![]() Seeing the emptiness here does not negate anything in the world, but it does radically alter how we interact with the world. Surely the reality of how we actually experience the world should never be ignored, for it is in the tasting that proof of the pudding is to be known, not in thinking about it. ![]() ![]() This text suggests that you consider yourself fully enlightened - are you? If not, then what you have written is merely belief or philosophy, and not 'real' experience. You also wrote: "good and evil are dissolved in nirvana or they are beynd good and evil because one author said nirvana in the end is beyond good and evil even contradictions reconciled." The delusion is in our egotistic experience of the world, not the world itself, as your comment suggests. He taught that our experience of the world is not accurate, not that everything is a delusion. What is not real? The world or our perceptions of it? If you are writing that the world is not real, that's not exactly what the Buddha taught (according to the Pali Canon). You wrote: "we people think the world is real thats why all evil dualism comes into being also reincarnation.i think people madly gives realness to something that is not real in the first place."
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