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    Different Kinds of Happiness
    David Dale Holmes
    • Feb 7, 2019
    • 4 min

    Different Kinds of Happiness

    From an article on Buddhistdoor All living beings desire happiness and recoil from suffering. When the Buddha said he taught suffering and the end of suffering, rather than being pessimistic, he was being optimistic. When the Buddha explained dukkha (Pali. suffering, discontent), he explicated its cause, how to eradicate its cause, and the method of practice leading to its eradication. He taught us the way to avoid suffering. Happy will he be who knows how to bring an end to
    8 views0 comments
    Right Speech
    Edward Horner
    • Jun 27, 2018
    • 5 min

    Right Speech

    This is a brief section from our upcoming book Wisdom in Buddhism Right Speech (Pali – samma vaca) The third factor on the Eightfold Path is that of Right Speech. In this age of mass-media, social media and almost instant communication around the globe, we might sometimes forget that our words have meaning. The words we use and how we use them help convey our intent. Our words express our thinking process; clear, muddled or somewhere in between. The words we use have weig
    9 views0 comments
    Avoid Intoxicants
    Edward Horner
    • Jun 16, 2018
    • 4 min

    Avoid Intoxicants

    A short section from our upcoming book Wisdom in Buddhism Do not take Intoxicants Intoxicants have been with humanity for a very long time; caffeine, tobacco, peyote, alcohol, hallucinogenic mushrooms, cocaine, marijuana, etc. Why is this so? Why have so many intoxicants been used by even our earliest, ancient ancestors? Why has humanity spent so much time and energy seeking them out? It might simply be that (as we will discuss in the Chapter 11.1 The Four Noble Truths) li
    31 views0 comments
    Be a Bystander
    Edward Horner
    • May 31, 2018
    • 2 min

    Be a Bystander

    Master Jingzong; English translation by Foyuan, edited by Jingxing Painting by Han Xi Shan A proverb says, “[In a chess game], bystanders see the game better than the players.” The famous poet Su Shi also had this to say, “One cannot see the true shape of Mount Lu because one is in the mountain.” The [chess] player cannot see clearly his situation because of self-interest, improper motives or a fixed perspective. The casual observer, however, can see and understand the whole
    4 views0 comments
    Fake News
    Edward Horner
    • May 4, 2018
    • 4 min

    Fake News

    Do Not Believe Everything You Are Told Wisdom, to a large extent, is learning to see the world, not as we think it is, but to see it as it actually behaves. An excerpt from our upcoming book Wisdom in Buddhism What do you believe when the president of the United States stands before you on national TV, addresses the nation and tells you that global warming and the very idea of climate change is nothing but ‘fake news?’ Do you believe him, because he’s the president and noth
    9 views0 comments
    The Illusion of Permanence
    Edward Horner
    • Apr 4, 2018
    • 5 min

    The Illusion of Permanence

    This delusion manifests in many forms. “No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man.” ― Heraclitus Heraclitus observes that even if the river looks the same, feels the same and appears to be in the same place, it’s only an illusion. The river changes course constantly, the water ebbs and floods throughout the seasons. The water may run clear one day then murky the next. Fish may run and fish may die. The river, in reali
    13 views0 comments
    Emotional Stability and its Role in Wisdom
    Edward Horner
    • Mar 28, 2018
    • 3 min

    Emotional Stability and its Role in Wisdom

    An excerpt from our upcoming book Wisdom in Buddhism When we speak of wisdom and its role in public discourse, it’s rarely about an individual, private citizen. Instead, it tends to be about public figures - those who open themselves up for criticism and put themselves in the limelight to be seen and to be critiqued, judged and held accountable. Rarely would a private citizen want their lives, past transgressions, decisions, policy choices or intellect exposed to public scrut
    26 views0 comments
    Is There a Universal Morality?
    Edward Horner
    • Mar 15, 2018
    • 9 min

    Is There a Universal Morality?

    We examine morality and ethics and how they relate to wisdom in Buddhism.
    6 views0 comments
    Wisdom, in Leadership
    Edward Horner
    • Feb 1, 2018
    • 3 min

    Wisdom, in Leadership

    A short excerpt from our upcoming book, Wisdom in Buddhism. Being truthful and thinking, deeply, before speaking, is a fundamental skill leaders need to learn if they wish to be considered 'wise.' This excerpt is part of a much longer article dealing with the need for wisdom in political and business leaders. Effective Public Communication Skills One does not need to be a ‘great orator’ in order to be an effective public communicator. When we think of great orators or the p
    6 views0 comments
    Attributing Intention
    Edward Horner
    • Dec 7, 2017
    • 5 min

    Attributing Intention

    An excerpt from our upcoming book Wisdom In Buddhism, due for release early 2018. This is from the chapter on Bias in Decision Making Attributing Intention This bias is really a subsection of attribution theory, which is beyond the scope of this book, but it is worth a mention. Attribution theory looks into how an observer is able to use gathered social cues to arrive at causal explanations for events or judgment about another persons behaviour. For the most part there are t
    7 views0 comments
    The Trouble with Being Wrong
    Edward Horner
    • Nov 8, 2017
    • 5 min

    The Trouble with Being Wrong

    This is an excerpt from our upcoming book Wisdom in Buddhism Whatever you believe, remember that you may be wrong. You need to be fearless about thinking, because sometimes you’re going to be wrong. And when you’re wrong it's going to hurt. The difficult thing about being wrong, is that it feels exactly the same as being right. You feel, clever, righteous, vindicated, honourable, exonerated and smug, just like if you were right. “The moon is made of cheese,” feels exactly
    4 views0 comments
    Hatred, the Third Mental Defilement
    Edward Horner
    • Nov 2, 2017
    • 3 min

    Hatred, the Third Mental Defilement

    A short excerpt from our upcoming book, Wisdom in Buddhism. Hatred, the Third Mental Defilement Hate arises from ignorance of the world and how everything and everyone is interconnected. We come to think of ourselves as standing apart or separate from the world and judge everything and everyone by some internal standard that we may not even understand. When those people, things or circumstances we judge are found wanting in some quality, we begin to develop negative feelings
    7 views0 comments
    Wisdom in Buddhism
    Edward Horner
    • Oct 13, 2017
    • 3 min

    Wisdom in Buddhism

    A brief excerpt from Wisdom in Buddhism scheduled for release early 2018 A look at how Buddhism can encourage the circumstances that help give rise to wisdom. "... After you’ve examined all of that and sorted through the likely possibilities and applied your super-set of mental faculties; intellect, deep thought, foresight, humility, humour, learnedness, philanthropy, historical perspective and humanitarian point of view, you can make a wise choice. Once you set aside your
    8 views0 comments