Modus.Ponens, onaquest, photonist, polarbuddha101, reflection, retrofuturist