Jay Forrest On Secular Buddhism show

Jay Forrest On Secular Buddhism

Summary: Secular Buddhism is Buddhism without karma, rebirth, or other metaphysical claims. It is about awakening, transformation, and flourishing in this one life.

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 What is Secular Buddhism? (Podcast) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 11:24

What is Secular Buddhism? Secular Buddhism is Buddhism without karma, rebirth, Nirvana, or other metaphysical claims. It is about awakening, transformation, and flourishing in this one life. Secular Buddhism accepts the Four Noble Truths, the Eightfold Noble Path, and the Three Marks of Existence.

 019 Goodbye | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 13:16

I am going on a long sabbatical in order to write my next book. I am guessing it will take me a year or so. I need complete dedication and focus, so I am ending the podcast today. This is my last episode. But I give hints of what's to come. To stay connected, check back in June, or December 2020, and see if things have changed. Also bookmark Bodhidaoism.com. When I come back, fate willing, I will be using that domain. I need to decrease while Bodhidaoism increases. Thank you!

 018 Martin Heidegger and Dasein | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 13:27

Being and Time by Martin Heidegger is, in the words of William Large, "probable one of the most important books written in the twentieth century" (1). It influenced not only existentialism, but the whole of contentential philosophy. One of Heidegger's main concepts is Dasein. Dasein is Heidegger's "word for human existence.... which describes the way in which human beings are rather than what they are" (Large 109-110). I would translated Dasein into English as "human beingness." Reference Large, William (2008) Heidegger's Being and Time. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.

 017 Thomas Aquinas and God | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:43

Thomas Aquinas' idea of God being necessary is false. The Cosmos alone has no cause, needs no cause. The Cosmos alone exists, from within rather than from without, by its essence rather than a cause. This only the Cosmos as a whole is necessary, everything else is contingent might-not-have been. And only the cosmos is eternal, everything else within it has a beginning. Reference Kreeft, Peter (2014) Practical Theology: Spiritual Direction from saint Thomas Aquinas. San Francisco: Ignatius Press.

 016 The Jay Michaelson Interview Part 2 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 28:29

In this episode we talk to Jay Michaelson about Bodhidaoism and Point 6 of the Naksha, which reads: "The Cosmos is Divine, being all there is or was or ever will be. We call the Cosmos the Divine because it is our mother, our sustainer, and the source of awe, reverence, and wonder. The word Divine is simply the metaphor we use to speak of the mystery of existence and the deeper significance of our interdependence with the Cosmos. For us, Nature is sacred." Jay Michaelson is a Rabbi, meditation teacher, and author who writes on law, religion, Judaism, and LGBT issues. Michaelson is legal affairs and religion columnist at The Daily Beast. Links Enlightenment by Trial and Error Jay Michaelson's Website

 015 The Jay Michaelson Interview Part 1 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 29:49

In this episode we talk to Jay Michaelson about his new book Enlightenment by Trial and Error: Ten Years on the Slippery Slopes of Jewish Spirituality, Postmodern Buddhism, and other Heresies. Jay Michaelson is a Rabbi, meditation teacher, and author who writes on law, religion, Judaism, and LGBT issues. Michaelson is legal affairs and religion columnist at The Daily Beast. Links Enlightenment by Trial and Error Jay Michaelson's Website

 014 Naturalistic Pantheism | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 11:58

"The Cosmos is Divine, being all there is or was or ever will be. We call the Cosmos the Divine because it is our mother, our sustainer, and the source of awe, reverence, and wonder. The word Divine is simply the metaphor we use to speak of the mystery of existence and the deeper significance of our interdependence with the Cosmos. For us, Nature is sacred" (Naksha 6).

 013 The John Vervaeke Interview | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:10:02

In this interview I discuss Bodhidaoism and the meaning crisis with John Vervaeke. John Vervaek is a professor at University of Toronto, he holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy and a B.Sc. in Cognitive Science. His areas of specialty are Cognitive Science, Cognitive Psychology, Developmental Psychology, and Positive Psychology. He is best know for his YouTube series on the meaning crisis. Links John Vervaeke's Website John Vervaeke's YouTube Channel

 012 Bodhidaoism Explained | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 50:04

Bodhidaoism is the way of awakening. It is a personal religion for the solitary practitioner that is based on scientific naturalism. Scientific naturalism is the view that, based on the evidence, the natural world is all there is, and science is the best means of knowing this world. A creator God, the supernatural, and a personal afterlife are all beliefs rejected by scientific naturalism, and hence, are not a part of Bodhidaoism. (Naksha, Point 1). Naksha http://bodhidaoism.com/Naksha/

 011 The George Kinder Interview | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 36:18

Internationally recognized as the father of the Life Planning movement, the Harvard-educated George Kinder revolutionized financial advice for over 30 years by training over 3,000 professionals in 30 countries in the field of financial Life Planning. In his new book, A Golden Civilization and The Map of Mindfulness, Kinder draws on 50 years as a mindfulness practitioner, over 30 years as a mindfulness teacher, and his experience training financial advisors globally to challenge the basic concepts of economics, our understanding of democracy, of space-time, and our own hearts. His objective is to bring greater levels of freedom everywhere. Links The Kinder Institute of Life Planning A Golden Civilization and The Map of Mindfulness

 010 Vegetarianism Not Required | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:14

The Summa Sophia said that a "vegetarian diet is required" for Bodhidaoists. But as of October 1, 2019, this is no longer the case. I would rather inspire people with my life than drive them by decree. I want people to become vegetarians because they believe it is right, not because I say so. Without this inner motivation nothing of lasting value will be accomplished. All this and more is in the new book: Secular Spirituality. Reference Naksha. http://bodhidaoism.com/Naksha/

 009 Understanding Nonattachment | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 12:37

Attachment is clinging to or grasping unto something or someone. Nonattachment is not clinging to or grasping unto something or someone. It is not detachment, which separates and closes off a person from reality. It is about staying connected to reality but not clinging to it. We can be connected to someone without being attached to them.

 008 Two Kinds of Religion | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:58

The sociology of religion focuses on the social aspects of religion. Emile Durkheim is a good example of this. There are two basic structures for religion, a disciple centered religion and a community centered religion. Christianity, as well as Daoism, began as a teacher disciple centered religion and evolved into a community centered religion. Stoicism stayed a disciple centered religion until it died out.

 007 Phenomenology | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 20:13

Phenomenology is the study of phenomena. Not a very insightful definition. My own definition is that phenomenology is the study of subjective experience. Edmund Husserl is considered the father of phenomenology. This is true in the West, but the study of subjective experience has a long history in India and china. Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre are probable the best know phenomenologists.

 006 Stoicism 101 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 16:32

This is an introduction to Stoicism. Stoicism was started by Zeno of Citium in about 300 BCE, in the city of Athens. Zeno was originally a student of the Cynic Crates, who was a student of Diogenes, who was a student of Antisthenes, who was a student of Socrates. Stoicism has a direct line of decent from Socrates.

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