There's a number of "Just War" theories out there and I wonder if people subscribe to any of them. Or if by undertaking the fifth precept, are you a strict pacifist? I'm curious to hear anyone's thoughts on the matter.
Thanks,
KM
Buddhism and War
Buddhism and War
Last edited by kmath on Wed Oct 16, 2013 3:43 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Buddhism and War
There are a number of threads about war and if being in the military is Right Livelihood or not. Here is one:
http://www.dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=12791
Or you can go to google and type in:
site:dhammawheel.com war
And there you will see quite a few threads on this subject.
http://www.dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=12791
Or you can go to google and type in:
site:dhammawheel.com war
And there you will see quite a few threads on this subject.
Re: Buddhism and War
David N. Snyder wrote:There are a number of threads about war and if being in the military is Right Livelihood or not. Here is one:
http://www.dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=12791
Or you can go to google and type in:
site:dhammawheel.com war
And there you will see quite a few threads on this subject.
Re: Buddhism and War
After reviewing some of the old discussion, I want to ask a follow up:
Many people said they might be willing to participate in the war as a doctor or in a similar role that does not require actual fighting. So those people, do you expect others to do the fighting for you?
I don't like the trend I see in Buddhism that allows for "passing the karmic buck" onto other people. For instance,
1. Not killing animals but still eating the meat
2. Monks asking lay people to cut into seeds, dig soil, etc.
3. And in this case allowing others to fight for one
It just seems karmically selfish, so to speak. If you want those things done, why not just accept the consequences of doing them yourself?
Many people said they might be willing to participate in the war as a doctor or in a similar role that does not require actual fighting. So those people, do you expect others to do the fighting for you?
I don't like the trend I see in Buddhism that allows for "passing the karmic buck" onto other people. For instance,
1. Not killing animals but still eating the meat
2. Monks asking lay people to cut into seeds, dig soil, etc.
3. And in this case allowing others to fight for one
It just seems karmically selfish, so to speak. If you want those things done, why not just accept the consequences of doing them yourself?
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Re: Buddhism and War
It's not a "trend" — the Dhamma has always been the same, and will never change.kmath wrote:I don't like the trend I see in Buddhism that allows for "passing the karmic buck" onto other people. For instance,
1. Not killing animals but still eating the meat
2. Monks asking lay people to cut into seeds, dig soil, etc.
3. And in this case allowing others to fight for one
It just seems karmically selfish, so to speak. If you want those things done, why not just accept the consequences of doing them yourself?
If you urge others to do killing on your behalf, then you share in the kamma. However, if others kill for the sake of their own livelihood, without your wish or in spite of your wish, then that is their kamma, and you have nothing to do with it.
Monks are not permitted to ask lay people to cut seeds, dig soil, etc. They can only say that they need a foundation or a cesspit, or they can ask fruits to be made allowable for monks. Lay people don't have to follow the Vinaya rule regarding digging soil or eating fruit with seeds, which were only made to placate Jains who believed that soil and seeds were alive.
If there is a war, Buddhists can be medics or fire-fighters striving to protect life and property, not to destroy it. That way, they will make wholesome kamma.
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Re: Buddhism and War
This is a good answer to the questions I had about monksBhikkhu Pesala wrote: Monks are not permitted to ask lay people to cut seeds, dig soil, etc. They can only say that they need a foundation or a cesspit, or they can ask fruits to be made allowable for monks. Lay people don't have to follow the Vinaya rule regarding digging soil or eating fruit with seeds, which were only made to placate Jains who believed that soil and seeds were alive.
Re: Buddhism and War
Perhaps "tendency" is a better word choice.Bhikkhu Pesala wrote: It's not a "trend" — the Dhamma has always been the same, and will never change.
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Re: Buddhism and War
Actually, I agree with most of what you have wrote. The exception is for monks and nuns, as Ven. Pesala pointed out. The monastics are held to a higher standard and have 227 and 311 precepts. Lay people have 5 and then 8 on uposatha days.kmath wrote: I don't like the trend I see in Buddhism that allows for "passing the karmic buck" onto other people. For instance,
1. Not killing animals but still eating the meat
2. Monks asking lay people to cut into seeds, dig soil, etc.
3. And in this case allowing others to fight for one
It just seems karmically selfish, so to speak. If you want those things done, why not just accept the consequences of doing them yourself?
However, a good test of a formulation (see Immanuel Kant's first law) is to test if it were universal and applied to everyone. What if everyone were Buddhist? Who would man the slaughter-houses? So at least in my opinion, a vegetarian diet is at least an ideal form since no one would be able to eat meat if everyone were Buddhist.
And it is similarly the case with self-defense. Often we hear Buddhists say that they wouldn't defend themselves, that they would use the saw simile or call the police. But isn't calling the police approving of their actions? I am not suggesting or recommending anyone to take action on their own, but just noting that you cannot really complain about people who do defend themselves when you approve of police doing their work to defend you. Again, what if everyone were Buddhist? Who would be the police officers?
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Re: Buddhism and War
If everyone were observing the five precepts, regardless of what label you gave them, no one could eat meat or fish, apart from road-kill. However, that is never going to happen, and it doesn't change the fact that mental defilements are stench, not the eating of meat. Nor does it mean that eating meat equates to killing living beings by proxy.David N. Snyder wrote:What if everyone were Buddhist? Who would man the slaughter-houses? So at least in my opinion, a vegetarian diet is at least an ideal form since no one would be able to eat meat if everyone were Buddhist.
