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I have tried to understand the 'historical Krishna' and become confused and unclear. I leave it at that as those things are not central to what is important to me in Hinduism.It was suggested in another thread that Hindu and Buddhist scriptures may not accurately reflect the lives of Buddha and Krishna.
I am interested in hearing specifically what scriptures and what parts of these scriptures the denizens of RF feel are flawed or inaccurate with regard to the lives of these two avatara.
Thanks. Why am I not surprised?
It was suggested in another thread that Hindu and Buddhist scriptures may not accurately reflect the lives of Buddha and Krishna.
I am interested in hearing specifically what scriptures and what parts of these scriptures the denizens of RF feel are flawed or inaccurate with regard to the lives of these two avatara.
Do you think Krishna existed, outside of Hindu scriptures?
I don't understand how this question is relevant to this discussion, but yes, I do.
Its because you are talking about the Buddhist and Hindu Scriptures being accurate.
Mhm. And?
I agree that Buddha existed, but not Krishna.
Thank you for your contribution.
Do you agree that Buddha existed?
Yes.
I think the reliability of oral transmission might depend on the culture it's transmitted within. Some predominantly oral cultures took extraordinary care to preserve unaltered their oral heritage.
Of all the oral traditions I've heard of, the one that most impresses me is a group of people who now live in India, but who apparently migrated to India at some distant point in the past from what is now southeastern Iraq. There's litany they recite in their temples that seems to date back to the Sumerians.
Here's the interesting part: The people in question do not know the meaning of the words they recite. They just recite them. But they have so well preserved the words that a few decades ago, scholars were able to match them to a clay tablet written in Sumerian thousands of years earlier. The people are reciting a homage to the goddess Inanna, who they no longer worship today.
I have no doubt about the great effort and care some cultures have taken to preserve their sacred scriptures, the Jews for example. The volume of scriptures would of course present an enormous challenge. The Chinese Canon is estimated be 80,000 pages long. Here is a mathematical exercise. Consider that it might take 2 minutes to recite one page. How long do you think it would take to recite 80,000 pages allowing 8 hours per day to this task?
Then consider how many times the works would need to be recited to memorise it. I’m not saying it can’t be done, rather highlighting the enormity of the task at hand. Then again the Egyptians built pyramids with a fraction of the resources we have today.
The most reliable way we can know about what someone taught is if they write it down or we have a reliable transcript from someone who was there. Unfortunately the means to record in writing relied on material such as papyrus before the availability of paper. Oral transmission of sacred Teachings may have been very well developed in some cultures. However because of the lack of contemporary written records we have no way of knowing for certain how this was done. We assume great effort and care would have been taken but we have no way of knowing for certain.Do you think oral tradition hints at accuracy of Buddhist and Hindu Scriptures?
Sure ... according to Wikipedia ... which is edited and revised all the time, by people who have opinions, and often agendas attached to said opinions. Either this stuff is conjecture, or it isn't. I don't see how anyone can pick something out as fact, but then see the rest as conjecture. Not that it matters.
I'll stick with 'I don't know.'
Wikipedia is as good as many other encyclopaedias with reliance on references from those with expertise in their field and the texts carefully edited in a professional manner. Being online it can be updated regularly rather than waiting for the next edition to be published. I would look at alternate sources of information from a source that is trusted. Its too easy to not make the effort to research or think about these types of questions and then say “ I don’t know”. Another strategy is to have an informed opinion and acknowledge the possibility of being wrong. From there we can consider alternative views and do further research. But I agree those having bias and having an agenda always needs to considered, including our own biases and agendas.
The most reliable way we can know about what someone taught is if they write it down or we have a reliable transcript from someone who was there. Unfortunately the means to record in writing relied on material such as papyrus before the availability of paper. Oral transmission of sacred Teachings may have been very well developed in some cultures. However because of the lack of contemporary written records we have no way of knowing for certain how this was done. We assume great effort and care would have been taken but we have no way of knowing for certain.
Was there papyrus when hindu and buddhist scriptures were written?