Transcript Buddhism
Buddhism
One Man’s Journey to
Enlightenment
Who, What, Why?
Siddhartha
Gautama was the founder of
Buddhism
He was raised Hindu and was the son of a
local ruler (extremely wealthy)
Lived a sheltered life; unaware of other
people’s sorrow
– He never knew that other people were unlike him
An “Eye-Opening” Experience
Siddhartha
eventually left his palace and
saw what the real world was like.
– He saw old age, sickness, and death…for the
first time!
He
now asked a very important question:
Why is there suffering?
– He then goes out in search of the answer.
Seeking Answers
Siddartha
followed the traditional Hindu path
to find the answers he was looking for.
– He fasted and meditated for long periods of
time…until he got his answers.
He
became Enlightened: he now knew the
cause of suffering and he knew the cure.
– He became the Buddha
• “The Enlightened One”
His Explanations
Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path
Four Noble Truths:
1. Suffering is Universal
2. Cause of suffering is desire
- When you get what you desire, you then
want something else
3. Only way to end suffering is to crush desire
- Nirvana = condition of wanting nothing
Buddhist’s ultimate goal
4. Follow the Eightfold Path
Eightfold Path
Right views
Right speech
Right intentions
Right action
Right effort
Right mindfulness
Right concentration
Right living
Relation to Hinduism
Buddha
saw himself as a Hindu
However, he did not like all Hindu beliefs
1. Multiple Gods
2. Importance/Power of priests
3. Caste System
Spread of Buddhism
After
the Buddha’s death, his followers
passed on his teachings by word of mouth
Later, his ideas were written down in the
“Three Baskets of Wisdom”
Buddhism spread quickly through South
Asia and then on to East Asia
Two Main Sects
Main
“sects” of Buddhism develop
– Subgroups of a religion
Theravada Buddhists
– Saw Buddha as a great teacher, not a god
– Stressed monastic life as the way to reach nirvana
– Popular in Sri Lanka, Burma, and Thailand
Mahayana
Buddhists
– Followers worship the Buddha as a god
– Became popular in China, Korea, and Japan.
The Spread of Buddhism
Buddha Statue in China
Different Representations of the
Buddha
Buddhist Monks