Buddhism And Theravada Buddhism

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Buddhism is unique. Not in the way that religion in general is unique either because all religions are unique. Buddhism varies vastly from the many religions studied in class, yet it still grasps all the aspects required of a religion. Looking into a singular form of Buddhism, Theravada Buddhism, one can find everything that a religion needs to incorporate to be a religion. I chose to stick with mainly Theravada Buddhism as it stays closer to the original more orthodox teachings of Buddhism.
Followers of Theravada Buddhism would say that their form of Buddhism is the far most traditional form of Buddhism today. Their beliefs start with the stories that follow The Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama’s life. He was believed to discover the path to enlightenment after …show more content…

Buddhism says you are fully enlightened when you achieve nothing. Not that you have no achievements but that you literally become nothing. The teachings go away. The suffering goes away. You even go away. When you fully become nothing you will be eliminated from suffering that comes with life. This is an often misunderstood part of buddhism because of course you can’t literally become nothing. The message here is suppose to be to lose all connections of yourself to life and you will not suffer.
Buddhist follow, along with karma, follow an idea called the eightfold path. These 8 steps are: right understanding, right aspiration, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration. These steps are another process Buddhist take to get to their revelations to enlightenment. It is the last of the very first of Buddha’s teachings, The Four Noble Truths. These truths are the basic guidelines of what Buddha wants to teach. They work in tandem with each other to explain the suffering of life, what causes it, and what one must do to eliminate

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