FortuneChildBooks.com--Nichiren Buddhism--Soka Gakkai

A Buddhist Dialogue with Science
By
Timothy Harada

Timothy Harada

Here is one way of looking at the 6th and 7th factors of life in relation to human feelings.  All humans have the inherent tendency for the feelings of love, hate and many other emotions; these are all inherent causes (or internal causes).  However, without someone in our environment to stir our feeling of love or hate, we could never manifest those feelings.  Therefore we need a relation (an external cause) to allow us to manifest our internal cause.  There is symmetry in these attractions; there is consistency from beginning to end.  However much a person stimulates another to feel love or hate, that person will manifest those feeling to that degree.  

From these few examples of the similarity of concepts between Buddhism and science, one can see that both Buddhism and science have a lot to offer each other-to push each other to new ways of viewing reality.  There are many more similarities, such as the Buddhist concept of the 10 worlds and its relationship to psychology and brain chemistry, and probably even other similarities that I am not yet aware of, nor far too many to detail in this short paper.  Hopefully, as science progresses and the study of Buddhism progresses, each will continue offering complimentary perspectives to the other, and hopefully a richer dialogue will emerge from the study of both.  If science is to progress quicker, it must be open to alternative views of reality.  In addition, if the understanding of Buddhism is to progress, and if Buddhists are to become more enlightened, they must constantly challenge their views of reality, by comparing them with the views of science. END

The views expressed in Mr. Harada's article are his 
and not necessarily those of the publisher or editors of FortuneChildBooks.com.

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Timothy Harada is a Southern California based, Native American, singer, songwriter, saxophonist, guitarist, pianist, novelist, writer, Buddhist and activist. He wrote this paper as his final in his Physics class during his senior year at Soka University of America, 2005.  It appears in his Collected Writings From Soka University of America , Volume 2. Harada is currently in self-imposed exile in Japan. Visit his website at timharada.com

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End Notes  

(1) http://etherbods.com/study/q-and-a/question16.shtml  

References

Chopra, Deepak.  Ageless Body, Timeless Mind: The Quantum Alternative to Growing Old.  Harmony Books.  New York.  1993.

Great Dialogues of Plato. Tr. W.H.D.Rouse. Signet Classics.  1999

Ikeda, Daisaku.  Buddhism and the Cosmos: Daisaku Ikeda in Conversation with Masayoshi Kiguchi and Eiichi Shimura.  Macdonald.  London.  1985.

Lectures on the Sutra.  Trans. Editorial Department. Nichiren Shoshu International Center. Japan.  1984.

The Lotus Sutra.  Trans. Burton Watson.  Columbia University Press.  1993. 

Robbins, Anthony.  Unlimited Power: The New Science of Personal Achievement.
Simon & Schuster.  New York.  1997

The views expressed in Mr. Harada's article are his 
and not necessarily those of the publisher or editors of FortuneChildBooks.com.

HOME   BACK   PAGE 1