Walker wrote: ↑Thu Jun 18, 2026 1:32 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jun 18, 2026 1:28 am
Walker wrote: ↑Thu Jun 18, 2026 1:03 am
Buddhism is far more rational, and the "there" in the question was about rationality.
Buddhism is definitely not more rational. It's substantially less so. It doesn't even pretend to be.
Buddhism has vehicles of teaching for all capacities...
It's true there's a number of different Buddhist sects. As with any group, they cannot all be right, insofar as they contradict each other.
Theravadas, for example, sometimes insist they believe in no gods and no spirits. Tibetan Buddhism and the various folk Buddhisms, on the other hand, believe in gods and spirits of various kinds...demons, really. Only one of the two, at most, can be right. Either there's no such thing as a god, a spirit or a demon, or there is. Either way, one is off track, and both will tell you it's the other one.
The same happens in all "religions" and ideologies, considered at their broadest level; they contradict other belief systems, and they contradict each other. So the option of thinking they are all the same route to the same ends isn't really rationally possible. So to say, as a blanket statement, that "all Buddhisms are rational" is impossible.
Inasmuch as they deny essential elements of each other, rationality itself makes that irrational to suppose.