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Impermenant and Forever

MonkeyFire

Well-Known Member
Is impermenance the opposite of eternal life? Why would the Buddha believe in this, since he's sublime and all? What exactly is impeemenance?
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Is impermenance the opposite of eternal life? Why would the Buddha believe in this, since he's sublime and all? What exactly is impeemenance?
That nothing stays the same. Forms rise and fall, atoms can be destroyed and made, molecules come together and separate. Points of Origins that no longer can be traced through the process of change giving way to new points of origin.

Realizing that dualistic ways of thinking as Illustrated above that does not actually add or take away the state by which things in phenomena rise and fall. An ever-present eternal now by which time never has or had a true beginning or end.
 

crossfire

LHP Mercuræn Feminist Heretic ☿
Premium Member
Is impermenance the opposite of eternal life? Why would the Buddha believe in this, since he's sublime and all? What exactly is impeemenance?
The word anicca is the negative of the word nicca. Nicca means constant, reliable, permanent, so anicca means not constant, not reliable, not permanent, subject to change. Anicca is therefore related to uncertainty, which is agnostic, not gnostic, unlike the more gnostic or faith based concept of eternal life. You really can't say it is opposite.
 

Unveiled Artist

Veteran Member
Is impermenance the opposite of eternal life? Why would the Buddha believe in this, since he's sublime and all? What exactly is impeemenance?

The Buddha said that what is eternal is not subject to change. He taught that everything changes (everything is impermanent) therefore, nothing is eternal or permanent.

He believes this because he experienced the nature of suffering and cause. Defining it as once one is born, they are in a process of dying. He tried to understand this through Hindu practices. That was not satisfying him enough because he felt Brahma is permanent and he saw life in constant transition. The eternal nature, he found, was a contradiction of the nature of life and humanity within it.

Impermanence: What is in constant change. Samsara. (Opposite of permanence)
 

MonkeyFire

Well-Known Member
Fluctuation must be iermanent creating paradox for impermenance. Impermenance itself can not change.
 

Aupmanyav

Be your own guru
Fluctuation must be permanent creating paradox for impermanance. Impermanance itself can not change.
You are absolutely right. That is one thing which is permanent. It is the property of what exists (in Hinduism, Brahman). Change every Planck's instant, 5.39 seconds raised to -44 power of ten (forum does not have the facility of superscript) or even quicker (the time period that we are not aware of) - virtual particles.

But what exists cannot be said to change. Because it is its permanent property to change. It would have been a change if it stopped doing that even for a Planck's instant. Therefore, what exists is changeless, and probably eternal.

Why probably eternal, because it exists in two forms - existence and non-existence, which are just phases of each other. Even existence is not permanent. It fluctuates unperceptibly with non-existence. This is the quantum theory of existence. I think, Buddha, my guru, understood it clearly.
 

Aupmanyav

Be your own guru
Maybe, maybe not.
That is Jainism - Anekantavada. :D
  1. Affirmation: syād-asti—in some ways, it is,
  2. Denial: syān-nāsti—in some ways, it is not,
  3. Joint but successive affirmation and denial: syād-asti-nāsti—in some ways, it is, and it is not,
  4. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syād-asti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is, and it is indescribable,
  5. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syān-nāsti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is not, and it is indescribable,
  6. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syād-asti-nāsti-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is, it is not, and it is indescribable,
  7. Joint and simultaneous affirmation and denial: syād-avaktavyaḥ—in some ways, it is indescribable.
Anekantavada - Wikipedia
 
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