movingalways wrote:cahoot: I see your confusion.
You’re trying hard to define bliss as a fleeting feeling on spiritual par with getting a surprise cookie in your lunch.
Bliss has no authority? What a strange expression.
Old U.G. was an ornery little cuss not much interested in buttering up egos. Men like that are often misunderstood.
(Your link didn’t work. Try this one.)
http://buddhism.about.com/od/abuddhistg ... anadef.htm
I see your confusion. You're trying hard to see my definition of bliss as a fleeting feeling on spiritual par with getting a surprise cookie in my lunch. :-) If by bliss and peace you are referring to this brief wiki definition of nirvana: "the word literally means "blown out" (as in a candle) and refers, in the Buddhist context, to the imperturbable stillness of mind after the fires of desire, aversion, and delusion have been finally extinguished", then I agree, nirvana is bliss and peace.
My connection of bliss to the comings and goings of the feeling state is in response to Dennis' generation of bliss as mood. Can you show me specifically, in one of the Buddha's suttas where he speaks of Nirvana as being a state of bliss and peace?
Sure, for you and Dennis I exhumed Buddha and activated Google. Whew.
My approach when I was approaching was self-enquiry rather than
Buddhist dharama study, though in the past decade I've read a bit here and there to gain a vocabulary to conceptualize into language what I've realized.
What do you know. There is a fleeting cookie Nirvana, the coming and the going of the feeling state.
"What is Nirvana? This is as when one who is hungry has peace and bliss after he has
Taken a little food. Such ease and bliss is also called Nirvana. It is as when an illness is cured, the
person gains peace and bliss. Such peace and bliss are also Nirvana. This is as when a person
with fear gains peace and bliss on reaching a refuge. Such peace and bliss are also Nirvana.
When a poor person obtains the seven jewels, he gains peace and bliss. Such peace and bliss
are also Nirvana. A person sees a bone and gains no greed. And this, too, is Nirvana."
"Such Nirvana cannot be termed" Great Nirvana". Why not? Because of the greed that
raises its head through hunger, illness, fear, or poverty. That is why we say that such Nirvana
is not Great Nirvana.
"The All-Buddha-Tathagata enters Nirvana. The nature of Nirvana has no Self, and no
Bliss; what there is is that which is Eternal and True. Thus, we speak of the retaining taints of
defilement. In the Buddhist doctrine and in the Buddhist Sangha are phases of discrimination;
the Tathagata ultimately enters Nirvana. “The Nirvana of sravakas, pratyekabuddhas, and the
All-Buddha-Tathagataisall-equal,without any difference. For this reason, what the two vehicles
gain is not Great Nirvana. Why not? Because there are not there the Eternal, Bliss, Self, and
the Pure. When there exist the Eternal, Bliss, the Self, and the Pure, we can speak of Great
Nirvana”.
The Mahaparinirvana Sutra
Chapter 29
http://search.yahoo.com/r/_ylt=A0oG7mj_ ... e_2007.pdf