Dear All,
Let us finish David Loy's short book this week (We will spend a couple of weeks with it to let folks catch up).
Remember too, our special Zazenkai with David this Sunday ...
ATTENTION: Special Zazenkai with DAVID LOY
For our readings this time, what are your impressions of David's Buddhist perspectives on many of our economic and environmental problems? Do you agree that we need more than social reforms alone (assuming that you believe so), that we need various kinds of inner reform? Is much of the problem due to our constant feelings of lack and inability to be satisfied? Are we looking for happiness and contentment in many of the wrong places? Are we confusing means and ends in our constant rush to technological and economic growth?
What do you think about David's proposal for a kind of "social and ecological Bodhisattva"?
Do you think that David salvages or makes relevant the ideas of Karma and Rebirth for contemporary times? Can we see Karma through the proposition that "Karma is better understood as the simple - although not necessarily easy - key to personal transformation: my life situation can be transformed by reforming what motivates my actions right now, and by making those volitions habitual ... the important point is that they can be changed"
What do you think about his various ways of looking at rebirth? Is he correct to raise various possibilities and speculations, but leave it all an open question?
Finally, any impression of the book as a whole? For a small book, it covered a variety of topics.
Gassho, J
SatToday
Let us finish David Loy's short book this week (We will spend a couple of weeks with it to let folks catch up).
Remember too, our special Zazenkai with David this Sunday ...
ATTENTION: Special Zazenkai with DAVID LOY
For our readings this time, what are your impressions of David's Buddhist perspectives on many of our economic and environmental problems? Do you agree that we need more than social reforms alone (assuming that you believe so), that we need various kinds of inner reform? Is much of the problem due to our constant feelings of lack and inability to be satisfied? Are we looking for happiness and contentment in many of the wrong places? Are we confusing means and ends in our constant rush to technological and economic growth?
What do you think about David's proposal for a kind of "social and ecological Bodhisattva"?
Do you think that David salvages or makes relevant the ideas of Karma and Rebirth for contemporary times? Can we see Karma through the proposition that "Karma is better understood as the simple - although not necessarily easy - key to personal transformation: my life situation can be transformed by reforming what motivates my actions right now, and by making those volitions habitual ... the important point is that they can be changed"
What do you think about his various ways of looking at rebirth? Is he correct to raise various possibilities and speculations, but leave it all an open question?
Finally, any impression of the book as a whole? For a small book, it covered a variety of topics.
Gassho, J
SatToday
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