Top Banner
Early Buddhism I. Late Vedic India & Spiritual Age II.Beliefs of Buddhism III. Practices of early Buddhism IDs: Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha), d. 483bce, nirvana, sangha
13

Early Buddhism

Feb 14, 2016

Download

Documents

emera

Early Buddhism. Late Vedic India & Spiritual Age Beliefs of Buddhism Practices of early Buddhism IDs: Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha), d. 483bce, nirvana, sangha. Argument. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Early Buddhism

Early Buddhism

I. Late Vedic India & Spiritual AgeII. Beliefs of BuddhismIII. Practices of early Buddhism

IDs: Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha), d. 483bce, nirvana, sangha

Page 2: Early Buddhism

Argument

With no gods, no supernatural features, and no afterlife, early Buddhism was a response to the historical context of Late Vedic India.

Page 3: Early Buddhism

I. Historical ContextA. Late Vedic Age (1000-500 BCE)

Changes around 500 BCE

Many small statesRajas (from kshatriya

caste)

Growth of towns

Page 4: Early Buddhism

Transition to Hinduism• More elaborate caste

system• Karma & transmigration

of souls• Dissatisfaction with

Brahman leadership• Bhagavad Gita• Krishna• Arjuna

Page 5: Early Buddhism

B. Axial (Spiritual Age) 6th-4th century BCE

Influential Thinkers• Buddha• Mahavira• Confucius• Laozi ?• Socrates• Aristotle• Plato & other Greeks

New Religions/Philosophical Systems

• Buddhism• Confucianism• Daoism• Greek Philosophy

Page 6: Early Buddhism

Hinduism in the“Spiritual Age”: 6th c. BCE

1. Mahavira JainismAsceticismNon-violence

gurus

Page 7: Early Buddhism

II. Beliefs of Early Buddhism

Siddhartha Gautama (c. 563 – 483 BCE)

the Buddha (the Enlightened One)

GangesBodhi tree (bo)

Page 8: Early Buddhism

Four Truths

1.Life is full of suffering.2.Suffering is caused by desires.3.The only way to rise above suffering is to

renounce desire.4.One can only do this by following Noble

Eightfold Path.

Page 9: Early Buddhism

Goals

rid self of desire & the illusion of separate identity

reach nirvana (contentment and extinction)

By following Noble Eightfold Path

Page 10: Early Buddhism

III. Practices of Early Buddhims

The Buddha’s Footprints

Limestone carving on stupa, India

1st c. BCE

Page 11: Early Buddhism

Sangha (Order)

• monks• nuns

Page 12: Early Buddhism

The Three Jewels“I go for refuge to

the Buddha.I go for refuge to

the Doctrine (dharma).

I go for refuge to the Order (sangha).”

Page 13: Early Buddhism

Argument

With no gods, no supernatural features, and no afterlife, early Buddhism was a response to the historical context of Late Vedic India.