The Religions Book

(ff) #1

133


lifestyle was incompatible with his
growing awareness of life’s hardships
and the certainty of death. In
addition, material comforts offered
no protection from these harsh
realities of life. So he embarked on
a religious quest to find the origin
of suffering, and the answer to it.
For seven years he practiced
severe asceticism, depriving
himself of all but the minimum
sustenance, but he found that this
did not help him find the knowledge
he sought. He therefore abandoned
the ascetic life, while remaining
determined to discover the cause
of suffering. He is said to have
gained enlightenment (becoming
aware of the true nature of reality)
during an all-night session of
meditation, and this gave him an
answer to the problems of suffering,
aging, and death. From that point
his followers were to refer to him as
Buddha, an honorary title meaning
one who is fully awake or the
enlightened one.


The Middle Way
Buddha’s teaching is known as
the Middle Way. At the most
obvious level, this suggests a
middle way between the two types
of existence that he rejected: the
life of luxury, attempting to obtain
protection from suffering with
material comforts, and that of
extreme austerity, denying himself
almost everything in pursuit of
spiritual growth. The approach or
way he found involved a moderate
amount of discipline in order to live
an ethical life, free from indulgence
in either sensual pleasures or self-
mortification. But Buddha’s Middle
Way is also set between two other
extremes: eternalism (where a
person’s spirit has purpose and


lives forever) and nihilism (extreme
skepticism in which the value or
meaningfulness of everything in
life is denied).

Eternalism and nihilism
The Vedic religion, particularly as
it was developed in the texts
known as the Upanishads (p.105),
argued that the true self of every
person is the atman, which is
eternal and is reincarnated from life
to life. The atman is linked to the
physical body only temporarily, and
is essentially independent of it.
Crucially, the Vedic religion
identified this atman with
Brahman, the fundamental divine
reality that underlies everything.
Ordinary things in the world (such
as trees, animals, and rocks) are an
illusion, known as maya; truth and

reality are to be found beyond these
physical things. When Buddha
rejected the eternal nature of the
self, he was rejecting a key feature
of Hindu thought and religion.
Buddha also rejected the other
extreme—nihilism, which holds
that ultimately nothing matters
or has any value. Nihilism can
be expressed in two ways, both
of which were practiced during
Buddha’s lifetime. One way is
the path of asceticism: purifying
the body by the harshest austerity
possible, and rejecting everything
that the worldly consider to be
of value. This was the path that
Buddha had attempted and found
wanting. The other way of living
out nihilistic beliefs was that taken
up in India by followers of the
unorthodox Lokayata school of ❯❯

See also: Aligning the self with the dao 66–67 ■ Self-denial leads to spiritual liberation 68–71 ■ Wisdom lies with the
superior man 72–77 ■ A rational world 92–99 ■ A faith open to all beliefs 321


BUDDHISM


However many material comforts I bring into my life, they
cannot protect me from the pain of suffering.

The total denial of material comforts and a life of asceticism
does not protect me from suffering either.

Each person needs to find a balanced, moderately disciplined
lifestyle that takes account of their individual circumstances.

Find the Middle Way.

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