That depends on what the police do. If someone is threatening to burn your house down, or to beat you up, the right thing to do is to call the police rather than taking the law into your own hands, or meekly surrendering to your fate. If they shoot the criminal while trying to arrest him, that is not your kamma just because you called the police. That was never your intention. You have every right to defend yourself, and if criminal actions are involved, it's best to let the professionals do it. Would you carry out surgery on your family members without calling a doctor?David N. Snyder wrote:Isn't calling the police approving of their actions?
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Re: Buddhism and War
Greetings Bhante, according to DN 26 ( http://tipitaka.wikia.com/wiki/Cakkavattisihanada_Sutta ), it could happen. It talks about a possible future which the Ten Wholesome Deeds will disappear and people will become so evil that they start killing off one another like "wild beasts" until only a few survive. At this point those few surviving humans will begin to live virtuous life again. Will it happen? Well, it's up to each and everyone of us to decide the kind of future we'll live in..Bhikkhu Pesala wrote: If everyone were observing the five precepts, regardless of what label you gave them, no one could eat meat or fish, apart from road-kill. However, that is never going to happen..
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Re: Buddhism and War
No, it will never happen that everyone on earth will avoid killing. Even during the most auspicious time of the Buddha it did not happen, and it won't happen in the time of Maitreyya Buddha either. If everyone was already at least a Stream-winner, there would be nothing much left for a Buddha to do by way of teaching the Dhamma.santa100 wrote:Will it happen? Well, it's up to each and everyone of us to decide the kind of future we'll live in.
What we do does indeed alter our future, and it also has some influence on those around us, but we have to live in the real world, which will always be an imperfect place.
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Re: Buddhism and War
Thank you for the harsh reality Bhante..
How about that pristine time when those Abhassara beings were reborn into our world with subtle and luminous bodies? Is it safe to say that there was no killing at least at that time? (DN 27 http://tipitaka.wikia.com/wiki/Agganna_Sutta )
How about that pristine time when those Abhassara beings were reborn into our world with subtle and luminous bodies? Is it safe to say that there was no killing at least at that time? (DN 27 http://tipitaka.wikia.com/wiki/Agganna_Sutta )
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Re: Buddhism and War
The Abhassara devas are celestial beings, not human beings, and if they were reborn on this world after they deceased from the Abhassara realms "with subtle and luminous bodies" they would not be human beings either, not by any sense of that term.
By the time that those beings evolved into human beings with males and females, indulging in sexual intercourse, then they might be called human beings, and there might be no killing at that time.
Such hypothetical scenarios based on the Aggañña Sutta are not the reality that we have to live with in this life, nor your descendants.
By the time that those beings evolved into human beings with males and females, indulging in sexual intercourse, then they might be called human beings, and there might be no killing at that time.
Such hypothetical scenarios based on the Aggañña Sutta are not the reality that we have to live with in this life, nor your descendants.
Blog • Pāli Fonts • In This Very Life • Buddhist Chronicles • Software (Upasampadā: 24th June, 1979)
Re: Buddhism and War
Wow, first it's the sexual indulgence, then the stealing, lying, and killing,.. those Abhassarans had no idea what they've evolved into..Bhikkhu Pesala wrote: By the time that those beings evolved into human beings with males and females, indulging in sexual intercourse, then they might be called human beings, and there might be no killing at that time.
Re: Buddhism and War
Getting the Message http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth ... ssage.htmlkmath wrote:There's a number of "Just War" theories out there and I wonder if people subscribe to any of them. Or if by undertaking the fifth precept, are you a strict pacifist? I'm curious to hear anyone's thoughts on the matter.
Thanks,
KM
Excerpt:
A professional soldier once went to the Buddha and said that his teachers had taught the existence of a heaven awaiting soldiers who die in battle. What did the Buddha have to say about that? At first the Buddha declined to answer, but when the soldier showed the sincerity of his question by pressing him three times for a response, he finally replied:
"When a warrior strives & exerts himself in battle, his mind is already seized, debased, & misdirected by the thought: 'May these beings be struck down or slaughtered or annihilated or destroyed. May they not exist': If others then strike him down & slay him while he is thus striving & exerting himself in battle, then with the breakup of the body, after death, he is reborn in the hell called the realm of those slain in battle. But if he holds such a view as this: 'When a warrior strives & exerts himself in battle, if others then strike him down & slay him while he is striving & exerting himself in battle, then with the breakup of the body, after death, he is reborn in the company of devas slain in battle,' that is his wrong view. Now, there are two destinations for a person with wrong view, I tell you: either hell or the animal womb."
-SN 42.3
"He, the Blessed One, is indeed the Noble Lord, the Perfectly Enlightened One;
He is impeccable in conduct and understanding, the Serene One, the Knower of the Worlds;
He trains perfectly those who wish to be trained; he is Teacher of gods and men; he is Awake and Holy. "
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"The Dhamma is well-expounded by the Blessed One,
Apparent here and now, timeless, encouraging investigation,
Leading to liberation, to be experienced individually by the wise. "
He is impeccable in conduct and understanding, the Serene One, the Knower of the Worlds;
He trains perfectly those who wish to be trained; he is Teacher of gods and men; he is Awake and Holy. "
--------------------------------------------
"The Dhamma is well-expounded by the Blessed One,
Apparent here and now, timeless, encouraging investigation,
Leading to liberation, to be experienced individually by the wise. "