The Four Aims of Life and The Noble Eightfold Path: Unifying - TopicsExpress



          

The Four Aims of Life and The Noble Eightfold Path: Unifying Ayurveda and Buddhism dharmaartha kaama mokSaaNaam aarogyam mulam uttamam, Charaka Translation: Health is the utmost root for the four aims of human life: dharma, artha, kaama, and mokSa. We are taught in Vedic Astrology to see the four aims of human life: dharma, which is purpose, duty, why we are here, artha, which interestingly translates to both means and meaning, the meaning and gains of human life, kaama, which is desire, and mokSa, which is liberation. These four aims of life are expressed three times each in the chart as beginning, middle and advanced stages. first house = beginning dharma = outer personality, physique, health/well-being, … second house = beginning artha = pocket money, family relationships, … third house = beginning kaam= courage, valor, virility, … fourth house = beginning mokSa = inner life, emotions, home, mother, … fifth house = middle dharma = creativity, children, spiritual practices, punya, … sixth house = middle artha = daily work, service,… seventh house = middle kaama = business and personal relationships, marriage, spouse, … eighth house = middle mokSa = length of life, physical death, … ninth house = advanced dharma = luck, fortune, religiosity, … tenth house = advanced artha = career, … eleventh house = advanced kaama = gains, profits from work, ability to earn money, social contexts and organizations, … twelfth house = advanced mokSa = loss, intuition, foreign travel, spirituality…. Without referring to astrology, Buddha told us how to achieve that all important final stage, mokSa, by following the eightfold path: right view, right aspiration, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. Rather wonderfully, there is a direct alignment between the three stages of dharma, artha, and kaama, which are known to set the path to liberation, and Buddha’s eight fold path to liberation. Dharma, artha, and kaama are like any set of three. They can be arranged into 8 subsets: dharma artha kaama dharma and artha dharma and kaama artha and kaama dharma, artha, and kaama the empty set Here is a list of the direct alignments between the 8 arrangements and the eightfold path: right view :: dharma right speech :: artha right aspiration :: kaama right concentration: dharma and artha right effort :: dharma and kaama right livelihood :: artha and kaama right action :: dharma, artha, and kaama right mindfulness :: the empty set Why this makes sense: 1. View is to understand things clearly, to see one’s purpose here on Earth, and to see the integration of one’s life into the whole. That is also one’s dharma. 2. Speech is clearly artha, because of the artha quality of the second house, the house of speech. 3. Aspiration is by its very definition kaama. 4. Concentration is in Buddhism best understood as dharma and artha without kaama. That is to say, it is best done with purpose and meaning without desire. This is best seen in the fifth house (dharma) and sixth house (artha). 5. Effort is similarly best understood as dharma and kaama without artha. That is to say, effort in Buddhism is purpose and desire without gains or meaning. Effort is definitely the third house (kaama) and ninth house (dharma). 6. Livelihood is clearly artha and kaama, means and desire. This is best seen in the tenth (artha) and eleventh (kaama) houses. 7. Action done rightly is the unification of dharma, artha, and kaama. Also action is in the konas, i.e., the first (dharma), seventh (kaama), and tenth (artha) houses. 8. Finally, and perhaps most importantly to any set is the empty set, shunyo, zero, upon which one may set one’s mind rightly.
Posted on: Tue, 15 Jul 2014 16:16:59 +0000

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