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The Chillout Room
Do you believe in Karma?
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<blockquote data-quote="Ed" data-source="post: 625147" data-attributes="member: 548"><p>You raise a good point about morality. I'm still getting my head around it, but where I am up to is that morality is essentially rigid, stuck, where as the universe, and our part in it flows. So there's a 'dis-ease' here. Therefore to be truly acting in our 'true nature' we may act in ways that are, perhaps to outside observers in a way that could be viewed 'immoral'. This occurs within Buddhism even, Thai buddhists are horrified at the thought of eating meat, drinking alcohol, getting married. In Japan after monastic training, the monk/priest is free to make his own mind up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ed, post: 625147, member: 548"] You raise a good point about morality. I'm still getting my head around it, but where I am up to is that morality is essentially rigid, stuck, where as the universe, and our part in it flows. So there's a 'dis-ease' here. Therefore to be truly acting in our 'true nature' we may act in ways that are, perhaps to outside observers in a way that could be viewed 'immoral'. This occurs within Buddhism even, Thai buddhists are horrified at the thought of eating meat, drinking alcohol, getting married. In Japan after monastic training, the monk/priest is free to make his own mind up. [/QUOTE]
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Do you believe in Karma?
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