In
the previous posting, MOVING TARGET: A
SHORT STORY, the person states that spirituality, for him at least, is a moving
target. In point of fact, it is a moving
target for everyone. Indeed, there is
nothing that is not a moving target.
This
transience, so-called, is the source of all suffering in the world, according
to Buddhism. Vedanta is more optimistic,
contending that transience makes us yearn for what is not transient, which is
God. It motivates us to seek God, which
Vedanta teaches is the purpose of life.
We
are, at the same time, under the illusion, called Maya, that nothing is moving,
or at least we don’t pay attention to the movement.
Our
believing that nothing is moving means that there are static, permanent things,
including ourselves, which, of course, is not true. We point to things as if they were
unchanging, saying, “it,” “this,” “there.”
We give ourselves a name, Joe Smith, Mary Jones, as if we were one constant
thing.
There
is the argument by the Sixth century Greek philosopher Parmenides that the
appearance of movement is just that, an appearance. Movement is limited to the relative world and
does not exist ultimately. The trouble
is, we do not live in the ultimate world, so we are stuck with movement.
Movement
began with the Big Bang. The good news
is that there is such a thing as death, presumably the end of movement. The bad news is that death leads to other
things, to reincarnation for one, which means still more movement. Relief is nowhere in sight.
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