Practicing the Eightfold Path
Practicing the Eightfold Path
A dharma talk by Danielle MacCartney
Practicing the Eightfold Path
A dharma talk by Danielle MacCartney
The Eightfold Path
A dharma talk by Danielle MacCartney
Pragmatic Buddhism is an empirically informed action plan to cultivate skillful living and increase human flourishing for all living beings.
The Three Characteristics of Existence: Impermanence
A dharma talk by Danielle MacCartney
“The flower bloomed and faded. The sun rose and sank. The lover loved and went. And what the poets said in rhyme, the young translated into practice.”
― Virginia Woolf, Orlando
Enlightenment?
Belief in strict determinism or in chaotic indeterminism, whether it be in ontology or in human behavior, was considered by the Buddha and [Willam] James to be inimical to the conception of human freedom (88). -David J. Kalupahana in The Principles of Buddhist Psychology
Enlightenment?
Belief in strict determinism or in chaotic indeterminism, whether it be in ontology or in human behavior, was considered by the Buddha and [Willam] James to be inimical to the conception of human freedom (88). -David J. Kalupahana in The Principles of Buddhist Psychology
Ritual, called “intentional practices” in Pragmatic Buddhism, is centered on intention of mind. “Intent” employed during Pragmatic Buddhist ritual cultivates mindfulness and empowers the participants through their experienced loss of self during the ritual acts. The ego-self (the “me”) is disseminated into the ritual experience, so that a holistic, undivided experience characterizes the ritual act. What we mean here is that by ”getting out of our own way” during the ritual acts, we open ourselves up to the harmonizing effects the rituals have on us.
In conversation a few weeks ago, the comment was made to me, "I don't understand the whole Pragmatic Buddhism thing." What followed was a well-intended discussion about the necessity of a synthesis of Eastern and Western thought, and what you would lose by doing so. "They're just too messy," I was told. And I get that...to a point.